| Literature DB >> 23072718 |
Stephanie E Combs1, Kerstin A Kessel, Klaus Herfarth, Alexandra Jensen, Susanne Oertel, Claudia Blattmann, Swantje Ecker, Angelika Hoess, Eike Martin, Olaf Witt, Oliver Jäkel, Andreas E Kulozik, Jürgen Debus.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To report on establishment of workflow and clinical results of particle therapy at the Heidelberg Ion Therapy Center.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23072718 PMCID: PMC3504515 DOI: 10.1186/1748-717X-7-170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Patients’ characteristics of 36 children and young adults treated with protons and carbon ions at the Heidelberg Ion Therapy Center (HIT)
| pilocytic astrocytoma | n = 7 |
| glioblastoma | n = 1 |
| ATRT | n = 1 |
| PNET | n = 1 |
| chordoma/chondrosarcoma | 10 (28%) |
| skull base chordoma | n = 7 |
| skull base chondrosarcoma | n = 3 |
| Skull base | n = 2 |
| pelvic | n = 1 |
| male | 11 (31%) |
| female | 25 (69%) |
| yes | 4 (11%) |
| no | 32 (89%) |
| Protons | 16 (44%) |
| Carbon ions | 13 (36%) |
| Photon + Carbon Ion Boost | 6 (+ 1 Proton Boost) (20%) |
Figure 1Clinical workflow for treatment under anesthesia in cooperation with the Department of Anesthesiology (A). A mobile anesthesia device was connected to the observation console of the radiation therapy treatment room; continuous monitoring of the patient was possible during patient setup and irradiation from outside the treatment room (B).
Figure 2Two-field proton treatment of a 5 years-old child with an orbital rhabdomyosarcoma.
Figure 3Treatment of a patient with an infratentorial pilocitic astrocytoma. Imaging for Treatment planning (A-D), treatment plan for protons, 2 fields, total dose of 54 Gy E in single doses of 1.8 Gy E (E-H), and imaging response 3 months after treatment (I-L).
Figure 4Imaging response of a 5 years-old child with an orbital rhabdomyosarcoma (plan shown Figure4). Inital imaging for treatment planning (A;B), Follow-up imaging 6 months after treatment; imaging showed a significant reduction in contrast enhancement with an overall reduction of the lesion in diameter.