MIMA Cancer Center Becomes First in World to Treat Soft Tissue Carcinoma With Stereotactic...
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MIMA Cancer Center Becomes First in World to Treat Soft Tissue Carcinoma With
Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy Using RapidArc(TM) Radiotherapy Technology
Novel image-guided treatment completed in just five minutes a day for five
days
MELBOURNE, Fla., July 22 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Doctors at Melbourne
Internal Medical Associates (MIMA) Cancer Center have become the first in
Florida to treat cancer using RapidArc(TM) radiotherapy technology from Varian
Medical Systems (NYSE: VAR). They are also the first in the world to use this
technology to deliver stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) in the treatment
of soft tissue carcinoma.
A 72-year-old man with Merkel cell carcinoma was treated for a soft tissue
tumor in his thigh, which had developed close to where a similar tumor had
been treated with conventional radiotherapy six months earlier.
"In this case, it was important that we avoid exposing the
previously-treated area to any additional radiation," said Todd Scarbrough,
M.D., radiation oncologist and director of the MIMA Cancer Center. "Using
RapidArc, we completed each of his treatment sessions in just five minutes,
including imaging and treatment. In the past, using conventional IMRT, this
type of treatment would have required 30 minutes per session to complete."
RapidArc makes it possible to quickly deliver an advanced image-guided,
intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) treatment with one 360 degree
rotation of the treatment machine around the patient. In this case, however,
Scarbrough and his team designed a treatment that was delivered with just half
a rotation around the patient.
"The tumor was near the surface of his thigh, so a full arc would have
exposed too much of his normal leg to the treatment beam," Scarbrough said.
Scarbrough's team planned the RapidArc treatment using Varian's
Eclipse(TM) treatment planning software, which allowed them to visualize how
the dose would be distributed within the patient's leg. "The RapidArc plan
gave us a dose distribution that was superior to what we could have achieved
with traditional IMRT," Scarbrough said. "Eclipse made it easy to create a
plan that would avoid the previously-irradiated tissues. We just superimposed
the dose distribution from his earlier treatments onto the new CT scans,
created a structure out of that area, and instructed the software to avoid it
as if it were a critical organ. It was very easy to do."
Stereotactic body radiotherapy involves delivering higher-than-usual doses
of radiation to a tumor over a shorter-than-usual timeframe. It requires
great accuracy and precision, both in terms of targeting and in terms of beam
shaping, to minimize the exposure of surrounding tissues. MIMA's RapidArc
protocol achieves the necessary level of precision. 3-D X-ray images of the
targeted area are used to fine-tune patient positioning prior to each
treatment. Then, as the treatment machine rotates around the patient, the
treatment beam is continually shaped and reshaped to match the dimensions of
the tumor.
"Any time you have a spherical lesion that is deep within the body, and
you want to deliver a high dose, RapidArc is going to be the ideal way to
treat," Scarbrough said. "Our plan is to use RapidArc any time the treatment
plan gives us a dose distribution that is equal to or better than what we can
get with standard IMRT, because RapidArc is so much faster. And that's much
better for our patients." Scarbrough's team is now working on RapidArc
treatment plans for a prostate and a lung cancer case scheduled to begin
treatment later this month.
The American Cancer Society estimates that, in the United States this
year, doctors will diagnose 1,437,180 new cancer cases; over 100,000 will
occur in the state of Florida.
ABOUT MELBOURNE INTERNAL MEDICINE ASSOCIATES (MIMA)
MIMA is an independent, physician-owned multispecialty group offering
patients comprehensive medical care throughout Brevard County, Florida.
Comprised of over 100 physicians representing 23 medical specialties, MIMA's
board-certified physicians provide high-quality medical care at 15 locations
on Florida's Space Coast. The MIMA Cancer Center's Department of Radiation
Oncology treats 80-90 patients per day, and has been offering image-guided
radiotherapy (IGRT) using technology from Varian Medical Systems since April
2005. For further information, visit http://www.mima.com/.
About Varian Medical Systems
Varian Medical Systems, Inc., 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 4,600 people who are located at
manufacturing sites in North America and Europe and in its 60 sales and
support offices around the world. For more information, visit
http://www.varian.com/.
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:
Meryl Ginsberg, Varian Medical Systems
650-424-6444 or meryl.ginsberg@varian.com
SOURCE Varian Medical Systems
Meryl Ginsberg of Varian Medical Systems, +1-650-424-6444,
meryl.ginsberg@varian.com
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