Title: First Edition
1CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns
- First Edition
- Release Date 7/8/2005
- Expiration Date 7/8/2008
- Sponsored by St. Johns Health System,
Springfield, Missouri
2CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns
Continuing Medical Education (CME) Information
- Overview
- CyberKnife radiosurgery is a new and promising
treatment for patients with a variety of tumors,
pain syndromes or functional disorders. This
presentation discusses the development of the
CyberKnife, how it works, several of the
important applications of its technology and
clinical data to support its use. - Description
- This CME activity includes
- PowerPoint Presentation
- CME Credit Registration Form with post-test
examination evaluation - The estimated time for completion is 35 minutes.
- Intended Audience
- This CME activity is intended for primary care
physicians.
3CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns
Continuing Medical Education (CME) Information
- Learning Objectives
- After completing this CME activity, participants
should be able to - Review general principles of radiation treatment
and radiosurgery. - Describe CyberKnife technology and its resulting
accuracy. - List indications for using stereotactic
radiosurgery in the brain and spine with outcomes
data for treated patients. - Recognize the limitations of stereotactic
radiosurgery. - Educational Need
- This CME program was developed to educate
physicians on state of the art radiosurgical care
of patients with neurosurgical diseases.
4CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns CME
Information
- Faculty Advisory Committee
- Alan M. Scarrow, MD, JD Bill
Hennessey Teresa Shull - St. Johns Clinic Neurosurgery
Terry Nigh Alan Scarrow - Co-Director, St. Johns Radiosurgery Center
Eddie Spain - Disclosure Policy
- It is the policy of the St. Johns CME Program
to insure balance, independence, objectivity and
scientific rigor in all its CME activities.
Consistent with this policy, CME participants
should be informed before the program begins
when 1) the CME activity is receiving commercial
support from a proprietary entity 2) potential
conflict(s)-of-interest exist between the faculty
and program content and/or with the proprietary
entity providing commercial support to the CME
activity 3) faculty intend to discuss
information regarding unapproved/unlabeled
commercial products during their presentation. - The intent of this policy is to provide CME
participants with information on which they can
make their own judgments to determine whether a
presentation has been influenced with regard to
exposition or conclusion.
5CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns CME
Information
- Disclosures
- Dr. Scarrow and Advisory Committee members
disclosed no significant relationship with - the manufacturer or provider of any commercial
product or service discussed in this - presentation.
- Dr. Scarrow will not be presenting information
regarding commercial products that are not - FDA-approved (unlabeled) for the use under
discussion or that are still investigational. - This CME activity is funded by St. Johns Health
System and is receiving no commercial - support.
- Educational Disclaimer
- The primary purpose of this CME activity is
education. The views and opinions expressed - in this presentation are those of the
participating faculty and do not constitute the
opinion - or endorsement of, or promotion by St. Johns
Health System or its affiliates. - It is intended to inform you about the knowledge,
techniques and experiences of - professionals who are willing to share such
information with colleagues. Participants - should use their personal and professional
judgment when considering further application - of this information, particularly as it may
relate to patient diagnosis or treatment
decisions
6CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns CME
Information
- Accreditation and CME Credit Designation
- ?St. Johns Health System is accredited by the
Missouri State Medical Association to provide
continuing medical education for physicians. - This enduring CME activity has been planned and
produced in accordance with the Accreditation
Council for Continuing Medical Education
Essentials. - ?St. Johns Health System designates this
educational activity for a maximum of 0.5
Category 1 credit toward the AMA Physicians
Recognition Award. Each physician should claim
the amount of credit actually spent in the CME
activity. -
- For questions regarding program content or
post-test questions contact - Dr. Alan Scarrow (417) 820-5150
7CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns CME
Information
- Obtaining CME credit
- On the last slide of this presentation, click on
the link to the CME Credit Registration - Form Post Test and print the document.
- Print your full name and address.
- Complete the Post-test Examination placing
your answers on the Post-Test - Answers Section.
- Address the evaluation questions.
- Document the amount of time spent to
complete this CME activity. - Send the form to the St. Johns CME
Office before the posted expiration - date.
