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Principles of Radiaton Oncology

Principles of Radiaton Oncology. Diane Severin 2011. Radiation oncology is the specialty which uses various forms of radiation to treat cancer patients. 5 year program. Knowledge base includes CT and MRI based anatomy, clinical oncology, medical physics and radiobiology. Overview. History

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Principles of Radiaton Oncology

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  1. Principles of Radiaton Oncology • Diane Severin • 2011

  2. Radiation oncology is the specialty which uses various forms of radiation to treat cancer patients. • 5 year program. • Knowledge base includes CT and MRI based anatomy, clinical oncology, medical physics and radiobiology.

  3. Overview • History • Biology of Radiotherapy • Physics of Radiotherapy • Clinical Radiation Oncology

  4. History of Radiotherapy • 1895 Wilhelm Roentgen described X-rays • 1898 Marie and Pierre Curie discovered radium. • 1901 first therapeutic use of radium for skin brachytherapy • 1903 first description of the effect of radiation on a lymphoma nodes • 1905 first description of sensitivity of seminoma to radiation

  5. History of Radiotherapy • 1915 The atomic model by Ernest Rutherford and development of Xray tubes • 1951 first Cobalt unit in London, Ontario • 1952 first linear accelerator in Stanford, California • 1973 CT scanner invented by Hounsfield • 1990 first use of scanners and computers for IMRT

  6. History of Radiotherapy • The early radiotherapy machines would deposit dose superficially and were limited by skin toxicity. • The development of linear accelerators that deposit dose deeper into tissues as well as three dimensional treatment planning systems has improved the ability to deliver dose while sparing normal tissues. • More than 1/2 of cancer patients receive radiotherapy at some point in their care.

  7. Biology of Radiation • Radiation can be thought of as packets of energy in the form of photons (eg: Xrays) or particles (eg: protons, neutrons, electrons, alpha particles). • As they penetrate tissue they can cause ionization directly or indirectly. • Dose deposited is measured in gray(Gy) 1 Joule/kg. Older unit was rad 1/100 Gy or 1 cGy

  8. Biology of Radiation Most damage is caused by hydroxyl

  9. Biology of Radiation • Cell death from radiation is thought to be primarily due to DNA damage in the form of single strand and double strand breaks. • Particulate radiation such as alpha particles, neutrons, protons cause more ionizations and more double strand breaks than Xrays. • Normal tissue can repair damage better than cancer tissue.

  10. Biology of Radiation • Biologic modifiers of the effect of radiation include: • Oxygen - If tumors are hypoxic there is less cell kill with radiation. Important to correct anemia. • Chemotherapy - can sensitize cells to radiation eg: cisplatin, 5fluorouracil, etoposide etc. • Radioprotectors - sulfhydryl compounds (amifostine) can protect cells from radiation. • Hyperthermia

  11. Physics of Radiation • 1. External Beam Radiotherapy (sometimes called Teletherapy) • 2. Brachytherapy • 3. Radioisotope therapy eg: radioactive iodine

  12. External Beam RT • 60Co delivers mega-voltage radiation (1.25 MeV) using radioactive material as the source of the gamma rays. • Linear accelerators produce x-rays and electrons which have high energies. They are mounted as gantries which can rotate 360 degrees in space around a treatment table. This is what is used now.

  13. External Beam RT Linear accelerator

  14. External Beam RT The spike ones are only in the states and Vancouver

  15. External Beam RT • Stereotactic radiosurgery/radiotherapy is a technique that gives a highly conformal treatment with very small margins. Large often single doses are given. • Initially used for brain lesions it’s use is expanding to other parts of the body.

  16. Brachytherapy • Brachytherapy is radiation treatment delivered from close range to tumors that can be accessed by interstitial, intracavitary or surface applicators. • Inside the applicators are radioactive materials that are encapsulated in cylinder or seed form. • The radioactive material decays with time releasing low energy particles or photons. • Must be on isolation because these people are radioactive

  17. Brachytherapy • Dose drops off via the inverse square law which helps protect normal tissues. • Cesium 137, Iridium 192, iodine 125 are examples of isotopes used. • Cervix cancer, prostate cancer, uterine cancer are treated with brachytherapy.

