New Planning Tool Streamlines Brachytherapy Treatments and Improves Patient Comfort
19 July 2005 - 8:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
New Planning Tool Streamlines Brachytherapy Treatments and Improves
Patient Comfort PALO ALTO, Calif., July 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/
-- An innovative new brachytherapy planning tool from Varian
Medical Systems is enabling clinics to streamline prostate cancer
treatments and improve patient comfort. The Vitesse(TM) system is
being used in more than 25 hospitals worldwide to speed up planning
and enable treatments to take place within a day, avoiding the need
for patients to stay in a hospital overnight. According to Dr
Gyorgy Kovacs, head of the Interdisciplinary Brachytherapy Centre
at Kiel University Hospital in Germany -- one of the first
departments to introduce the Vitesse system -- treatment planning
for HDR (High-Dose-Rate) brachytherapy prostate procedures has been
cut from 90 minutes to just 30 minutes per patient. "As well as the
time saving," said Dr Kovacs, "you also find that the dose
conformity is better and you are better able to spare adjacent
critical organs from unnecessary exposure, so it's not only faster
it also results in more effective treatments and higher cure
rates." Clinical evidence suggests that the most effective way of
treating high-risk prostate cancer is to deliver high doses of
radiation in a highly targeted manner directly to the cancerous
tissues. Using the Vitesse HDR brachytherapy system from Varian
Medical Systems, clinics are able to accomplish this with just one
or two high-dose treatments in a single day. Delivered alone or in
conjunction with external beam radiation therapy, brachytherapy is
used primarily for treating breast, prostate and gynaecological
cancers, providing patients with new treatment options, and gaining
recognition as a viable and highly targeted cancer treatment
approach. Brachytherapy treatments involve the implantation of
radioactive sources inside the tumour. There are two types of
brachytherapy employed: permanent seed implants and temporary
implants. Temporary implants involve using a machine called a
High-Dose-Rate afterloader to place radioactive seeds into
particular positions within a set of needles that have been
temporarily implanted in the prostate. The spatial arrangement of
the seeds within the needles is what yields the desired radiation
dose distribution with the patient's anatomy. "Previously,
hospitals wishing to employ this temporary implant technique have
been hampered by the difficult logistics," said Dave Hall, Varian's
Brachytherapy product manager. "The implant takes an hour, the
patient goes to recovery, then goes to Radiology for a CT scan,
then waits for the physics staff to generate a treatment plan, and
then gets the first radiation treatment. Often by then it is too
late to get a second radiation dose on the same day and the patient
needs to be kept in hospital overnight." Vitesse, which marries
together Varian's VariSeed(TM) planning system for seed prostate
implants and BrachyVision(TM) 3D brachytherapy planning software,
is an optional workflow module that allows doctors to quickly
acquire prostate images with HDR catheters already in place. This
data can then be exported over a digital connection to the
BrachyVision software program, meaning doctors can go straight from
imaging to treating, sometimes in a single procedure room. Dr
Kovacs and his team at Kiel have carried out more than 400 of these
online planned cases over the past eight months, in a process he
calls 'Intensity Modulated Brachytherapy' or IMBT. "The learning
curve for us has been remarkably short. We were doing offline
pre-treatment planning using our own in-house software and we are
now at a stage where we can use the Varian software to contour and
plan on the actual images, using the Vitesse and BrachyVision
programs to adjust the catheter position as necessary." The
clinical team at Kiel uses both GammaMed(TM) and VariSource(TM) HDR
afterloaders from Varian to deliver brachytherapy treatments. As a
site with over 20 years' of experience, they have been following
treatment outcomes for a long time. Dr Kovacs reports, "excellent
results with outcomes comparable to those reported for permanent
implants or surgery." Varian plans to show the latest version of
the Vitesse system at the upcoming American Association of
Physicists in Medicine meeting in Seattle, Washington, July 24-27,
2005. Editorial contact: Neil Madle, Varian Medical Systems, +44
7786 526068, . About Varian Medical Systems Varian Medical Systems,
Inc., of Palo Alto, California is the world's leading manufacturer
of integrated cancer therapy systems, which are treating thousands
of patients per day. The company is also a premier supplier of
X-ray tubes and flat-panel digital subsystems for imaging in
medical, scientific, and industrial applications. Varian Medical
Systems employs approximately 3,280 people who are located at
manufacturing sites in North America and Europe and in its 56 sales
and support offices around the world. Additional information is
available on the company's web site at http://www.varian.com/ .
DATASOURCE: Varian Medical Systems, Inc. CONTACT: Neil Madle of
Varian Medical Systems, +44 7786 526068, or Web site:
http://www.varian.com/
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