Norton Healthcare Provider

Stereotactic radiosurgery offers noninvasive brain tumor treatment

Gamma Knife, CyberKnife, and TrueBeam may sounds like superheroes, but they are actually tools for treating brain tumors. These three machines are used for stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), a non-surgical treatment option that uses high doses of precisely focused radiation beams to destroy cancer cells.

What is Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS)?

Older versions of radiation therapy cast a wide net of radiation around the tumor, which damages the surrounding healthy tissue. These treatments can last over a period of weeks. But new developments in SRS allow practitioners to pinpoint cancer cells with extreme accuracy and can address tumors in less than a week in some cases, compared to the sometimes weeks-long traditional radiation therapy.

Benefits of TrueBeam SRS

SRS at Norton Healthcare

The TrueBeam platform is an innovation on the much older Gamma Knife and CyberKnife platforms. “The advantages of the TrueBeam platform include no invasive head frame like the Gamma Knife, improved tumor localization and increased particle energy compared to both GammaKnife and CyberKnife. For the patient, that means treatment times which are up to 80% faster than either older technology,” said Aaron C. Spalding, MD, PhD, radiation oncologist who serves as the Executive Medical Director for Norton Cancer Institute. He added, “We made sure that the technology available for our patients was the most advanced today. That is our commitment to our region for beyond state of the art care.”

SRS procedures on the brain involve a team of professionals from many areas, including oncologists (cancer doctors), radiation specialists, neurologists (brain doctors) and patient navigators. “The TrueBeam has allowed our advanced team of specialists to push the envelope for faster, safer care,” David A. Sun, M.D., Ph.D., neurosurgeon and executive medical director of Norton Neurosciences Institute.

Comparison of Gamma Knife®, TrueBeam® and CyberKnife®

All three treat the same cancers but they don’t all treat the same parts of the body. While the Gamma Knife can only treat brain tumors, both the TrueBeam and Cyberknife can treat tumors in the body. However, the up to two-hour treatment time of the Cyberknife means more patient discomfort.

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The Brain Tumor Center is a collaboration of Norton Neuroscience Institute and Norton Cancer Institute and offers same-day appointments for newly diagnosed patients. This multidisciplinary program offers the latest in treatment options like TrueBeam.

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TrueBeam and Cyberknife both have robotic surgical systems.

The TrueBeam platform can effectively simultaneously treat 20 or more brain tumors quickly. The result for the patient is of their brain tumors while sparing memory and speech centers, preserving quality of life.

Trust the experts

By choosing the TrueBeam platform, Norton Healthcare is able to fully utilize the training and skill of the medical team using the machines. “There are many ways to achieve the results we want,” David A. Sun, M.D., Ph.D., executive medical director of Norton Neurosciences Institute. “We use all the skills and tools at our disposal to offer the highest levels of stereotactic radiosurgery care.”

“We have a team of highly trained experts, and we use the best skills of all of our players,” Dr. Sun said. “And that makes all the difference in the world.”