  18. Brachytherapy

  19. Radioisotope Therapy • Iodine 131 is used in treatment of thyroid cancer. • Radiation safety precautions necessary as patients are radioactive. • Other radioisotope therapies include MIBG, octreotide, strontium etc.

  20. Clinical Radiation Oncology (RO) • The ultimate goal of radiation therapy is to deliver a high dose to the target volume (tumor) while minimizing dose to the normal tissue.

  21. Clinical RO • Multidisciplinary interactions are important ie: medical oncology, surgery, internal medicine, physics, nurses, rehabilitation, psychology and therapists. • Treatment given with curative intent for many sites: H&N, CNS, Lung, GI, breast, prostate, bladder, lymphoma, sarcoma, skin, gynecologic tumors. • Palliative treatment important for pain, bleeding, brain mets and obstructive symptoms.

  22. Clinical RO • Process of Radiation Therapy • 1. Consultation with the radiation oncologist. • History and examination of the patient, education regarding type and stage of cancer, discussion of benefits and risks of therapy, consent for therapy.

  23. Clinical RO • 2. Immobilization and CT simulation • Aquaplast shells, vac fix bags, tatoos • CT simulation is a scan obtained in the position the patient will be in for their treatment.

  24. Clinical RO • 3. Treatment Planning • The gross tumor volume (GTV) is contoured by the radiation oncologist. • Meshing of CT sim scans with MRI scans or PET scans can help in volume definition.

  25. Clinical RO • CTV is a margin around the GTV to account for potential locoregional subclinical extension of cancer cells. • It can include microscopic spread to lymph nodes. • Eg: the mesorectum, internal iliac, presacral and lower common iliac nodes are included in the CTV for rectal cancers

  26. Clinical RO

  27. Clinical RO • PTV is the planning target volume. It is a volumetric expansion which accounts for organ motion as well as set up uncertainty. • ITV (internal target volume) is used in tumors in which a significant amount of variation in tumor position occurs eg: due to respiration. • 4D CT simulation is required for ITV definition

  28. Clinical RO

  29. Clinical RO • Field Definition – The radiation oncologist can define fields to be treated. • If normal tissue constraints require it, more complex treatment planning can occur using intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) or tomotherapy.

  30. Clinical RO

  31. Clinical RO

  32. Clinical RO

  33. Clinical RO

  34. Clinical RO

  35. Clinical RO

  36. Clinical RO • 4. Therapy • Patients have daily treatments. They are in the radiation room 15 minutes or less and in the cancer institute 30 – 45 minutes total • In curative therapies, treatments are often fractionated ie: small doses per day for many days eg: 36 fractions/ 5days per week/ 7 weeks • They are assessed weekly by the radiation oncologist to ensure they are tolerating therapy

  37. Clinical RO • Fractionation occurs to prevent late side-effects. • If treated palliatively for pain or other symptoms they are often given fewer fractions eg: 8 Gy in 1 fx, 20 Gy in 5 fx or 30 Gy in 10 fx. • Late side-effects are less of a concern due to survival time in these patients. Also the doses are lower and are tolerated by normal tissues.

  38. Clinical RO • 5. Follow up • Following therapy follow up is arranged 6 – 8 weeks later for most patients. • Long term follow up depends on tumor type and chance of curative salvage if recurrence detected early. • Eg: colorectal cancer vs breast cancer

  39. Clinical RO • Side-Effects of Therapy • Early side-effects occur within weeks of radiation therapy. (ONLY in radiated area.) • They occur in tissues with rapid cell turnover and are thought to occur due to depletion of the stem cells within that tissue. • Eg: tumor shrinkage, skin irritation/blistering, diarrhea

  40. Clinical RO • Late side-effects of radiation occur months to years after radiation. • The incidence of late effects depends on the volume irradiated, the structure irradiated, total dose and most importantly fraction size. Ie: bigger doses per fraction lead to increased long term side-effects.

  41. Dilatd blood vessels, not painful

  42. Given steroid cream from family physician

  43. thomatitis

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