WHAT IS CYBERKNIFE?
The CyberKnife is a robotic stereotactic radiosurgery system that achieves
surgical like results using highly focused radiation to kill benign or malignant
tumors. The system consists of a compact linear accelerator mounted on a robotic
arm. It is controlled by computers and guided by real-time x-ray images
throughout the delivery of high dose radiation. The robotic system is able to
detect and adjust for minute changes in patient or target position, even locking
on to a target that moves during breathing.
WHAT DISEASES DOES CYBERKNIFE TREAT?
CyberKnife treats tumors and benign lesions of the brain, spine and soft
tissue in areas such as lung, liver, pancreas and prostate. Primary and
metastatic tumors as well as functional diseases, such as arterial
venous malformations (AVM’s) and trigeminal neuralgia, can be treated by
CyberKnife.
WHEN IS CYBERKNIFE STEREOTACTIC RADIOSURGERY AN APPROPRIATE TREATMENT
OPTION?
Radiosurgery is not an appropriate treatment option for every
patient or disease. CyberKnife is appropriate whenever stereotactic radiosurgery
is appropriate. CyberKnife stereotactic radiosurgery is often used in
conjunction with traditional therapies such as radiation therapy, chemotherapy
or surgery. CyberKnife may also be the best, or the only, option for some
patients in the following circumstances:
- recurrence of a tumor next to a critical structure such as the spine, that
has already received its
maximum lifetime dose of radiation
- tumor
located close to a critical structure such as optic nerves, where traditional
radiation therapy
would pose significant risk of damage to that structure
- when a surgical approach would be too difficult
- when surgery is unable to
remove all of the diseased tissue
- when the patient is unable or unwilling
to undergo traditional surgery.
WHAT IS INVOLVED WITH A CYBERKNIFE TREATMENT?
The patient and their primary care physician may seek a CyberKnife
consultation with the CyberKnife clinical team. Every consultation includes the
CyberKnife radiation oncologist and surgeon. If treatment
is appropriate, the CyberKnife coordinator arranges for imaging studies from
which the CyberKnife surgeon, radiation oncologist and physicist jointly plan
and approve a course of treatment. The treatment is completed in 1 to 5 sessions
lasting 45 to 90 minutes.
IS A CYBERKNIFE TREATMENT LIKE RADIATION THERAPY?
Although both methods use high energy radiation, stereotactic radiosurgery
differs from traditional radiation therapy or intensity modulated radiation
therapy in several ways. CyberKnife treatments are more accurate due to the
ability of the robot to point to the target from more than 1,000 possible
positions with sub millimeter precision. This means that the target can be fully
treated while minimizing radiation to immediately adjacent structures. High
accuracy enables a full treatment in 1 to 5 sessions rather than 25 to 40
sessions.
CyberKnife is “patient centric” meaning that the system finds and then adjusts
itself to the location of the patient and tumor. There is a much wider variety
of treatment angles and fields for the computer to choose
from. Gamma Knife radiosurgery and linear accelerator (gantry) based treatments
are “isocentric” meaning that the target must be brought into the center or
focal point of the treatment device. A rigid head
frame is required for gantry based or Gamma Knife radiosurgery, which is
confined to targets within the brain. CyberKnife does not require the use of a
rigid frame so targets can be treated throughout the body.
WHAT ARE THE ADVANTAGES AND LIMITATIONS OF CYBERKNIFE?
CyberKnife achieves surgical like results without open surgery. Hence there
is no anesthesia, no blood loss, and no post-surgical recovery. Patients
typically resume normal activity on completion of the
procedure. CyberKnife stereotactic radiosurgery is appropriate wherever
traditional stereotactic radiosurgery is indicated. Historically, stereotactic
radiosurgery has been confined to intracranial lesions.
The clinical literature for soft tissue radiosurgery is being developed, as
CyberKnife is the first technology that is able to perform this type of
treatment beginning in 2001.
WHY DID UNITED HEALTH SERVICES DECIDE TO INITIATE A CYBERKNIFE PROGRAM AT
WILSON MEMORIAL REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER?
As a leader in bringing world class technology and medicine to the Southern
Tier, United Health Services was eager to acquire CyberKnife technology for its
patients. Our first patient treatments on September 21, 2005 marked the
culmination of nearly 3 years of planning, facility construction and training of
a clinical team comprising radiation oncologists, surgeons, physicists,
radiation therapists and nursing staff. We are proud to be the first CyberKnife
center in New York State and part of a small but rapidly growing number of
centers in the United States and overseas.
As with all medical devices, CyberKnife underwent FDA (Food and Drug
Administration) review and received clearance in 2001 “to provide treatment
planning and image guided stereotactic radiotherapy for
lesions, tumors and conditions anywhere in the body when radiation treatment is
indicated”. To date, thousands of patients worldwide have been treated with
CyberKnife.