Scientific Presentations at 2009 ASTRO Meeting Highlight RapidArc(R) Radiotherapy Technology from Varian Medical Systems
November 10 2009 - 8:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
Presenters Cite Speed, Accuracy, and Reduced Scatter Dose to
Healthy Tissues as Among the Benefits of RapidArc Radiotherapy and
Radiosurgery for the Treatment of Cancer CHICAGO, Nov. 10
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Clinicians using RapidArc® radiotherapy
technology for fast, precise, non-invasive cancer treatments have
found that they are able to substantially reduce scatter dose to
surrounding healthy tissues, according to several presentations and
posters presented this week at the annual meeting of the American
Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) in Chicago. With RapidArc,
doctors were able to quickly administer image-guided radiotherapy
or radiosurgery treatments using fewer monitor units, which
translates to less total body irradiation during treatment. In
addition, a number of planning studies documented the clinical
advantages of RapidArc over other forms of intensity-modulated
radiotherapy (IMRT). ASTRO is the largest association of radiation
oncology professionals in the world, with 10,000 members, including
radiation oncologists, radiation oncology nurses, medical
physicists, radiation therapists, dosimetrists and biologists. The
2009 meeting was held in Chicago, Illinois, from November 1-5. Some
of the highlights: PROSTATE CANCER In the vast majority of cases,
RapidArc treatments for prostate cancer result in equal or better
tumor coverage with less dose to the bladder and rectum, compared
to conventional fixed-field IMRT, according to a research team from
the Finsen Centre* in Copenhagen, Denmark. The RapidArc treatments
also use much fewer monitor units--a two to three-fold
decrease--which means that less scattered, non-therapeutic
radiation is delivered during these treatments, which took, on
average, 1.25 minutes to deliver once patients were positioned for
treatment.(1) These results were echoed by researchers at the
University of Alabama, Birmingham (UAB*), who found that RapidArc
is more efficient in terms of delivery time and the number of
monitor units needed, and produces treatment plans "that meet both
target coverage and normal tissue constraints for all three
prostate risk categories."(2) PANCREATIC CANCER In comparing
RapidArc with helical tomotherapy for the treatment of pancreatic
cancer, a team of researchers from the University of Virginia found
that the two approaches can generate comparable IMRT treatment
plans; however, RapidArc may have a dosimetric advantage due to
faster treatments using fewer monitor units.(3) A group from the VU
University Medical Center in Amsterdam (VUMC*) reported that, for
pancreatic cancer, the conformity index (a measure of plan quality)
was higher for RapidArc plans than for conventional IMRT plans,
with better sparing of surrounding organs. "The speed of planning
and delivery favors RapidArc over five-field IMRT, particularly as
the risk of intra-fractional motion is correlated with treatment
duration," they concluded.(4) LUNG CANCER A team from the Brown
Cancer Center at the University of Louisville reported that a
two-arc RapidArc plan offers the same level of dose homogeneity and
tissue sparing as fixed-field IMRT. The RapidArc treatments,
however, are faster to deliver, even with two arcs. "The reduction
in treatment time is a benefit to image-guided radiation therapy
(IGRT) and consequently to SBRT," the researchers assert.(5)
Another team from the University of Virginia found that the
treatment of peripheral lung lesions using RapidArc is
dosimetrically equivalent to fixed-gantry IMRT, however, "low dose
spillage trended toward improvement, which may reduce the incidence
of symptomatic radiation-induced pneumonitis." BRAIN CANCER Emory
University researchers compared RapidArc with non-rotational IMRT
in the treatment of pediatric brain tumors. The team observed that
tumor coverage is comparable between the two approaches, however,
RapidArc reduces treatment duration and the amount of dose going to
normal tissues throughout the body. "Pediatric patients would
benefit from shortened treatment times, potentially reducing the
use of anesthesia," they concluded, adding that the decreased total
body irradiation could also potentially reduce the number of late
effects, including the risk of secondary malignancies later in
life.(6) ANAL CANCER A team from the Centre Regional de Lutte
Contre le Cancer Val d'Aurelle in Montpellier, France, compared
RapidArc to IMRT for the treatment of anal canal cancer, finding
that RapidArc with two arcs delivered equivalent treatment plans in
terms of target coverage and sparing of organs at risk. RapidArc
"provided significant reductions in MU and treatment time per
fraction," they stated. "These improvements should reduce patient
discomfort, allow more quality control, and may increase treatment
acceptance compared to IMRT."(7) Abstracts for these and other
presentations and posters presented at this year's ASTRO meeting
are available at the ASTRO website and also, in the "Proceedings of
the American Society for Radiation Oncology 51st Annual Meeting,"
International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics,
Volume 75, Issue 3, Supplement . *One or more members of this
research team received research grant support from Varian Medical
Systems. (1) S. A. Engelholm, S. S. Korreman, P. M. Petersen, M.
