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Heating technology for malignant tumors: a review
- Source :
- International Journal of Hyperthermia, Vol 37, Iss 1, Pp 711-741 (2020), INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYPERTHERMIA, Int J Hyperthermia
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- The therapeutic application of heat is very effective in cancer treatment. Both hyperthermia, i.e., heating to 39-45 degrees C to induce sensitization to radiotherapy and chemotherapy, and thermal ablation, where temperatures beyond 50 degrees C destroy tumor cells directly are frequently applied in the clinic. Achievement of an effective treatment requires high quality heating equipment, precise thermal dosimetry, and adequate quality assurance. Several types of devices, antennas and heating or power delivery systems have been proposed and developed in recent decades. These vary considerably in technique, heating depth, ability to focus, and in the size of the heating focus. Clinically used heating techniques involve electromagnetic and ultrasonic heating, hyperthermic perfusion and conductive heating. Depending on clinical objectives and available technology, thermal therapies can be subdivided into three broad categories: local, locoregional, or whole body heating. Clinically used local heating techniques include interstitial hyperthermia and ablation, high intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), scanned focused ultrasound (SFUS), electroporation, nanoparticle heating, intraluminal heating and superficial heating. Locoregional heating techniques include phased array systems, capacitive systems and isolated perfusion. Whole body techniques focus on prevention of heat loss supplemented with energy deposition in the body, e.g., by infrared radiation. This review presents an overview of clinical hyperthermia and ablation devices used for local, locoregional, and whole body therapy. Proven and experimental clinical applications of thermal ablation and hyperthermia are listed. Methods for temperature measurement and the role of treatment planning to control treatments are discussed briefly, as well as future perspectives for heating technology for the treatment of tumors.
- Subjects :
- FLEXIBLE MICROSTRIP
Hyperthermia
Technology
Cancer Research
Hot Temperature
APPLICATORS
Materials science
Physiology
medicine.medical_treatment
Thermal dosimetry
Thermal ablation
INTENSITY FOCUSED ULTRASOUND
PLUS REGIONAL HYPERTHERMIA
NANOPARTICLE HYPERTHERMIA
ablation
Article
Heating
LUNG-CANCER
RECURRENT BREAST-CANCER
INTERSTITIAL THERMAL THERAPY
Neoplasms
ADVANCED
Physiology (medical)
Medicine and Health Sciences
medicine
Medical technology
Humans
CELL
hyhperthermia
R855-855.5
Radiation treatment planning
HIPEC
Hyperthermia, Induced
medicine.disease
Ablation
PANCREATIC-CANCER
High-intensity focused ultrasound
RANDOMIZED CLINICAL-TRIAL
Radiation therapy
MAGNETIC
Ultrasonic sensor
heating equipment
INVASIVE BLADDER-CANCER
thermal therapy
Biomedical engineering
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 02656736 and 14645157
- Volume :
- 37
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- International journal of hyperthermia
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dc9d65879e5da6f3c588ad176078a5d3