- If you have any questions regarding this process,
please contact Teresa Shull at - (417) 820-2772 or e-mail at tshull_at_sprg.mercy.net
. - Grading of post-tests and processing of CME
credit will be completed within - 60 days upon receipt. A score of at least 70 is
required to receive CME credit.
8CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns
- Alan Scarrow, M.D., J.D.
- Neurosurgery
- Co-Director, St. Johns Radiosurgery Center
9CyberKnife Radiosurgery
- CyberKnife
- What is a CyberKnife?
- How does it work?
- How is it different from other radiation devices?
- Is there evidence that it works?
10CyberKnife
11CyberKnife How is it different?
- Evolution of radiosurgery
- Stereotactic radiosurgery invented by Swedish
neurosurgeon Dr. Lars Leksell in 1968
12CyberKnife How is it different?
- GammaKnife radiosurgery commercialized and
utilized throughout the world during 70s, 80s,
90s - Butonly applicable for intracranial tumors since
the brain is the only organ that can be
immobilized - Question How to apply similar principles of
radiosurgery to the rest of the body?
13CyberKnife How is it different?
- Next step in evolution linear accelerator with
intensity modulation useful both intracranial
(with a head frame) and extracranial - Better butprecision, accuracy and immobilization
still a challenge outside the brain
14CyberKnife How is it different?
- Next step in evolution CyberKnife
- First and only radiosurgery device with patented
real-time imaging coupled to radiation delivery - CyberKnife winner of 2005 Most Promising New
Product Award (Phoenix Medical Device
Diagnostic Conference)
15CyberKnife How is it different?
- CyberKnife has linear accelerator mounted on
robotic arm w/ infinite angles of radiation
delivery vs. IMRT w/ only single plane delivery
(a.k.a. isocenter delivery) - vs.
- sphere disc
16CyberKnife How is it different?
- CyberKnife precision and accuracy
- Most accurate image guided radiosurgery system in
the world total end to end clinical accuracy
0.95 mm - No need for frame to immobilize head
17CyberKnife How is it different?
- Attempts to replicate CyberKnife precision and
accuracy (e.g. Novalis BrainLab) - Do not monitor tumor movement (only chest
movement) - Internal tracking (CK) v. external tracking (NBL)
- Cannot make real-time adjustments in radiation
delivery (CyberKnife patent) - Must use head frame to deliver sufficient
precision and accuracy intracranially
18CyberKnife Radiosurgery
- Radiosurgery
- What is radiosurgery?
- Misnomer? Oxymoron? Term of art?
- Traditional single session, precise delivery of
a therapeutically effective radiation dose to an
image defined target - Expanded spatially accurate and highly conformal
doses of radiation targeted at well defined
structures with ablative intent - Comparison to radiation therapy less concerned
with targeting accuracy and anatomic precision
normal tissues protected by dividing doses into
multiple fractions separated by time to allow for
recovery of normal tissues - Shotgun vs. laser guided rifle
- Primum non nocere
19CyberKnife Process
- Patient selected for CyberKnife treatment
- ? pt brought in for history, physical, review of
images - ? fiducials placed close to tumor (except in
brain where no fiducials are needed) - ? CT or MRI of tumor and fiducials downloaded
into CyberKnife - ? treatment planning with tumor and critical
structures outlined, dose determined - ? treatment initiated w/tracking of fiducials
during radiation delivery
20Clinical Evidence for Radiosurgery
- Most studies based on either GammaKnife or
platform-based linear accelerator data - Assumption that CyberKnife outcome data will be
similar given the more precise and accurate means
of delivering radiation to the tumor
21Types of Clinical Evidence
- Class I Prospective, randomized, controlled
trials - Class II Prospective studies (data collected
prospectively) with retrospective analysis e.g.