Aznar, F. Kjaer-Kristoffersen. Intensity Modulated Single Arc
Therapy (RapidArc(TM)) of Prostate Cancer. (2) R. Popple, J. B.
Fiveash, M. C. Dobelbower, R. Jacob, R. Y. Kim, I. A. Brezovich.
Prostate Treatment Using Intensity Modulated Arc Therapy: Clinical
Experience and Comparison with DMLC IMRT. (3) J. Cai, R. McLawhorn,
W. Yang, K. Wijesooriya, N. Dunlap, C. Geesey, K. Sheng, T. Rich,
S. Benedict. Dosimetric Comparison Of 6 MV And 15 MV RapidArc To
Helical Tomotherapy For The Treatment Of Pancreatic Cancer. (4) W.
Eppinga, F. J. Lagerwaard, W. F. A. R. Verbakel, B. J. Slotman, S.
Senan, Conventional IMRT Versus Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy
(RapidArc) For Pancreatic Cancer . (5) A. D. Zacarias, M. Brown, M.
Mills . Comparison of Eclipse Fixed Field IMRT and RapidArc VMAT
for Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy of the Lung. (6) D. O. Ansari,
N. Esiashvili, A. H. Dhabaan, C. S. Jarrio, E. S. Elder, M.
Crowder, W. Koontz-Raisig, H. G. Shu. Is Intensity Modulated Arc
Therapy (IMAT) Better Than Non-rotational Intensity Modulated
Radiation Therapy (IMRT) For Pediatric Brain Tumors? (7) J. Dubois,
S. Vieillot, C. Llacer Moscardo, C. Lemanski, D. Azria, P.
Fenoglietto. A Planning Study To Compare Plans Using Volumetric
Modulated Arc Therapy Or Intensity-modulated Radiation Therapy For
The Treatment Of Anal Canal Cancer. ABOUT VARIAN MEDICAL SYSTEMS
Varian Medical Systems, Inc. (NYSE:VAR), of Palo Alto, California,
is the world's leading manufacturer of medical devices and software
for treating cancer and other medical conditions with radiotherapy,
radiosurgery, proton therapy, and brachytherapy. The company
supplies informatics software for managing comprehensive cancer
clinics, radiotherapy centers and medical oncology practices.
Varian is a premier supplier of tubes and digital detectors for
X-ray imaging in medical, scientific, and industrial applications
and also supplies X-ray imaging products for cargo screening and
industrial inspection. Varian Medical Systems employs approximately
5,100 people who are located at manufacturing sites in North
America, China, and Europe and in its 79 sales and support offices
around the world. For more information, visit
http://www.varian.com/ FOR INFORMATION CONTACT: Meryl Ginsberg,
(650) 424-6444 DATASOURCE: Varian Medical Systems, Inc. CONTACT:
Meryl Ginsberg, Varian Medical Systems, Inc., +1-650-424-6444, Web
Site: http://www.varian.com/
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