Abstract

Twenty patients with intracranial ependymoma (16) or anaplastic ependymoma (4) received post-operative radiation therapy at the University of California, San Francisco from 1959 through 1981. No patient received prophylactic spinal irradiation. The actuarial survival at 5, 10, and 15 years for 15 patients with ependymoma who received greater than 45 Gy was 67, 57, and 46%, respectively. Only one patient (7%) developed clinically recognized spinal metastases; this patient was eventually shown to have tumor at the primary site, within the irradiated volume. Six of 11 patients treated with partial brain irradiation had an intracranial recurrence, versus 1 of 4 patients treated with whole brain irradiation. Three patients were autopsied after failing partial brain irradiation for an ependymoma and the site of failure was within the irradiated volume of each patient. Partial brain irradiation was used to treat 4 patients with anaplastic ependymoma. One developed a local recurrence within the irradiated volume. The other three survived longer than 10 years. At UCSF, most patients with low grade epeadymmmms are presently treated with partial brain irradiation, but whole brain plus spinal irradiation is used for anaplastic tumors.

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