observational, cohort, case control studies - Class III Retrospective studies (data collected
retrospectively) e.g. clinical series,
registries, case reviews, expert opinion
22CyberKnife Radiosurgery
- Which neurological diseases or conditions are
responsive to CyberKnife radiosurgery? - Tumors
- Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs)
- Trigeminal neuralgia
- Tremors
- Seizures
- Intractable pain
- Glaucoma
23Tumors
- Primary/metastatic
- Brain/spine
- Malignant/benign
- Primary therapy/adjunctive therapy
- Single treatment/staged treatment
- Therapeutic/palliative
24Adult Primary Brain Tumors
- Malignant
- Gliomas account for 30-40 of all supratentorial
tumors - Grade I and II well-differentiated astrocytomas
- Grade III anaplastic astrocytomas
- Grade IV glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) account
for 50 of all gliomas - Benign
- Meningiomas (16 of all supratentorial tumors)
- Acoustic neuromas
- Pituitary adenomas
- Jugular schwannomas
25Adult Malignant Brain Tumors
- GBM and Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS)
- 1 study w/ Class I evidence
- Entry criteria no prior rad or chemo, Karnofsky
gt 60, life expect gt 3 mo, adequate BM reserves,
acceptable renal and hepatic fxn, NL CXR, tumor
diameter lt 40 mm - Group 1 EBRT carmustine (BCNU) (80 pts)
- Group 2 SRS EBRT BCNU (80 pts)
- med. survival 13.6 mo no difference in survival,
quality of life, cognitive function - 4 cases of late radiation toxicity in Group 2
26Adult Malignant Brain Tumors
- GBM and SRS
- 1 study w/ Class III evidence
- Failed EBRT and/or chemo, Karnofsky gt 50, used
with paclitaxel (Taxol) - 88 pts
- Smaller tumor volumes with better survival
27Adult Malignant Brain Tumors
- GBM and SRS Summary
- Useful in selected cases
- Does not cure GBM
- Why is SRS not very effective for GBM?
28Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Meningiomas
- Location, location, location, size
- Treatments observation, surgery, SRS
29Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Meningiomas and SRS
- 2 studies w/ Class III evidence
- Study 1
- Entry criteria tumors lt3 cm diameter (untreated
or residual following surgery) with exceptions
for larger tumors in the elderly (100 pts) - 5 yr follow up for tumors lt 3 cm 97 pts with
controlled tumor growth tumors gt 3 cm with
increased risk of radiation induced edema - 4 of 23 pts with tumors gt 3 cm required repeat
surgery to relieve persistent mass effect of
radiation induced edema
30Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Meningioma Study 2
- Entry criteria tumor volume lt 20 cm3 high
surgical risk or advanced age or patient
preference (50 pts) - 14 mo follow up neuro exam improved, normal or
unchanged in 43/50 pts tumor growth controlled
in all but 1
31Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Meningiomas and SRS Summary
- Some evidence to support controlled growth
- Useful for patients with
- Tumors adjacent or enmeshed with critical
structures - Significant medical morbidities
- Advanced age
- Aversion to surgery
32Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Acoustic neuromas (AN)
- One of the original uses for SRS
- Well defined, circumscribed
- Fairly high operative morbidity
33Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- AN and SRS
- 1 Class II study (207 pts)
- Entry criteria acoustic neuroma
- Pts chose microsurgery (110 pts) v. SRS (97 pts)
- 4 yr follow up
34Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Significantly lower morbidity w/ SRS
- Complaint s/p microsurgery s/p radiosurgery
- Facial palsy 47 0
- Loss of fnct. hear. 63 30
- Hemifacial spasm 27 3
- Tinnitus 40 50
- Hypesthesia 29 4
- No return to work 34 1
35Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Class III data
- Some variation in upper limit of size (3-4 cm in
diameter) - Some variation in single shot v. staged SRS
- Tumor control rate gt90
- Low morbidity comparable to Class II data
36Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- AN and SRS Summary
- SRS preferable to microsurgery in many if not
most cases due to lower morbidity - Size is most common limiting factor for SRS (lt4
cm diameter) - Tumor control rates very good
37Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Pituitary adenomas
- First line treatment usually medical or
microsurgical - SRS generally reserved for residual or recurrent
tumor - GH, ACTH, null cell, resistant PRL tumors
38Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Pituitary adenomas and SRS
- 2 Class II trials abundant Class III data w/
similar results - Class II trial 1
