Radiobiological measurements have been made under various conditions of muliport pion irradiation using the Stanford Medical Pion Generator (SMPG). Chinese hamster cells (HA-1) were suspended in a tissue-equivalent 25% gelatin/medium solution. Hypoxic and aerobic HA-1 cells were irradiated simultaneously in a cylindrical water tank at either 4 or 16 degrees C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
January 1994
Purpose: Recurrence in the prostatic gland remains a significant problem in the management of locally advanced prostatic cancer. Transperineal thermobrachytherapy has been utilized in an attempt to improve local tumor control. The purpose of this study was to quantitate the temperature distributions obtained in carcinoma of the prostate treated with interstitial radiofrequency-induced hyperthermia given in conjunction with 192Ir brachytherapy in a Phase I study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Hyperthermia
July 1993
An adaptive temperature control system has been developed for the microstrip antenna array applicators used for large area superficial hyperthermia. A recursive algorithm which allows rapid power updating even for large antenna arrays and accounts for coupling between neighbouring antennas has been developed, based on a first-order difference equation model. Surface temperatures from the centre of each antenna element are the primary feedback information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe optimal treatment with hyperthermia of superficially located tumors which involve large surface areas requires applicators which can physically conform to body contours, and locally alter their power deposition patterns to adjust for nonuniform temperature caused by tissue inhomogeneities and blood flow variations. A series of 915 MHz microstrip array applicators satisfying these criteria have been developed and clinically tested. Clinical and engineering design tradeoffs for practical devices are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
May 1992
Pretreatment and treatment related factors were reviewed for 996 hyperthermia sessions involving 268 separate treatment fields in 131 patients managed with hyperthermia for biopsy confirmed local-regionally advanced or recurrent malignancies to ascertain parameters associated with the development of complications. A subset of 249 fields were identified in which multipoint or mapped temperature data were available for at least one treatment session per field. A total of 198 fields involved superficially located tumors (less than or equal to 3 cm from the surface), whereas 51 fields involved more deeply located tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOver the past decade, hyperthermia has been extensively studied as an adjuvant to radiation therapy in the management of local-regional metastases from adenocarcinoma of the breast. A retrospective review of our experience from July 1982 to January 1990 identified 241 fields in 89 patients which satisfied the following criteria: biopsy confirmation of recurrent or metastatic adenocarcinoma of the breast; involvement of the chest wall and/or regional lymph nodes with diffuse or nodular metastases; treatment which included radiation therapy and externally administered hyperthermia during which mechanically-mapped and/or multipoint normal tissue and intratumoral temperatures were monitored; and at least one follow-up evaluation at 3 weeks or more after completion of treatment. The majority of fields were in patients who had extensive prior treatment including radiation therapy (68%), chemotherapy (86%), and hormonal therapy (58%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
May 1991
Clinical quality assurance guidelines are established for RTOG hyperthermia protocols in which unfocused planar ultrasound may be used to administer hyperthermia. Measurement of temperature at a few fixed points is no longer considered to be adequate. Thermal mapping is required to obtain profiles of the temperature across the tumor dimensions, including margins of normal tissue.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
December 1990
From March 1984 to February 1988, 70 patients with 179 separate treatment fields containing superficially located (less than 3 cm from surface) recurrent or metastatic malignancies were stratified based on tumor size, histology, and prior radiation therapy and enrolled in prospective randomized trials comparing two versus six hyperthermia treatments as an adjunct to standardized courses of radiation therapy. A total of 165 fields completed the combined hyperthermia-radiation therapy protocols and were evaluable for response. No statistically significant differences were observed between the two treatment arms with respect to tumor location; histology; initial tumor volume; patient age and pretreatment performance status; extent of prior radiation therapy, chemotherapy, hormonal therapy, or immunotherapy; or concurrent radiation therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Hyperthermia
September 1990
Total-Skin Electron Therapy (TSET) modalities have been developed at two energies on a Varian Clinac 1800. The physical criteria for the beams were determined mainly from the requirement of continuing the Stanford treatment technique, which was 12 Total-Skin Electron Therapy portals combined in six pairs. The penetration of the lower energy mode matches that previously obtained at Stanford on the Varian Clinac 10, (about 4 mm for the 80% isodose contour in the 12-field treatment).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
January 1990
Spiral microstrip microwave (MW) antennas have been developed and adapted for use as clinical hyperthermia applicators. The design has been configured in a variety of forms including single fixed antenna applicators, multi-element arrays, and mechanically scanned single or paired antennas. The latter three configurations have been used to allow an expansion of the effective heating area.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
