Proton Therapy Reduces Side Effects for Pediatric Head, Neck Cancer Patients
|
By MedImaging International staff writers Posted on 09 Oct 2013 |
The precise targeting and careful dosing of radiation using proton therapy is beneficial in continuing efforts to reduce treatment side effects among head and neck cancer patients, according to a new study of pediatric patients.
The study’s findings were presented September 23, 2013, at the 55th annual meeting of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) conference, held in Atlanta, GA, USA. “Children are especially susceptible to the side effects of radiation therapy, and treating them for head and neck cancers poses an additional challenge due to the risk of radiation to developing tissues,” said the study’s lead author, Christine Hill-Kayser, MD, an assistant professor of radiation oncology in Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania’s (Philadelphia, USA) Abramson Cancer Center. “Our findings using proton therapy for these patients, however, show that side effects are milder than those which are typically seen among children undergoing conventional radiation. We hope that this will translate to mean fewer late effects as they survive their cancer.”
Although physicians have hypothesized about reduced toxicity and side effects with proton therapy because the modality spares most normal tissue from damage, clinical data on the new approach have not yet matured, particularly among pediatric cancer patients. The present study sought to shed more light on the issue by tracking a group of 25 patients, ranging in age from 1 to 21 years, all of whom received proton therapy at Penn Medicine’s Roberts Proton Therapy as part of their treatment for a range of head and neck cancers, including Ewing’s sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and salivary gland tumors. Treatment toxicity was evaluated weekly during proton treatment and every one to three months after that.
After a median of 13 months after treatment, 19 patients (76%) have no evidence of disease, three patients (12%) had developed local recurrence, and five (20%) had tumors that seemed to be stable. One patient died of their cancer. The investigators noted that these outcomes are typically similar to those that would be expected with more conventional X-ray therapy. More importantly, however, were the greatly reduced side effects seen in the study, compared to the prevalence seen among head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy. “The side-effects profile was really very mild, with basically no high-grade toxicity,” said Dr. Hill-Kayser, who conducted the study along with colleagues from both Penn Medicine and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
The most common side effects were fatigue and dermatitis. The researchers noted that while skin reactions are frequently observed during radiation treatment, this study seemed to indicate a somewhat greater reaction than expected when proton treatment was followed by specific chemotherapeutic agents, including actinomycin-d and doxorubicin, which can interact with radiation and cause radiation sensitivity. That finding helped the researcher to further customize their approach to minimize that side effect. “If we started those drugs right away after proton therapy, it seemed the dermatitis was worse,” Dr. Hill-Kayser said. “So we learned that after proton therapy, we wanted to hold those drugs and not give them for a month to six weeks, so the patient had time to recover from the skin toxicity before it got worse.”
Another typical side effect of radiation therapy—particularly among head and neck cancer patients—can be weight loss and nutritional problems, but those were also only found to be a slight concern for the patients in the current study. “It’s common to lose some weight during radiation treatment because the mouth and throat get inflamed, but we found that very few patients in our study lost more than 10% of their body weight during the course of treatment. We found that we could minimize that weight loss by using a gastrostomy tube to give tube feedings, but even when we didn't do that, the weight loss was manageable. This was likely the case because proton therapy allowed us to decrease the radiation dose to the mouth and throat compared to equivalent plans using X-ray therapy.”
Over one to three months, all of the study patients fully recovered from any acute side effects from the proton treatment. Dr. Hill-Kayser expects that this research will help to support the growing consensus that “pediatrics is one of the areas where proton therapy is going to provide a lot of benefit.”
Related Links:
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
The study’s findings were presented September 23, 2013, at the 55th annual meeting of the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) conference, held in Atlanta, GA, USA. “Children are especially susceptible to the side effects of radiation therapy, and treating them for head and neck cancers poses an additional challenge due to the risk of radiation to developing tissues,” said the study’s lead author, Christine Hill-Kayser, MD, an assistant professor of radiation oncology in Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania’s (Philadelphia, USA) Abramson Cancer Center. “Our findings using proton therapy for these patients, however, show that side effects are milder than those which are typically seen among children undergoing conventional radiation. We hope that this will translate to mean fewer late effects as they survive their cancer.”
