World first: Lasers used in keyhole surgery for brain cancer

// added August 30, 2008 // 3 comments //
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In a ground-breaking advance, French neurosurgeons on Friday said they had successfully treated brain tumors through ultra-keyhole surgery, using a tiny fibre-optic laser to destroy cancerous cells.

Alexandre Carpentier of the Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital in Paris said the exploit was "a world-first" in its use of multiple advanced techniques and of local anesthesia rather than general sedation.

So far, eight volunteers have been treated in the pilot programme, launched December 2006, Carpentier told AFP.

"They were suffering from metastasizing brain tumors caused by various cancers, mainly lung and breast cancer that failed to respond to conventional treatment and were otherwise inoperable," he said.

Doctors had given the volunteers only three months left to live, on average.

Under the pioneering technique, a minute hole three millimeters (0.12 of an inch) wide was drilled into the skull, allowing the surgeon to introduce a water-cooled fibre-optic laser into the brain.

The device was gently guided towards the tumor area with the help of a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner.

Every three seconds, a computer workstation calculated the temperature at the area being burned by the laser to ensure that there was no dangerous overheating and to confirm that only tumorous cells were being destroyed.

The patient received only a local anesthetic, remaining conscious in order to be able to speak to the medical team to help verify that cerebral functions were not being harmed.

However, "the patients feels nothing during the operation and generally can leave hospital 14 hours later, the evening or the morning after the operation," the surgeon said.

The results are "conclusive," said Carpentier.

Treating the patients completely requires two or more bouts of surgery, and there had been no cases of cerebral bruising or epilepsy.

So far, six of the eight have completed the full programme. Of the six, five have not had a relapse -- a return of cancerous cells to the brain -- at a nine-month monitoring point.

"This is the first time that laser technology has been used intracranially, meaning inside an enclosed skull, using MRI in real time to avoid collateral damage," said Carpentier.

"This is the forerunner of future techniques in which MRI will play a core intervention role in neurosurgery."

The pilot trial, reported in the latest issue of the US journal Neurosurgery, was carried out under the supervision of the French Health Products Safety Agency (Afssaps).

It drew on advanced technology supplied by the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, and a Texan company, BioTex Inc., which specializes in the use of lasers for medical therapy.
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3 comments // World first: Lasers used in keyhole surgery for brain cancer

  • andyux
    • 0
      andyux  
    • Lindsey, good point; however, there are no robotics involved n this procedure. There is software and hardware that work together with MRI to provide real-time data that is used to predict treatment options and see the progress, yet a neurosurgeon manually places the probe in the treatment area and has full control of the process at all times. Check their website or more info www.visualaseinc.com

    • 1 month ago
  • andyux
  • LindseyIndigo
    • 0
      LindseyIndigo  
    • Very interesting news. I think greater use of robotics in surgery has to be closely monitored, but this sounds amazing. It must be so scary being in this 'guinea pig' situation though - being unwell is horrible enough if you have a fair idea what the outcome of any treatment could be, but to not even know what could happen - the people involved are incredibly brave.

    • 1 year ago

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