OBJECTIVE Vestibular schwannomas (VSs) are benign tumors of the cerebellopontine angle that are typically managed with stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). Intratumoral hemorrhage (ITH) of VSs is a rare occurrence that results in worsening vestibular and new cranial nerve deficits. Few reports have described the management and outcomes of this entity after SRS. To further delineate the incidence and impact of this event, the authors performed a retrospective review of their VS SRS patients at a single center. METHODS Between 1987 and 2022, 2058 patients with VSs underwent Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKRS) at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The authors performed a review of the prospectively maintained VS database at their center to identify patients with ITH. The presentation, management, and clinical and imaging outcomes of the patients are reported. RESULTS A total of 1902 VS patients had sufficient clinical and imaging follow-up data. Five Koos grade III (n = 1) and IV (n = 4) VS patients developed ITH after GKRS, resulting in a cumulative incidence rate of 0.26%. The age at presentation ranged from 62 to 79 years, and 3 patients were male. The time from VS diagnosis to GKRS ranged from 1 to 13 months, and the time from GKRS to ITH ranged from 2 to 130 months. Three patients had bleeding risk factors. One patient required urgent surgical intervention due to the ITH volume, while the other 4 patients were initially observed. Three patients remained stable and required no delayed intervention; 1 patient required delayed resection because of symptom progression and hemorrhagic expansion. Histopathological analysis revealed multiple fragments of S-100–positive cells, hemorrhage, and hemosiderin-laden macrophages. At last follow-up, 4 patients had clinically improved and 1 patient remained stable. CONCLUSIONS ITH after VS radiosurgery is a rare phenomenon with a cumulative incidence rate of 0.26% in this series. Patient-tailored management in the form of observation or resection is based on patient presentation, acuity, and ITH size.
INTRODUCTION Intratumoral hemorrhage (ITH) is a rare occurrence in vestibular schwannomas (VS) resulting in worsening vestibular and cranial nerve deficits. Scarce data described the occurrence, management, and outcomes of ITH after stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS). OBJECTIVE The aim of this study is to delineate the incidence, presentation, management, and outcomes of ITH in VS patients following SRS. METHODS A total of 2058 patients with VS underwent Gamma Knife radiosurgery (GKRS) at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center between 1987 and 2022. The authors identified patients with ITH. Their presentation, management, clinical, and imaging outcomes are reported and analyzed. RESULTS A total of 1902 VS patients had sufficient clinical and imaging follow-up data. Five Koos III (n = 1) and IV (n = 4) VS patients developed ITH after GKRS, resulting in a cumulative incidence rate of 0.26%. The age at presentation ranged from 62 to 79 years, and 3 of the patients were males. The time from VS diagnosis to GKRS ranged from 1-13 months, and the time from GKRS to ITH ranged from 2-130 months. Three patients had bleeding risk factors. One patient required urgent surgical intervention due to the ITH volume, while the other four patients initially were observed. Three remained stable and required no delayed intervention. Histopathological analysis revealed multiple fragments of S-100–positive cells, hemorrhage, and hemosiderin-laden macrophages. At last follow-up, 4 patients had clinically improved, and one remained stable.ConclusionVS ITH following SRS is a rare complication with a cumulative incidence rate of 0.26%. Patient-tailored management is vital based on patient presentation, acuity, and ITH size and characteristics.
INTRODUCTION Preoperative stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is an emerging therapeutic strategy for treatment of brain metastasis requiring surgical resection. Prior reports have been highly-controlled, excluding very large brain metastases. Here, we report a prospectively-collected preoperative series reflective of a real-world neurosurgical patient cohort, with a particular focus on resumption of immunotherapy. METHODS Our series included Nf27 prospective preoperative compared to concurrently collected Nf37 postoperative patients. Demographic, SRS volumes/dose, pre/postoperative immunotherapy, and clinical outcomes were collected. Subsequent univariate comparisons between groups were performed. RESULTS Pre/postoperative tumor volumes (19.1 [range: 2.4-65.1] vs. 12.5 [3.6-80.3]cc, p=0.20); local tumor control at 1 year (77.6% vs. 71.4%, p=0.616); overall survival (1.0 [0.8-2.2] vs. 1.3 [0.7-NR] years, p=0.8) were comparable between groups. Rates of LMD (3.7% vs. 8.0%, p=0.39) and subsequent WBRT (8.0% vs. 16.2%, p=0.46) were not statistically different. OR time (168 vs. 173 min, p=0.64), estimated blood loss (133 vs. 180 mL, p=0.31), and wound infections (1 vs. 1, p=1.00) were not significantly different.An ostensible advantage to preoperative SRS is that steroids may be weaned more quickly to allow resumption of immunotherapy. Median steroid taper length was significantly shorter (8 vs. 21.5 days, p=0.007), and median daily Dexamethasone dose at 1 week post-op was significantly lower in the preoperative group (1 vs. 7mg d, p=0.007). All preoperative patients eligible for resumption of immunotherapy (Nf5) resumed treatment within 6 weeks. Conversely, only 2/6 in postoperative patients resumed treatment within 6 weeks, (p=0.07), while 4 failed to resume immunotherapy altogether. In patients initiating immunotherapy after OR/SRS, time to initiation was non-significantly lower in the preoperative group (52[38-84] vs.163[108-208] days, p=0.06). CONCLUSIONS Preoperative SRS is safe and provides comparable local tumor control rate even in large tumors ( >20cc). In patients requiring resumption of immunotherapy, preoperative SRS may provide a faster pathway towards resumption of systemic therapy.
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