Although physicians have hypothesized about reduced toxicity and side effects with proton therapy because the modality spares most normal tissue from damage, clinical data on the new approach have not yet matured, particularly among pediatric cancer patients. The present study sought to shed more light on the issue by tracking a group of 25 patients, ranging in age from 1 to 21 years, all of whom received proton therapy at Penn Medicine’s Roberts Proton Therapy as part of their treatment for a range of head and neck cancers, including Ewing’s sarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and salivary gland tumors. Treatment toxicity was evaluated weekly during proton treatment and every one to three months after that.
After a median of 13 months after treatment, 19 patients (76%) have no evidence of disease, three patients (12%) had developed local recurrence, and five (20%) had tumors that seemed to be stable. One patient died of their cancer. The investigators noted that these outcomes are typically similar to those that would be expected with more conventional X-ray therapy. More importantly, however, were the greatly reduced side effects seen in the study, compared to the prevalence seen among head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy. “The side-effects profile was really very mild, with basically no high-grade toxicity,” said Dr. Hill-Kayser, who conducted the study along with colleagues from both Penn Medicine and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
The most common side effects were fatigue and dermatitis. The researchers noted that while skin reactions are frequently observed during radiation treatment, this study seemed to indicate a somewhat greater reaction than expected when proton treatment was followed by specific chemotherapeutic agents, including actinomycin-d and doxorubicin, which can interact with radiation and cause radiation sensitivity. That finding helped the researcher to further customize their approach to minimize that side effect. “If we started those drugs right away after proton therapy, it seemed the dermatitis was worse,” Dr. Hill-Kayser said. “So we learned that after proton therapy, we wanted to hold those drugs and not give them for a month to six weeks, so the patient had time to recover from the skin toxicity before it got worse.”
Another typical side effect of radiation therapy—particularly among head and neck cancer patients—can be weight loss and nutritional problems, but those were also only found to be a slight concern for the patients in the current study. “It’s common to lose some weight during radiation treatment because the mouth and throat get inflamed, but we found that very few patients in our study lost more than 10% of their body weight during the course of treatment. We found that we could minimize that weight loss by using a gastrostomy tube to give tube feedings, but even when we didn't do that, the weight loss was manageable. This was likely the case because proton therapy allowed us to decrease the radiation dose to the mouth and throat compared to equivalent plans using X-ray therapy.”
Over one to three months, all of the study patients fully recovered from any acute side effects from the proton treatment. Dr. Hill-Kayser expects that this research will help to support the growing consensus that “pediatrics is one of the areas where proton therapy is going to provide a lot of benefit.”
Related Links:
Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Latest Nuclear Medicine News
- PET Imaging of Inflammation Predicts Recovery and Guides Therapy After Heart Attack
- Radiotheranostic Approach Detects, Kills and Reprograms Aggressive Cancers
- New Imaging Solution Improves Survival for Patients with Recurring Prostate Cancer
- PET Tracer Enables Same-Day Imaging of Triple-Negative Breast and Urothelial Cancers
- New Camera Sees Inside Human Body for Enhanced Scanning and Diagnosis
- Novel Bacteria-Specific PET Imaging Approach Detects Hard-To-Diagnose Lung Infections
- New Imaging Approach Could Reduce Need for Biopsies to Monitor Prostate Cancer
- Novel Radiolabeled Antibody Improves Diagnosis and Treatment of Solid Tumors
- Novel PET Imaging Approach Offers Never-Before-Seen View of Neuroinflammation
- Novel Radiotracer Identifies Biomarker for Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
- Innovative PET Imaging Technique to Help Diagnose Neurodegeneration
- New Molecular Imaging Test to Improve Lung Cancer Diagnosis
- Novel PET Technique Visualizes Spinal Cord Injuries to Predict Recovery
- Next-Gen Tau Radiotracers Outperform FDA-Approved Imaging Agents in Detecting Alzheimer’s
- Breakthrough Method Detects Inflammation in Body Using PET Imaging
