Rolf-Dieter Kortmann, Clemens Seidel, Klaus Müller, Franz Wolfgang Hirsch
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Attainment of local control is a cornerstone in the management of brain tumors in children. Treatment of progressive low-grade and all high-grade gliomas traditionally includes resection followed by fractionated radiotherapy (FRT) or FRT alone in neoplasms not amenable to surgical removal. While in younger children chemotherapy is typically used as a first-line non-surgical management option, FRT in such patients remains the standard of salvage therapy. Recent improvements in techniques for radiation treatment planning and delivery allow conformal and selective coverage of the target volume with a prescribed dose, sparing adjacent normal tissues to assure maximal tumor control and minimal toxicity. Implementation of novel functional and metabolic neuroimaging allows better delineation of the lesion margins and organs at risk, which also reduces the incidence of adverse effects. Further improvements of outcome after radiation treatment of pediatric gliomas may be expected with wider application of intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), proton therapy, and stereotactic techniques, including brachytherapy.
期刊介绍:
Published since 1966, this series has become universally recognized as the most significant group of books serving neurological surgeons. Volumes feature contributions from distinguished international surgeons, who brilliantly review the literature from the perspective of their own personal experience. The result is a series of works providing critical distillations of developments of central importance to the theory and practice of neurological surgery.