CC BY 4.0 · Indian Journal of Neurosurgery
DOI: 10.1055/s-0044-1782666
Research Article

First Thousand Cases of Intracranial Radiosurgery Treated with Gamma Knife at a Tertiary Care Hospital in India

1   Department of Neurosurgery, Gammaknife Surgery Centre, Army Hospital (R&R), Delhi Cantonment, New Delhi, India
,
Arti Sarin
1   Department of Neurosurgery, Gammaknife Surgery Centre, Army Hospital (R&R), Delhi Cantonment, New Delhi, India
,
H.S. Bhatoe
3   Department of Neurosurgery, Max Super Specialty Hospital, Mohali, Punjab, India
,
Harish C. Pathak
4   Department of Neurosurgery, Max Hospital, Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India
,
5   Department of Neurosurgery, Command Hospital (SC), Pune, Maharashtra, India
,
Maneet Gill
1   Department of Neurosurgery, Gammaknife Surgery Centre, Army Hospital (R&R), Delhi Cantonment, New Delhi, India
,
Saurabh K. Verma
6   Department of Neurosurgery, Apollomedics Super Specialty Hospitals, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
,
Raj Ratan
1   Department of Neurosurgery, Gammaknife Surgery Centre, Army Hospital (R&R), Delhi Cantonment, New Delhi, India
,
Nilotpal Chakravarty
7   Department of Radiation Oncology, Yashoda Hospital & Research Centre, Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, India
,
1   Department of Neurosurgery, Gammaknife Surgery Centre, Army Hospital (R&R), Delhi Cantonment, New Delhi, India
› Author Affiliations

Abstract

Purpose We present the profile of first 1,000 cases of intracranial radiosurgery (IRS) treated with Gamma Knife system at a government-funded tertiary care hospital in India. In addition to the information on the indications treated, this study provides an idea of the relevance of the Gamma Knife Radiosurgery (GKRS) for IRS in the fast-changing technological scenario. This study also shows the disease indications for which GKRS was the primary treatment preference.

Materials and Methods Leksell Gamma Knife model 4C was used for GKRS. Leksell G-frame-based stereotactic localization was used for all patients. Axial magnetic resonance imaging scans were used for treatment planning with additional two-dimensional angiography images for patients treated for arteriovenus malformations (AVM). The patient population treated with GKRS at our center mainly comprised of patients referred from across the country.

Results Acoustic schwannoma formed the largest group of patients (27%) followed by meningioma (21%), AVM (18%), pituitary adenoma (16%), brain metastasis (5.3%), trigeminal neuralgia (3%), cavernoma (2.4%), glomus jugulare (1.8%), craniopharyngioma (1.1%) and “others” (5%).

Conclusion The case mix at our center is similar to the overall Indian case mix. However, it is different from the Asian data of 2018 but interestingly similar to the data from Middle East and Africa for 2018. Among the various categories of cranial disorders treated by us, pituitary adenoma tumors had minimum (14/161) and cavernoma tumors had maximum (24/24) proportion of cases managed with GKRS as primary treatment modality.



Publication History

Article published online:
16 May 2024

© 2024. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

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