Chakrabarti et al. review and promote the adoption of hypofractionated and ultra-hypofractionated (SBRT) schedules for localized prostate cancer, citing radiobiological rationale and recent clinical trials 1).
While superficially related to radiosurgical approaches in neuro-oncology, this review provides no direct insights applicable to neurosurgical practice. It is narrowly focused on prostate cancer and rooted in a radiotherapy culture far removed from neurosurgical clinical decision-making.
The article's usefulness to a neurosurgeon is limited to generic conceptual validation of hypofractionation strategies — already well known in neuro-oncology.
The authors summarize trials like CHHiP, HYPO-RT-PC, and PACE-B, all widely disseminated. No new angle, critique, or hypothesis is introduced. This is academic repackaging, not a review.
*Verdict:* Redundant. We knew all this five years ago.
Despite citing radiobiological justification (low α/β), the article fails to:
*Translation:* Missed opportunity to bridge toward neuro-oncology.
Terms like “noninferiority,” “acceptable toxicity,” and “resource optimization” are used uncritically:
This is marketing wrapped in medical terminology.
No effort is made to extrapolate lessons learned to brain tumors, skull base lesions, or spinal metastases — all areas where SBRT is also evolving.
*For neurosurgeons:* This is not a transferable model; it is organ-specific siloeing.
The article touts “efficiency” and “reduced burden” without exploring:
Efficiency without transparency is just cost-shifting.
A bland, consensus-driven voice with no dissent, no challenge, no clinical doubt. This is institutional publishing — not critical scholarship.
“Safe, effective, efficient” — the academic equivalent of elevator music.
This article has minimal relevance to neurosurgery beyond revalidating an already-known principle: fewer, larger doses can work — in some cancers, in some contexts. It does not inspire, educate, or challenge neurosurgical thinking.
Hypofractionation in neuro-oncology deserves its own mechanistic exploration — not a borrowed script from prostate cancer.
Reviewed by: Neurosurgery Wiki Editorial Board Date: 2025-06-15