DURAL CAROTID-CAVERNOUS FISTULAS - ROLE OF CONVENTIONAL RADIATION-THERAPY - LONG-TERM RESULTS WITH IRRADIATION, EMBOLIZATION, OR BOTH

Citation
T. Hirai et al., DURAL CAROTID-CAVERNOUS FISTULAS - ROLE OF CONVENTIONAL RADIATION-THERAPY - LONG-TERM RESULTS WITH IRRADIATION, EMBOLIZATION, OR BOTH, Radiology, 207(2), 1998, pp. 423-430
Citations number
33
Categorie Soggetti
Radiology,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Journal title
ISSN journal
00338419
Volume
207
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
423 - 430
Database
ISI
SICI code
0033-8419(1998)207:2<423:DCF-RO>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate the long-term results of irradiation alone or of embolization with or without irradiation in patients with dural caroti d cavernous fistulas (DCCFs). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Between 1984 and 1996, symptomatic DCCFs in 26 patients were treated by using irradiati on alone (protocol 1, n = 12) before April 1988 and by using embolizat ion as an initial treatment (protocol 2, n = 14) during and after Apri l 1988. When angiography showed no improvement after embolization, irr adiation was added (n = 6). On the basis of drainage flow speed, DCCFs were classified as fast, medium, or slow. RESULTS: With irradiation a lone, all six patients with slow- to medium-type DCCFs had cure with a mean follow-up of 62 months. Four of six patients with fast-type DCCF s had cure or improvement, but the remaining two had no change. In the embolization group, irradiation was added in six patients with fast-t ype DCCFs. With a mean follow-up of 24 months, four of the six patient s had cures, one had improvement, and one had no clinical change. Thos e who underwent protocol 2 had cures significantly earlier than those who underwent protocol 1 (P < .05). CONCLUSION: Conventional radiation therapy resulted in cure of DCCFs in nine (75%) of the 12 patients an in improvement of signs and symptoms in one (8%). Fast-type DCCFs may not always be improved. Radiation therapy may be useful in DCCFs afte r embolization.