- Entry criteria GH secreting tumors w/
post-operative GH level gt 3 ng/mL and elevated
IGF-1 or evidence of growing sellar mass (17 pts) - Follow up 24 mo 14/17 with resolution of high GH
levels, no tumor growth
39Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Class II Trial 2
- Entry criteria hormone excess or local invasion
s/p surgery and EBRT (21 pts 13 GH, 4 ACTH, 1
PRL, 3 null cell) - Median follow up 33 mo GH 12/13 w/ ? in disease
activity 4/4 ACTH better clinically but w/
continued ? ACTH PRL pt progressed despite SRS
2/3 null cell tumors controlled - No visual deficits
40Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Pituitary adenoma and SRS summary
- SRS typically used as adjunct to microsurgical or
medical treatment - Particularly helpful in more difficult tumors
such as GH and ACTH - Low incidence of optic nerve injury
41Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Jugular Foramen Tumors
- Paragangliomas (glomus tumors), schwannomas,
meningiomas - May present with pulsatile tinnitus, hearing
loss, pain, or lower cranial nerve dysfunction - 1 Class III study
- Entry criteria residual or newly diagnosed tumor
(25 pts)
42Adult Benign Brain Tumors
- Jugular Foramen Tumors and SRS
- Median follow up 38.7 mo 11 pts w/ tumor
shrinkage, 13 unchanged, 1 w/ slight increase - 16 w/ improvement in neurological exam, 9 w/
unchanged exam
43Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Brain Metastases
- Account for 20-30 of all supratentorial brain
tumors most common brain tumor overall - Most common metastatic tumors
- Sources lung 45, breast 10, renal 7, GI 6,
melanoma 3 - Incidence testes 46, melanoma 40, lung 21,
breast 9 - When imaged w/ MRI, the majority of pts present
with gt 1 metastasis
44Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Brain metastases and SRS
- 2 studies with Class I evidence
- 3 studies with Class II evidence
- Many with Class III evidence
45Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Class I Study 1
- Entry criteria histologic confirmation of tumor
type, all mets lt 25 mm diameter, pts w/ 2-4 mets
on contrast MRI, Karnofsky score gt 70 (no
surgery) - Group 1 whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT) (14
pts) Group 2 WBRT SRS (13 pts) - Trial stopped at 27 mo follow up due to
significant benefit in Group 2 - median survival Group 1-7.5 mo v. Group 2 -11 mo
- median time to local failure in Group 2-36 mo
46Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Class I study 2
- Entry criteria contrast MRI w/ 1-3 mets, max
tumor diameter 4 cm with no other met gt 3 cm,
Karnofsky gt 70, NL coagulation and blood count,
no brain stem mets, no tumor within 1 cm of optic
chiasm, no treatment of systemic cancer within 1
mo of proposed SRS - Group 1 WBRT (167 pts) Group 2 WBRT SRS (164
pts) - No significant survival difference for pts w/
multiple mets - Significant survival advantage in Group 2 for pts
w/ single met, improved Karnofsky scores, ?
steroid use - 43 greater chance of developing recurrence in
Group 1
47Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Class II and III studies
- Demonstrate shift in cause of death from brain
mets to systemic disease - Establish SRS dosing based on size of tumor
- Local control rate gt 90 at 1 yr follow up
- Smaller tumors with better control rate
- Improved functional outcome (KPS) and neurologic
exam in pts treated with SRS - Single met with better survival than multiple
- SRS effective with relatively radioresistant
tumors such as melanoma, colon ca
48Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Brain metastases and SRS summary
- SRS important primary or adjunct treatment for
pts w/ brain metastases - SRS WBRT shown to have improved overall
survival and functional capacity over WBRT alone - Smaller and fewer mets associated with improved
survival - SRS shifts cause of death from brain mets to
systemic disease
49Adult Metastatic Tumors
- Uveal melanoma
- SRS as alternative to enucleation
- 1 Class III study w/ 81 pts
- Median follow up 15 mo local control rate 87,
tumor regression in 60, stabilization in 24,
progression in 16 - Visual improvement in 15
- 10/12 pts with tumor progression underwent
enucleation - 10 pts w/ optic nerve damage, 11 w/ iris damage,
4 w/ vitreous hemorrhage
50Adult Spine Tumors
- SRS and spine CyberKnife only territory
- Do not attempt this at home
- Useful for primary and metastatic, malignant and
benign disease - Question Will extracranial tumors respond to
CyberKnife radiosurgery in a similar manner to
intracranial tumors treated with traditional
radiosurgical devices?
