| Brachytherapy is a
minimally invasive radiotherapeutic method which places radioactive
material either inside, or close to the tumor tissue. Brachytherapy
is primarily curative and organ-preserving.
It is a
modern and precise procedure that achieves a tumor eradicating dose
escalation as well as an optimal conservation of the surrounding
tissue. Brachytherapy is also used successfully in the prophylaxis
of re-stenoses in peripheral vessels and coronary arteries. In
afterloading technique a 192-Iridium radiation source is applied for
a short time, i.e. seconds to minutes by remote control to the organ
that is to be irradiated. With this technique gynecological tumors,
esophagus, cystic duct, and peripheral vessels are
treated.
In
interstitial Brachytherapy a 192-Ir radiation source inserted
temporarily into applicators that have been implanted into the
tissue before, or several 125-Iodine radiation sources with a short
half-life are directly and permanently implanted into the tissue.
This technique is used to treat prostate, rectum, otolaryngological
tumors and sarcomas. In contact therapy a sealed radioactive source
or an applicator are brought into contact with an external or
internal body surface of the patient.
Brachytherapy can be divided into four main
types:
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Surface Applicator or
"Mould" brachytherapy. Superficial tumors can be treated using
sealed sources placed close to the skin. Dosimetry is often
performed with reference to the Manchester system; a rule-based
approach designed to ensure that the dose to all parts of the
target volume is within 10% of the prescription dose.
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Interstitial
brachytherapy. The sources are inserted into tissue using needles
with a diameter of about one mm. Either iridium-192 is inserted
temporarily into these needles or so-called seeds are permanently
implanted. Prostate cancer treatment with Iodine-125 is common for
interstitial brachytherapy using seeds
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Intracavitary
brachytherapy places the sources inside a natural body cavity. The
most common applications of this method are gynecological in
nature, although it can also be performed on the nasopharynx.
-
Intravascular
brachytherapy places a catheter with the sources inside the
vasculature. The most common application of this method is the
treatment of coronary in-stent restenosis, although the therapy
has also been investigated for use in the treatment of peripheral
vasculature stenoses.
HDR
brachytherapy
High
Dose Rate (HDR) brachytherapy is a common brachytherapy method and
has been available for more than 25 years now.. Applicators in the
form of catheters are arranged, usually according to the Manchester
or Paris system. A high dose rate source (Iridium 192 or Cobalt 60)
is then temporarily placed in the catheters on the end of a wire by
the afterloader machine whilst the patient is isolated in a shielded
room. The source dwells in a preplanned position for a preset time
before stepping forward along the catheter and repeating, to build
up the required dose distribution. The advantage of this treatment
over implanting radioactive sources directly is that there is lower
staff exposure and the source can be more active due to low staff
exposure, thus making treatment times quicker.
LDR
brachytherapy
Cancer
of the prostate is one of the most frequent
cancer types of males and is diagnosed in more than 200.000 new
cases in Europe last year. As a standard treatment the
prostatectomy, i.e. the surgical removal of the prostate, is
performed in most cases. Besides the general operation risk a
considerable high risk of post-operative incontinence and impotence
exists.
Besides prostatectomy,
radiation therapy in form of interstitial brachytherapy is gaining
more and more significance in therapy of not yet metastasing
prostate carcinoma. During one year, more than 60,000 prostate
cancer patients are treated world wide with brachytherapy. Extensive
long term studies proof a comparable healing and surviving rate with
prostatectomy at a significantly reduced risk of side
effects.
Two different
brachytherapeutic methods are available for the treatment of
prostate carcinoma.
-
The permanent
implantation of seeds with Iodine-125 or Palladium-103: LDR
Brachytherapy (Low Dose
Rate)
-
The temporary
afterloading implantation with Iridium-192, a radiation source
moved in steps through the organ, which is only temporarily
applied and removed afterwards: HDR Brachytherapy (High
Dose Rate).
LDR Seed
Implantation is suitable for low risk and early stage carcinoma
of the prostate, while HDR Brachytherapy is used for a wider
range of prostate stages, PSA values, and tumor grades. The
components and dosages are modified for those with low,
intermediate, or high risk prostate cancer. This treatment can also
certainly be used for many tumors which are considered to advanced
for radical prostatectomy. As long as there is no obvious spread to
distant areas of the body like the bones this treatment can still be
considered.
The radiation sources
are developing their effect directly in the cancerous tissue, only a
small dose burden is exposed to adjacent organs. As the radiation
sources are less than one millimeter in diameter, implantation is
performed with relatively small applicators.
sonoTECH's strong engagement in
this advanced treatment method since several years and close
cooperation with leading clinicians and physicists resulted in the
development of therapy planning systems setting the pace regarding
functionality, planning quality and operability.
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