1. VERO® radiotherapy for low burden cancer: 789 patients with 957 lesions.
- Author
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Orecchia, R., Surgo, A., Muto, M., Ferrari, A., Piperno, G., Gerardi, M. A., Comi, S., Garibaldi, C., Ciardo, D., Bazani, A., Golino, F., Pansini, F., Fodor, C., Romanelli, P., Maestri, D., Scroffi, V., Mazza, S., and Jereczek-Fossa, B. A.
- Subjects
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CANCER radiotherapy , *CANCER treatment , *INTENSITY modulated radiotherapy , *RADIATION doses , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this retrospective study is to evaluate patient profile, feasibility, and acute toxicity of RadioTherapy (RT) delivered by VERO® in the first 20 months of clinical activity. Methods: Inclusion criteria: 1) adult patients; 2) limited volume cancer (M0 or oligometastatic); 3) small extracranial lesions; 4) treatment between April 2012 and December 2013 and 5) written informed consent. Two techniques were employed: intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) and stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Toxicity was evaluated using Radiation Therapy Oncology Group/European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (RTOG/EORTC) criteria. Results: Between April 2012 and December 2013, 789 consecutive patients (957 lesions) were treated. In 84% of them one lesion was treated and in 16% more than one lesion were treated synchronously/metachronously; first radiotherapy course in 85%, re-irradiation in 13%, and boost in 2% of cases. The treated region included pelvis 46%, thorax 38%, upper abdomen 15%, and neck 1%. Radiotherapy schedules included <5 and >5 fractions in 75% and 25% respectively. All patients completed the planned treatment and an acceptable acute toxicity was observed. Conclusions: RT delivered by VERO® was administrated predominantly to thoracic and pelvic lesions (lung and urologic tumours) using hypofractionation. It is a feasible approach for limited burden cancer offering short and well accepted treatment with favourable acute toxicity profile. Further investigation including dose escalation and other available VERO® functionalities such as real-time dynamic tumour tracking is warranted in order to fully evaluate this innovative radiotherapy system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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