The Brain Tumor Center of Excellence of Wake Forest University was formed in June 2003 -- the realization of a dream of three of our leading physicians and the chair of the Department of Neurosurgery.
With the goal of being a national leader in patient care and research, the Center has built its program with three basic components: an excellent group of clinicians, a world-class researcher to direct the Center, and a mission to grow the clinical and basic research programs to a magnitude that would place Wake Forest among the top six brain tumor centers in the United States.
Patients come from all over North Carolina, the Southeast and beyond to seek care from this team of highly experienced, nationally recognized experts in all facets of brain tumor treatment and study.
Significant strides have been made in our research goals. The Brain Tumor Center of Excellence has three areas of research focus:
· Novel therapeutics – identifying innovative treatments that will improve outcome.
· Bioanatomic imaging – identifying the unique signatures of a cancer through non-invasive imaging of tumor biology, chemistry and physiology, thus allowing individual treatment planning.
· Radiation-induced brain injury – understanding the mechanisms of injury and ways to prevent and treat side-effects of brain tumor therapy.
Each year, approximately 17,500 primary brain tumors and 150,000 to 250,000 metastatic brain tumors are diagnosed in the United States. Brain tumors are the most common cause of death from childhood cancers, and the cure rate in adults is 1 percent to 5 percent.
It has been said that if a cure could be found for brain cancer, it would solve the mystery of all human cancer. Our goal is to solve that mystery.
Gamma Knife Stereotactic Radiosurgery
Gamma Knife versus Cyberknife – important differences in capabilities
Since Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center opened North Carolina’s premiere Gamma Knife sterotactic radiosurgery center in 1999, patients have come from across the nation to benefit from this non-invasive, state-of-the-art treatment. Our Center boasts one of the most experienced radiosurgical treatment teams in the United States, and is one of the most active Gamma Knife Centers in the country.
The Gamma Knife is a method of delivering an ultra-precise dose of radiation to treat a variety of benign and malignant lesions and conditions in the brain, including brain metastases, trigeminal neuralgia, acoustic neuroma, vascular malformations, meningiomas, malignant gliomas, pituitary adenomas, and skull base lesions. All patients undergo multidisciplinary evaluation with neurosurgery, radiation oncology, and where appropriate medical oncology, pediatric oncology, neurology, otolaryngology, and interventional radiology. On a weekly basis, a Gamma Knife conference is held by the entire team at which our own cases as well as sent-in consultations are reviewed.
3D Conformal and Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy
Among the newer treatment options for cancer of the prostate, brain, lung, and head and neck are two methods of focusing radiation on the tumor and surrounding at-risk tissues while optimally sparing nearby normal tissues, 3-dimensional (3D) conformal radiation therapy, and intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). This approach uses anatomic computed tomogrphic and/or magnetic resonance images of the patient, computer-generated radiation dose calculations, and a computer-controlled linear accelerator to conform or “paint” the radiation dose very precisely to match the shape of the tumor to be treated, avoiding critical structures that may be only millimeters away.
When the linear accelerator radiation beam intensity is varied, or modulated, over space and time during the patient’s treatment, hence the term “Intensity Modulated” radiation therapy. In combination with advanced imaging techniques like magnetic resonance spectroscopy and positron emission tomography that image both tumor anatomy and biology, IMRT holds great promise for improving local tumor control and survival, even in the most resistant and aggressive human cancers.
Brachytherapy
Brachytherapy, which literally means “short therapy”, involves the implantation of radioactive sources in or near a tumor, a procedure which typically involves the collaboration of a surgical oncologist and radiation oncologist. A full range of brachytherapy treatment options are available for treating cancers of the prostate, breast cervix, uterus, vagina, head and neck, soft tissues, brain, and eye. In fact, with the availability of both high dose rate (HDR) and low dose rate (LDR) brachytherapy technology and expertise, virtually any area of the body can be implanted if appropriate. Brachytherapy is often used as a “boost” in conjunction with external beam radiation, particularly for locally advanced cancers.