Hyperthermia delivered by scanned focused ultrasound was combined with external beam radiation to treat 15 patients with primary malignant tumors of the brain. A preliminary craniectomy was performed to avoid attenuation of the ultrasound beam by the skull, and multiple thermal sensors were employed to ascertain intratumoral temperatures. The target temperature was 42.5 degrees C at the tumor boundary. This was attained at more than one point during every complete treatment, while a mean temperature in excess of 42 degrees C was achieved within the scanned tumor volume during at least 1 treatment in 11 patients. Technical problems and toxicities are described.
Malignant sweat gland neoplasms are rare tumors. Historically, the principal mode of treatment has been local surgical excision. Eight published studies show that greater than 50% of patients develop either local tumor recurrence after surgery or regional lymph node metastases. Most patients have evidence of locoregional failure before distant metastases are detected. Three patients were recently referred to the University of Arizona Cancer Center for consideration of irradiation after resection of such tumors. In two patients, the tumor was located on the scalp and, in one patient, on the alar surface of the nose. Their ages ranged from 19 to 60 years. All underwent surgical resection followed by high-dose irradiation of the surgical bed (approximately 70 Gy) and regional lymphatic chains (approximately 50 Gy). Two patients remain disease-free at 27 and 35 months, respectively, after completion of treatment; the third died of rapidly progressive systemic metastases. A review of the literature is provided focusing on treatment success and predominant patterns of recurrence. Finally, a rational approach for evaluation of patients that might benefit from local irradiation is presented.
Treatment of paragangliomas of the temporal bone (glomus jugulare and glomus tympanicum tumors) is controversial, with both surgery and radiation therapy having their advocates. This paper discusses the experience at the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center in treating 10 cases of this uncommon tumor between 1971 and 1988. Seven of 10 cases were initially treated using irradiation and achieved complete tumor control for a mean of 67 months (range = 23-107 months). Two patients, one treated surgically and the other by embolization, had recurrences and were salvaged by radiation, and neither has recurred. The final patient is disease-free 9 months after embolization and surgery. There have been no serious sequelae of treatment. We conclude that moderate-dose irradiation can safely control most temporal bone paragangliomas.
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