A Pilot Study of Hypofractionated Radiosurgery for Trigeminal Neuralgia
Sophia N Shah, Praneet Kaki, Sohan S Shah, Sunjay A Shah

TL;DR
This study tested a three-fraction radiosurgery approach for trigeminal neuralgia but found it caused high facial numbness without better pain control.
Contribution
The study evaluates a hypofractionated radiosurgery regimen for trigeminal neuralgia as a potential alternative to single-fraction treatments.
Findings
84% of patients experienced adequate pain relief within 1.5 months, but 25% experienced treatment failure by 6 months.
Facial numbness occurred in 50% of patients, with a median onset of 10 months post-treatment.
Hypofractionated treatment did not reduce late facial numbness and had similar pain relief rates to conventional methods.
Abstract
The primary late toxicity of radiosurgery treatment for trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is facial numbness due to trigeminal nerve dysfunction. Although most patients prefer loss of facial sensation to TN, severe loss of facial sensation can be debilitating. In order to try to obtain high pain control rates while minimizing the risk of late facial numbness, we elected to treat patients on the distal trigeminal nerve with a three-fraction regimen over consecutive days instead of one fraction. Our goal was to relieve the pain while also allowing the trigeminal nerve time to repair radiation damage between treatments in an attempt to minimize the risk of permanent facial numbness. Patients in a pilot study, approved by an Institutional Review Board (IRB), received a treatment regimen of 99 Gy, administered in three consecutive daily fractions of 33 Gy each, with the dosage targeted to the 80%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTrigeminal Neuralgia and Treatments · Facial Nerve Paralysis Treatment and Research · Meningioma and schwannoma management
