Johannesburg, 11 December 2017 – Since launching in April 2017, the Leksell Gamma Knife Icon (Gamma Knife) radiosurgery technology at Netcare Milpark Hospital in Johannesburg has helped 121 patients requiring treatment for either malignant or benign brain, head or neck tumours. 

The Gamma Knife delivers exceptional precision and accuracy, using 192 radiation beams generated from radioactive cobalt and targeted to a specific area affected by a tumour. Its high level of precision and ability to focus on an exact target ensures that the risk of the inaccuracies and radiation affecting healthy tissue are minimal. 

The cutting-edge technology is a first for the Southern Hemisphere and fourth globally, and was introduced to South Africa by Gamma KnifeSA – a collaboration between  Eurolab, a local market-leading oncology company and Netcare, South Africa’s largest private hospital group. 

Lynne du Toit, CEO of Eurolab, says the Gamma Knife places South Africa on the map to providing patients with the benefits of a less surgically-invasive treatment, which has already treated over one million patients around the world, and makes cancer treatment more affordable to South Africans. 

“This world-class radiosurgery technology has already started changing the lives of South Africans living with cancer, and it is these patients that drive everything we do at Eurolab,” says du Toit. “Our whole-of-cancer approach focuses on the patient, their health, and relieving their financial stress, during and after their life-threatening illness.” 

In comparison to traditional radiation approaches, the benefits to Gamma Knife treatment are substantial. Gamma Knife treatment spares surrounding healthy tissue and provides higher and more effective treatment doses in fewer treatments resulting in reduced patient recovery time. 

A patient’s individual Gamma Knife treatment plan is formulated by a specialised multidisciplinary team and is usually completed in a few hours, with little to no side effects. 

“While local treatment success rates can only be successfully evaluated after a 6 to 18 month cycle per patient, the global growth rate of functional cases treated with Gamma Knife in the last five years is currently 49.2%,” says du Toit. 

The Gamma Knife can also be used for treatment of recurrent gliomas, acoustic neuromas (vestibular schwannomas), post-surgical pituitary tumours, vascular malformations, trigeminal neuralgia and medication-refractory essential tremors. 

“With high costs associated to travelling abroad, South African patients no longer have to travel overseas to receive this advanced radiosurgery treatment. Eurolab offers an uncompromising commitment to our whole-of-cancer approach, including investing in bringing the Gamma Knife to South Africa, in partnership with Netcare,” says du Toit. 

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