Melita Steiner
University of Virginia
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Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005
Hung-Chuan Pan; Jason P. Sheehan; Matei Stroila; Melita Steiner; Ladislau Steiner
OBJECT The authors present data concerning the development of cysts following gamma knife surgery (GKS) in 1203 consecutive patients with arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) treated by the senior author (L.S.). The cyst was defined as a fluid-filled cavity at the site of a treated AVM. Cases involving regions corresponding to previous hematoma cavities were excluded. The incidence of cyst formation was assessed using magnetic resonance imaging studies performed in 196 cases with more than 10 years of follow up, in 332 cases with 5 to 10 years of follow up, and in 675 cases with less than 5 years of follow up. One hundred five cases were lost to follow-up study. The Cox regression method was used to analyze the factors related to cyst formation. METHODS The incidence of cyst formation in the entire patient population was 1.6 and 3.6% in those undergoing follow-up examination for more than 5 years. Ten of 20 cysts developed between 10 to 23 years, nine between 5 to 10 years, and one in less than 5 years following the treatment. Cyst fluid aspiration, cystoperitoneal shunt placement, or craniotomy were used in three symptomatic cases. Analysis of age, sex, and treatment parameters yielded no significant relationship with cyst formation; however, radiation-induced tissue change following GKS (p = 0.027) and prior embolization (p = 0.011) were related to cyst formation. CONCLUSIONS Overall, the incidence of cyst formation in patients who underwent GKS for AVM was 1.6%. The development of the cyst was related to the duration of the follow-up period. When cysts are symptomatic, surgical intervention should be performed.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2005
Hung-Chuan Pan; Jason P. Sheehan; Matei Stroila; Melita Steiner; Ladislau Steiner
OBJECT The authors conducted a study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of gamma knife surgery (GKS) for the treatment of brain metastases from lung cancer. METHODS Between February 1993 and May 2003 191 patients underwent treatment for 424 brain metastases from non-small (171 cases) and small cell lung carcinoma (20 cases). Imaging and clinical status were monitored every 3 months following the treatment. Kaplan-Meier survival curves, Cox proportional hazards regression for risk factor analysis, and nonparametric methods for evaluating tumor response were used. There was no difference in median survival following combined whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) and gamma knife surgery (14 months) and GKS alone (15 months). There was also no difference between the median survival rates for either tumor type. In the multivariate analysis, age less than 65 years, Karnofsky Performance Scale score greater than 70, normal neurological status, multiple GKS treatments, and pre-GKS craniotomy were related to longer survival. Tumor control rates varied according to the volume of the metastases and were as follows: 84.4% (< 0.5 cm3), 94% (0.5-2 cm3), 89.1% (2-4 cm3), 93.4% (4-8 cm3), 85.7% (8-14 cm3), and 87.5% (> 14 cm3). Four lesions required post-GKS craniotomy due to swelling or rapid tumor progression. The rate of tumor shrinkage was higher when a volume was 2 cm3, lower in cystic lesions, lower in tumors with previous WBRT, and lower for margin doses less than 14 Gy. CONCLUSIONS The risk-benefit ratio of GKS in this series was satisfactory. There was no difference in response rates of the two tumor types, and WBRT did not improve the duration of survival.
Acta Neurochirurgica | 1995
Dheerendra Prasad; Melita Steiner; Ladislau Steiner
SummaryWe present our results of Gamma Knife surgery for craniopharyngioma in nine patients. The current status of surgery, radiation therapy, intracavitary instillation of radionucleides and Gamma Knife surgery in the management of craniopharyngiomas is discussed.
Acta Neurochirurgica | 2000
Bryan Rankin Payne; Dheerendra Prasad; Melita Steiner; Ladislau Steiner
Summary¶ A retrospective analysis of a consecutive series of 12 patients with 15 intracranial hemangiopericytomas treated at the University of Virginia using Gamma surgery is presented. Clinical and radiographic follow up of 3 to 56 months is available for 10 patients with 12 tumors. There was one tumor present at the time of initial Gamma surgery in each patient. Two new tumors occurred in patients previously treated. Nine of the tumors decreased in volume and three remained stable. Four of the nine tumors that shrank later progressed at an average of 22 months after treatment. Of the tumors that decreased in volume and have not progressed, the response has been for an average of 11 months. The follow-up for two tumors that remained unchanged was 10 and 34 months (average 22 months). A third tumor was unchanged at 42 months but the patient died of new disease adjacent to the treated area in the anterior skull base. There were no complications and the quality of life following the procedure was maintained or improved in every case. Gamma surgery is effective in palliating the patients by decreasing tumor volume and delaying recurrence.
Progress in neurological surgery | 2007
György T. Szeifert; Dheerendra Prasad; Toshifumi Kamyrio; Melita Steiner; Ladislau Steiner
The aim of this study was to assess the role of Gamma Knife radiosurgery in the complex management of cerebral astrocytomas. Out of a series with more than 1,000 brain tumor cases treated at the Lars Leksell Center for Gamma Knife Surgery, UVA, 74 astrocytomas were selected for the present review. The tumor either disappeared or decreased in 60% of grade 1 astrocytomas (n = 15), and 71% tumor control was achieved in grade 2 astrocytomas (n = 17) following radiosurgery. In the high-grade glioma group (grades 3 and 4; n = 42) median survival time was 14 (range 2-58) months, and 25% of the patients were alive at 5 years after the treatment. The best results were presented by the subgroup wherein previous craniotomy and debulking of the tumor were followed by radiosurgery (n = 7) with a median survival period of 24 (range 2-53) months. Results of the present analysis suggest that stereotactic radiosurgery represents an alternative or supplementary treatment modality to conventional surgery in small-volume low-grade astrocytomas especially in deep-seated critical locations. There is also evidence for the beneficial effect of radiosurgery on the survival of patients with high-grade gliomas; however, the limitations of a focused irradiation technique on a malignant infiltrative process are obvious.
Archive | 1994
Ladislau Steiner; Ch. Lindquist; B. Karlsson; W. Guo; Melita Steiner
Following the description of the technique of Gamma Knife radio-surgery, a review of the results in vascular malformations is given. Maximal doses of 15–25 Gy with periphery doses of 10–62 Gy have been tested. With a dose of 25 Gy to the periphery of small AVMs, the incidence of total obliteration was 88%; in AVMs of moderate or large size, it was 78% respectively 50%.
Acta Neurochirurgica | 1995
B. Sutter; Melita Steiner; M. B. S. Lopes; Dheerendra Prasad; Ladislau Steiner
SummaryThree patients with pituitary adenomas (ACTH-secreting, non-secretory, and multi-secretory) with unfavorable course, in spite of repeated microsurgery, drag therapy, as well as radiotherapy and radiosurgery, are presented. Each case was re-evaluated for possible flaws in management. Two of the invasive tumors continued to grow, in spite of correct management. The third patient with a pituitary adenoma underwent microsurgical resection, and later following a false positive finding of recurrence, received radiotherapy and underwent radiosurgery. The lesion actually was chronic inflammatory tissue.
Journal of Neurosurgery | 1992
Ladislau Steiner; Christer Lindquist; John R. Adler; James C. Torner; Wayne M. Alves; Melita Steiner
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2000
Dheerendra Prasad; Melita Steiner; Ladislau Steiner
Journal of Neurosurgery | 2006
Vincenzo Mingione; Chun Po Yen; Mary Lee Vance; Melita Steiner; Jason P. Sheehan; Edward R. Laws; Ladislau Steiner