Treating Lung Cancer Patients Using New Radiotherapy Technology
By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 13 Nov 2008
Clinicians in the Netherlands are using new radiotherapy technology to treat four early-stage lung cancer patients in what is believed to be among the world's first treatments of their kind. Posted on 13 Nov 2008
Clinicians from VU University Medical Center (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) now plan to replace conventional stereotactic radiotherapy treatments with RapidArc technology, developed by Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (Palo Alto, CA, USA), for all such patients.
A 57-year-old male, diagnosed with a 1.2-cm diameter non-small cell lung tumor in the right upper lobe and deemed unfit for surgery as a result of severe emphysema, was the first patient to receive the ground-breaking radiotherapy treatment at the hospital in early September [2008]. "We normally use ultra-precise stereotactic radiotherapy in these cases and we have now treated more than 400 such patients in this way,” said Dr. Ben Slotman, chairman of the hospital's department of radiation oncology. "But RapidArc offers some real timesaving over stereotactic radiotherapy and its use in this case is a real breakthrough for us and our patients.”
The new treatment was delivered in less than 15 minutes versus the 30 to 45 minutes typically needed by the team at VU University Medical Center to treat lungs with image-guided intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). The treatment was delivered using six arcs--or rotations--of the treatment machine around the patient. RapidArc delivers a volumetric radiotherapy treatment in a single or multiple arcs of the treatment machine around the patient.
"We were very pleased with how the treatment went,” added Dr. Suresh Senan, professor of clinical experimental radiotherapy. "The online patient setup using cone beam CT [computed tomography] scans allowed direct visualization of the tumor just prior to fast treatment delivery using RapidArc, all of which greatly increased the confidence of the treatment team in the precision of delivery. The high-dose radiation area was restricted to the tumor, and the surrounding healthy tissue and critical organs received very low doses. Due to the high precision and the speed of treatment delivery, and the associated increase in patient comfort, RapidArc will eventually replace all conventional stereotactic treatments for early stage lung cancer at our hospital.”
RapidArc was introduced by Varian earlier in 2008, and to date more than 30 hospitals worldwide are using this new technology for advanced, precise, and fast treatments. Non-small cell lung cancer treatments require extremely precise radiotherapy delivery to avoid affecting surrounding critical organs. Worldwide, lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in men and the second leading cause of cancer death in women.
Related Links:
VU University Medical Center
Varian Medical Systems