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  4. Impact of biologically effective dose on tremor decrease after stereotactic radiosurgical thalamotomy for essential tremor: a retrospective longitudinal analysis
 
research article

Impact of biologically effective dose on tremor decrease after stereotactic radiosurgical thalamotomy for essential tremor: a retrospective longitudinal analysis

Tuleasca, Constantin  
•
Carey, Guillaume
•
Barriol, Romain
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January 31, 2024
Neurosurgical Review

Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is one of the surgical alternatives for drug-resistant essential tremor (ET). Here, we aimed at evaluating whether biologically effective dose (BEDGy2.47) is relevant for tremor improvement after stereotactic radiosurgical thalamotomy in a population of patients treated with one (unplugged) isocenter and a uniform dose of 130 Gy. This is a retrospective longitudinal single center study. Seventy-eight consecutive patients were clinically analyzed. Mean age was 69.1 years (median 71, range 36-88). Mean follow-up period was 14 months (median 12, 3-36). Tremor improvement was assessed at 12 months after SRS using the ET rating assessment scale (TETRAS, continuous outcome) and binary (binary outcome). BED was defined for an alpha/beta of 2.47, based upon previous studies considering such a value for the normal brain. Mean BED was 4573.1 Gy(2.47) (median 4612, 4022.1-4944.7). Mean beam-on time was 64.7 min (median 61.4; 46.8-98.5). There was a statically significant correlation between delta (follow-up minus baseline) in TETRAS (total) with BED (p = 0.04; beta coefficient - 0.029) and beam-on time (p = 0.03; beta coefficient 0.57) but also between TETRAS (ADL) with BED (p = 0.02; beta coefficient 0.038) and beam-on time (p = 0.01; beta coefficient 0.71). Fractional polynomial multivariate regression suggested that a BED > 4600 Gy(2.47) and a beam-on time > 70 min did not further increase clinical efficacy (binary outcome). Adverse radiation events (ARE) were defined as larger MR signature on 1-year follow-up MRI and were present in 7 out of 78 (8.9%) cases, receiving a mean BED of 4650 Gy(2.47 )(median 4650, range 4466-4894). They were clinically relevant with transient hemiparesis in 5 (6.4%) patients, all with BED values higher than 4500 Gy(2.47). Tremor improvement was correlated with BED Gy(2.47 )after SRS for drug-resistant ET. An optimal BED value for tremor improvement was 4300-4500 Gy(2.47). ARE appeared for a BED of more than 4500 Gy2.47. Such finding should be validated in larger cohorts.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1007/s10143-024-02296-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:001154431300001

Author(s)
Tuleasca, Constantin  
Carey, Guillaume
Barriol, Romain
Touzet, Gustavo
Dubus, Francois
Luc, Defebvre
Carriere, Nicolas
Reyns, Nicolas
Date Issued

2024-01-31

Publisher

Springer

Published in
Neurosurgical Review
Volume

47

Issue

1

Start page

73

Subjects

Life Sciences & Biomedicine

•

Biologically Effective Dose

•

Essential Tremor

•

Radiosurgery

•

Tetras

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTS5  
FunderGrant Number

University of Lausanne

Available on Infoscience
February 23, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/205446
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