Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Intracranial Cavernous Malformations: International Stereotactic Radiosurgery Society, Systematic Review, Meta-Analysis, and Practice Guidelines.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_34B7C6A92CCD
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Intracranial Cavernous Malformations: International Stereotactic Radiosurgery Society, Systematic Review, Meta-Analysis, and Practice Guidelines.
Journal
World neurosurgery
Author(s)
Tos S.M., Shaaban A., Mantziaris G., Dumot C., Kotecha R., Fariselli L., Gorgulho A., Levivier M., Ma L., Paddick I., Pollock B.E., Regis J., Suh J.H., Yomo S., Sahgal A., Sheehan J.P.
ISSN
1878-8769 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1878-8750
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
The International Stereotactic Radiosurgery Society (ISRS) aims to establish evidence-based guidelines for single-fraction stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) in treating intracranial cavernous malformations.
We conducted a systematic review following PRISMA and MOOSE guidelines, searching electronic databases up to January 2024 to assess SRS's impact on post-treatment hemorrhage rates. Pooled risk ratios (RR) and confidence intervals were utilized to quantify this effect, along with assessments of lesion volume changes, seizure outcomes, and SRS-related adverse effects.
Our meta-analysis included 32 studies with 2672 patients. A significant decrease in annual hemorrhage rates was observed post-treatment (RR=0.17), with rates of RR=0.29 in the first 2 years and RR=0.11 thereafter. Hemorrhage rates significantly differed before and after 2 years post-SRS (RR=0.36). Among epileptic patients, 20.2% had epilepsy pre-treatment, and 49.9% were seizure-free post-SRS, while 30.6% experienced reduced seizure frequency. Lesion volume changes showed a reduction in 46.9%, stability in 47.1%, and an increase in 6.7%. Symptomatic radiation effects affected 8% of patients. Subgroup analysis revealed symptomatic change rates of 6% at doses ≤13Gy compared to 9% at doses >13Gy. Permanent clinical deficits were rare (2%).
This meta-analysis suggests SRS is an effective intervention for intracranial cavernous malformations, significantly reducing hemorrhage rates and improving seizure outcomes. ISRS practice guidelines are provided.
Keywords
Cavernous malformation, Hemorrhage, Radiation-induced change, Srs, Seizure, SRS
Pubmed
Create date
04/10/2024 15:38
Last modification date
05/10/2024 6:02
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