- Advanced Imaging Reveals Hidden Metastases in High-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients
Channels
Radiography
view channel
X-Ray Breakthrough Captures Three Image-Contrast Types in Single Shot
Detecting early-stage cancer or subtle changes deep inside tissues has long challenged conventional X-ray systems, which rely only on how structures absorb radiation. This limitation keeps many microstructural... Read more
AI Generates Future Knee X-Rays to Predict Osteoarthritis Progression Risk
Osteoarthritis, a degenerative joint disease affecting over 500 million people worldwide, is the leading cause of disability among older adults. Current diagnostic tools allow doctors to assess damage... Read moreMRI
view channel
Novel Imaging Approach to Improve Treatment for Spinal Cord Injuries
Vascular dysfunction in the spinal cord contributes to multiple neurological conditions, including traumatic injuries and degenerative cervical myelopathy, where reduced blood flow can lead to progressive... Read more
AI-Assisted Model Enhances MRI Heart Scans
A cardiac MRI can reveal critical information about the heart’s function and any abnormalities, but traditional scans take 30 to 90 minutes and often suffer from poor image quality due to patient movement.... Read more
AI Model Outperforms Doctors at Identifying Patients Most At-Risk of Cardiac Arrest
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is one of the most common inherited heart conditions and a leading cause of sudden cardiac death in young individuals and athletes. While many patients live normal lives, some... Read moreUltrasound
view channel
Wearable Ultrasound Imaging System to Enable Real-Time Disease Monitoring
Chronic conditions such as hypertension and heart failure require close monitoring, yet today’s ultrasound imaging is largely confined to hospitals and short, episodic scans. This reactive model limits... Read more
Ultrasound Technique Visualizes Deep Blood Vessels in 3D Without Contrast Agents
Producing clear 3D images of deep blood vessels has long been difficult without relying on contrast agents, CT scans, or MRI. Standard ultrasound typically provides only 2D cross-sections, limiting clinicians’... Read moreGeneral/Advanced Imaging
view channel
3D Scanning Approach Enables Ultra-Precise Brain Surgery
Precise navigation is critical in neurosurgery, yet even small alignment errors can affect outcomes when operating deep within the brain. A new 3D surface-scanning approach now provides a radiation-free... Read more
AI Tool Improves Medical Imaging Process by 90%
Accurately labeling different regions within medical scans, a process known as medical image segmentation, is critical for diagnosis, surgery planning, and research. Traditionally, this has been a manual... Read more
New Ultrasmall, Light-Sensitive Nanoparticles Could Serve as Contrast Agents
Medical imaging technologies face ongoing challenges in capturing accurate, detailed views of internal processes, especially in conditions like cancer, where tracking disease development and treatment... Read more
AI Algorithm Accurately Predicts Pancreatic Cancer Metastasis Using Routine CT Images
In pancreatic cancer, detecting whether the disease has spread to other organs is critical for determining whether surgery is appropriate. If metastasis is present, surgery is not recommended, yet current... Read moreImaging IT
view channel
New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible
Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Global AI in Medical Diagnostics Market to Be Driven by Demand for Image Recognition in Radiology
The global artificial intelligence (AI) in medical diagnostics market is expanding with early disease detection being one of its key applications and image recognition becoming a compelling consumer proposition... Read moreIndustry News
view channel
GE HealthCare and NVIDIA Collaboration to Reimagine Diagnostic Imaging
GE HealthCare (Chicago, IL, USA) has entered into a collaboration with NVIDIA (Santa Clara, CA, USA), expanding the existing relationship between the two companies to focus on pioneering innovation in... Read morePatient-Specific 3D-Printed Phantoms Transform CT Imaging
New research has highlighted how anatomically precise, patient-specific 3D-printed phantoms are proving to be scalable, cost-effective, and efficient tools in the development of new CT scan algorithms... Read more
Siemens and Sectra Collaborate on Enhancing Radiology Workflows
Siemens Healthineers (Forchheim, Germany) and Sectra (Linköping, Sweden) have entered into a collaboration aimed at enhancing radiologists' diagnostic capabilities and, in turn, improving patient care... Read more







