Radiobiology of radiosurgery for the central nervous system

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Abstract

According to Leksell radiosurgery is defined as "the delivery of a single, high dose of irradiation to a small and critically located intracranial volume through the intact skull." Before its birth in the early 60s and its introduction in clinical therapeutic protocols in late the 80s dose application in radiation therapy of the brain for benign and malignant lesions was based on the administration of cumulative dose into a variable number of fractions. The rationale of dose fractionation is to lessen the risk of injury of normal tissue surrounding the target volume. Radiobiological studies of cell culture lines of malignant tumors and clinical experience with patients treated with conventional fractionated radiotherapy helped establishing this radiobiological principle. Radiosurgery provides a single high dose of radiation which translates into a specific toxic radiobiological response. Radiobiological investigations to study the effect of high dose focused radiation on the central nervous system began in late the 50s. It is well known currently that radiobiological principles applied for dose fractionation are not reproducible when single high dose of ionizing radiation is delivered. A review of the literature about radiobiology of radiosurgery for the central nervous system is presented. © 2013 Antonio Santacroce et al.

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Santacroce, A., Kamp, M. A., Budach, W., & Hänggi, D. (2013). Radiobiology of radiosurgery for the central nervous system. BioMed Research International. Hindawi Publishing Corporation. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/362761

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