51Adult Spine Tumors
- Spine tumors and SRS
- 3 Class II studies (2 studies same pt group)
- 1 Class III study
- Class II studies 1 and 2
- Entry criteria pain or progressive neurological
deficit, may have SRS as primary therapy or
adjunct to EBRT or surgery, malignant or benign
disease, Karnofsky gt 50, no overt spine
instability, no neurologic deficit from bony
compression (may have had compression from
tumor), prior radiation treatments not exceeding
maximum dose tolerance of spinal cord (125 pts) - All pts treated with single dose radiosurgery
52Adult Spine Tumors
- Class II studies 1 and 2
- Median follow up 18 mo
- 74/79 pts w/ pain prior to treatment with
significant relief - 16/18 pts w/ myelopathy from tumor compression
had improvement in symptoms - 2/18 w/ myelopathy progressed to complete
paraplegia - No radiation myelopathy at 27 mo follow up
53Adult Spine Tumors
- Class II study 3
- benign spine lesions only (neurofibroma,
paraganglioma, schwannoma, meningioma, spinal
chordoma, hemangioma - Entry criteria no overt instability or
neurologic deficit from bony compression, prior
radiation did not exceed tolerance of spinal cord
(15 pts) - All pts w/ single treatment
- All pts w/ pain prior to treatment pain free at 1
mo follow up
54Adult Spine Tumors
- Class III study
- 10 tumors (5 mets, 2 schwannomas, 1
hemangioblastoma, 1 meningioma, 1 chordoma), 6
vascular malformations - Treated in 1-5 staged radiosurgical treatments
- Follow up 3-48 mo local tumor control in 6/10
55Adult Spine Tumors
- Spine tumors and SRS summary
- CyberKnife has gained acceptance as a primary or
adjunct treatment for all types of spine tumors - May be used in malignant and benign disease
- Excellent treatment for pain due to bony or
neural compression - Neurologic symptoms due to tumor compression no
bar to treatment - Thus fartumors outside of the brain seem to
respond to CyberKnife SRS in a manner similar to
those in the brain
56Intractable Cancer Pain
- Often due to bony metastases
- We respect and value the dignity of each human
life at all stages of development and conditions.
We seek to promote good health and well-being
while at the same time strive to relieve
suffering and address its causes. We believe this
service is an opportunity for all involved to
come to a deeper understanding of the true
meaning and gift of life. - Primum non nocere
57Intractable Cancer Pain
- 1 Class II study
- Entry criteria pain related to bony metastases,
Karnofsky gt 40, all prior pain treatments
inadequate except morphine, no prior brain
radiation (9 pts) - Some Class III evidence
58Intractable Cancer Pain
- SRS treatment of entire pituitary w/160 Gy
- Follow up 1-24 mo all pts pain free within first
few days following treatment - No hormonal dysfunction
- Mechanism? Possible release of endorphins
mimicking action of morphine
59Summary SRS for Brain and Spine Tumors
- CyberKnife SRS useful in both brain and spine
tumors - Malignant and benign disease including
radioresistant tumors - Increases mean survival in many cases and halts
tumor progression in others - Excellent at relieving pain from bone metastases
or neural compression - Useful as primary therapy or as adjunct to
chemotherapy, EBRT or surgery
60Accessing the CyberKnife
- Physician referral to St. Johns Radiosurgery
Center - CK intake form with short pt vignette and most
recent radiographic images (XR, CT, MRI, or PET) - Review of each case by team of radiation
oncologist and surgeon - Notification to referring MD
61CyberKnife Patient Care Package
- Total pt care package
- Outpatient treatments
- Branson shows, golf, fish, fine dining
62CyberKnife Radiosurgery at St. Johns CME
Credit Documents
- In order to receive CME credit, please use your
mouse pointer and left click on the link below.
When the document is opened, print the document,
complete the information and return it to the
address listed on the form. Thank you for
participating. - Link CME Form Post Test - CyberKnife
Radiosurgery at St. John's