January 1990
Since September 1983, five patients with head and neck cancers and five patients with pelvic or perineal recurrences of colorectal neoplasms received 192Ir interstitial implants through flexible afterloading catheters that were modified to allow RF hyperthermia treatments of the tumor within 1 hr pre- and post-brachytherapy. Local control in the implant volume was obtained in three of the patients with head and neck cancers (base tongue--2/4; floor of mouth--1/1) with follow-up of 9 to 42 months. Two patients had local recurrences after disease-free periods of 8 and 24 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe smearing effects due to thermal conduction along various, nonenergized, interstitial devices were quantified in a flow cell-thermal step gradient. An insulated cylindrical flow cell with a high (ca 45 degrees C, 1.12 cm i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Hyperthermia
April 1989
A mathematical model for heating and cooling during hyperthermia has been developed from an appropriate solution of a bioheat transfer equation. Predicted cooling rates obtained from the model have been compared with cooling rates obtained from experiments performed on both perfused and non-perfused normal canine brain tissue. The agreement between the predicted and observed cooling rates in non-perfused tissue is satisfactory (within 6-11 per cent) and provides confidence that the conduction process is being accurately represented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of blood flow and thermal conduction during microwave hyperthermia were investigated in normal canine brain. Heating was accomplished with an external microstrip spiral antenna and temperature measurements were made using a multichannel fluoroptic thermometry system. In order to determine cooling rates, temperature measurements made during cooling were fitted with a model consisting of a constant value and an exponential term.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
June 1988
Regional hyperthermia for the treatment of deep seated tumors is often limited by excessive heating of normal tissues, usually with associated patient pain and/or discomfort. The use of bladder cooling via perfusion of distilled water through a modified tri-lumen irrigation catheter as an aid to circumventing this problem in one anatomical region is described. This relatively simple technique provided rapid pain relief and permitted completion of the hyperthermia treatment in a satisfactory manner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom September 16, 1981, through April 4, 1986, a total of 21 radiative electromagnetic (microwave and radiofrequency), ultrasound and interstitial radio-frequency hyperthermia applicators and three types of thermometry systems underwent extensive phantom and clinical testing at Stanford University. A total of 996 treatment sessions involving 268 separate treatment fields in 131 patients was performed. Thermal profiles were obtained in 847 of these treatment sessions by multipoint and/or mapping techniques involving mechanical translation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrom 10/81 to 1/87, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) of the U.S. Department of Public Health Services (PHS) contracted with four institutions to evaluate hyperthermia technology to be applied in the treatment of human malignancy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys
June 1987
The rates of cooling ("thermal washout") in selected sites in tumor and adjacent normal tissues following the completion of clinical hyperthermia sessions were analyzed in ten patients treated with combined radiation and hyperthermia for deep seated recurrent or metastatic tumors. The temperatures were recorded at 10 second intervals for at least 2 minutes after the cessation of microwave power at the end of the 30-60 minute duration hyperthermia treatments. These thermal washouts were characterized by the slope of a log-linear relation between temperature elevation above the oral baseline temperature and time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegional heating administered with an annular array to 12 patients with deep-seated advanced malignant disease eccentrically located in the lower abdomen and pelvis is compared based on the annular array operating configuration. One configuration (4 quadrants active) delivers radiofrequency power with relative uniformity throughout the patient cross-section. The other (2 quadrants active) allows the radiofrequency power deposition to be shifted preferentially into the eccentrically located treatment volume.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical application of hyperthermia in the treatment of deep-seated tumors remains an empirical science. The pleomorphic nature of the neoplasms and the great diversity in the anatomy and physiology of the individual tumor locations make the treatment of nearly every neoplasm a unique challenge. A wide variety of devices is required, both for the administration of hyperthermia and for the measurement of the temperatures achieved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperthermia has little hope of progressing as a clinical modality without accurate assessment of the temperature distributions obtained. At the present time only direct, invasive temperature-measuring techniques are possible, posing severe limitations. Established techniques for clinical temperature measurement have developed over the past few years, and for both ultrasound and electromagnetic hyperthermia it is possible to get temperature-time profiles at a large number of spatial points.
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