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Browsing by Author "Budnick, Hailey C."

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    GammaTile for Gliomas: A Single-Center Case Series
    (Springer Nature, 2021-11) Budnick, Hailey C.; Richardson, Angela M.; Shiue, Kevin; Watson, Gordon; Ng, Sook K.; Le, Yi; Shah, Mitesh V.; Radiation Oncology, School of Medicine
    GammaTile® (GT Medical Technologies, Tempe, Arizona) is a surgically targeted radiation source, approved by FDA for brachytherapy in primary and secondary brain neoplasms. Each GammaTile is composed of a collagen sponge with four seeds of cesium 131 and is particularly useful in recurrent tumors. We report our early experience in seven patients with recurrent gliomas to assess this type of brachytherapy with particular attention to ease of use, complication, and surgical planning. This study represents a retrospective chart review of surgical use and early clinical outcomes of GammaTile in recurrent gliomas. The number of tiles was planned using pre-operative imaging and dosimetry was planned based on post-operative imaging. Patients were followed during their hospital stay and were followed up after discharge. Parameters such as case length, resection extent, complication, ICU length of stay (LOS), hospital LOS, pre-operative Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), immediate post-operative GCS, post-operative imaging findings, recurrence at follow-up, length of follow-up, and dosimetry were collected in a retrospective manner. Seven patients were identified that met the inclusion criteria. Two patients were diagnosed with recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), one lower-grade glioma that recurred as a GBM, one GBM that recurred as a gliosarcoma, and two recurrent oligodendrogliomas. We found that operation time, ICU LOS, hospital LOS, pre- and post-operative GCS, and post-operative complications were within the expected ranges for tumor resection patients. Further, dosimetry data suggests that six out of seven patients received adequate radiation coverage, with the seventh having implantation limitations due to nearby organs at risk. We report no postoperative complications that can be attributed to the GammaTiles themselves. In our cohort, we report seven cases where GammaTiles were implanted in recurrent gliomas. No implant-related post-operative complications were identified. This early data suggests that GammaTile can be a safe form of brachytherapy in recurrent gliomas.
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    Predictors of Seizure Freedom in Pediatric Low-Grade Gliomas
    (Springer Nature, 2022-11-26) Budnick, Hailey C.; Baygani, Shawyon; Easwaran, Teresa; Vortmeyer, Alexander; Jea, Andrew; Desai, Virendra; Raskin, Jeffrey; Neurological Surgery, School of Medicine
    Objective: Pediatric low-grade gliomas (LGGs) are found in approximately one to three percent of patients with childhood epilepsy. Epilepsy in these patients is often medically refractory and therefore represents a unique cohort with significant morbidity from concomitant pathology. Similar studies in adult patients with low-grade gliomas have identified predictors of seizure freedom including gross-total resection, preoperative seizure control on antiepileptic medication and duration of seizures of less than one year. This study aims to identify similar predictors of seizure freedom in operatively managed pediatric LGGs. Methods: A retrospective chart review was performed for patients diagnosed with World Health Organization (WHO) Grade I and II gliomas in patients ≤18 years old at a single institution (Indiana University School of Medicine at Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis, IN) from 2007-2017. Infratentorial and purely intraventricular lesions were excluded. WHO classification and histologic diagnosis were based on surgical pathology. Tumor grade, location, laterality, seizure status at presentation, and AED requirements pre- and post-operatively were recorded. Chi-squared analyses for independence were performed controlling for age at presentation, resection extent, seizure type, and Engel Class for seizure freedom post-operatively. Results: Forty-two patients met the inclusion criteria. Preoperative seizures were observed in 23 patients (55%). Presentation with preoperative seizures was highly associated with continued seizure burden post-operatively, independent of the extent of surgical resection. Supratentorial location and the administration of prophylactic pre- and post-operative AEDs were associated with Engel Class I seizure freedom. Temporal location was not significantly associated with medically refractory epilepsy compared with extra-temporal locations. Conclusions: In our cohort of pediatric LGGs, we find that patients that did not initially present with seizures and those who were treated with prophylactic pre- and post-operative AEDs, were more likely to achieve Engel Class I seizure freedom post-operatively. Tumors located in the temporal location were not significantly associated with a higher seizure burden than other supratentorial, extra-temporal tumors. Neither extent of resection nor electrocorticography-guided resection correlated with improved seizure freedom outcomes during glioma resection.
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    Susceptibility-Weighted MRI Approximates Intraoperative Microelectrode Recording During Deep Brain Stimulation of the Subthalamic Nucleus for Parkinson's Disease
    (Elsevier, 2024-01) Budnick, Hailey C.; Schneider, Dylan; Zauber, S. Elizabeth; Witt, Thomas C.; Gupta, Kunal; Neurological Surgery, School of Medicine
    Background Deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN-DBS) for Parkinson's disease can be performed with intraoperative neurophysiological and radiographic guidance. Conventional T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging sequences, however, often fail to provide definitive borders of the STN. Novel magnetic resonance imaging sequences, such as susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI), might better localize the STN borders and facilitate radiographic targeting. We compared the radiographic location of the dorsal and ventral borders of the STN using SWI with intraoperative microelectrode recording (MER) during awake STN-DBS for Parkinson's disease. Methods Thirteen consecutive patients who underwent placement of 24 STN-DBS leads for Parkinson's disease were analyzed retrospectively. Preoperative targeting was performed with SWI, and MER data were obtained from intraoperative electrophysiology records. The boundaries of the STN on SWI were identified by a blinded investigator. Results The final electrode position differed significantly from the planned coordinates in depth but not in length or width, indicating that MER guided the final electrode depth. When we compared the boundaries of the STN by MER and SWI, SWI accurately predicted the entry into the STN but underestimated the length and ventral boundary of the STN by 1.2 mm. This extent of error approximates the span of a DBS contact and could affect the placement of directional contacts within the STN. Conclusions MER might continue to have a role in STN-DBS. This could potentially be mitigated by further refinement of imaging protocols to better image the ventral boundary of the STN.
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    Thermal Damage Estimate Artifact Following Antecedent Biopsy: A Case Report
    (Springer Nature, 2022-11-26) Bakr, Salma M.; Kantak, Pranish A.; Jimenez, Med Jimson D.; Budnick, Hailey C.; Raskin, Jeffrey; Neurological Surgery, School of Medicine
    MR-guided laser interstitial therapy (MRgLITT) is becoming more commonly used for minimal access approaches to intracranial lesions of all etiologies. The short-term safety profile of MRgLITT is favorable compared with sweeping incisions and open craniotomies, especially for lesions located in deep, periventricular, and highly eloquent areas. The Visualase software (Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, MN, USA) has multiple adaptations to assist with this safety margin, including the thermal damage estimate (TDE), which applies predictive mathematical modeling to a two-dimensional (2D) graphical representation. TDE has been shown to highly correlate with actual tissue destruction in a priori MRgLITT cases and to anecdotally be imprecise when MRgLITT is combined with biopsy. We present a case regarding a 17-year-old male patient with intractable focal epilepsy. He underwent stereotactic biopsy and then ablation where it was shown that TDE is ~35% larger in the coronal plane than in the actual ablation zone. Air may have caused this artifact in the biopsy cavity, which affected the proton resonance frequency (PRF) and caused TDE pigment deposition. We believe in the need for a more comprehensive understanding and investigation regarding this TDE artifact. Future prospective studies into MRgLITT should attend carefully in cases where it is combined with biopsy.
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