Detalle clínico de los expertos cómo utilizan la tecnología de TrueBeam™ de Varian para mejorar la precisión y la velocidad de los tratamientos del cáncer
Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | September 15, 2010
BARCELONA, Spain /PRNewswire/ -- Cancer treatment experts today reported their experiences with early treatments using the new TrueBeam system from Varian Medical Systems (NYSE: VAR), aimed at increasing the speed and precision of radiotherapy and radiosurgery treatments. Clinicians from the first two European hospitals to start clinical treatments using the new TrueBeam system - Zurich University Hospital in Switzerland and VU University Medical Center in Amsterdam, Netherlands - addressed an Emerging Technologies Symposium at the annual ESTRO conference here in Barcelona to give detailed accounts of early patient treatments.
Professor Urs Luetolf of Zurich University Hospital said, "When we introduce new technology it is always interesting for our fellow radiation oncologists and radiation therapists to hear about clinical process improvements for treatment delivery and imaging which enables us to handle organ and tumor motion, but clinical medicine has one main goal - to add something for patient.
"We have treated more than 100 patients on the TrueBeam system since we introduced it six months ago and, although it's too early to assess outcomes, it's clear the system offers advantages in terms of the speed and precision of delivery," Prof. Luetolf added. "Cancer patients constantly seek a better cure and fewer side effects and they want to be treated using the latest and most advanced technology, and our experiences with this advanced system to date have been encouraging for patients as well as making the treatment process more straightforward for clinicians."
Professor Ben Slotman, head of radiation oncology at VU University Medical Center, outlined the results of patient treatments that commenced using the new TrueBeam system earlier this month, beginning with that of an 80-year-old lung cancer patient for whom surgery was deemed inappropriate because of her age and an earlier operation. She received eight stereotactic body radiosurgery treatments over a two-week period using TrueBeam in combination with RapidArc® technology and Professor Slotman described this pioneering treatment.
Professor Slotman also outlined key findings from two years of RapidArc radiotherapy treatments for more than 1,000 patients at VU, almost of third of them receiving hypo-fractionated, stereotactic body radiotherapy. "Delivering treatments rapidly is especially important when you need to deliver high doses with great precision, as shortening treatment times considerably reduces the extent of patient motion during treatment," he said.