American journal of clinical oncology
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Am. J. Clin. Oncol. · Jun 1993
Review Clinical TrialClinical experience with interstitial thermoradiotherapy for localized implantable pelvic tumors.
Twenty-six patients (20 females, 6 males) with localized tumors of the pelvis, including 3 primary advanced (PRIM), 7 persistent (PERS), 10 recurrent (REC), and 6 metastatic (MET) tumors, were treated with a combination of low-dose rate (LDR) iridium 192 interstitial radiotherapy (IRT), interstitial 915 MHz microwave hyperthermia (IHT), and external beam radiotherapy (RT). Histological diagnoses were squamous cell carcinoma in 13 (50%), adenocarcinoma in 12 (46%) and soft tissue sarcoma in 1 (4%) lesion. Tumor sites were cervix in 8 (31%), colorectum in 6 (23%), vagina in 4 (15%), anus in 3 (12%), ovary in 2 (8%), and other sites in 3 (12%) lesions. ⋯ Factors influencing initial (3 months FU) and long-term tumor response (12 months FU) included tumor class, tumor volume, total radiation dose, and thermal parameters with "good quality of heating" (TQ 41 degrees C > or = 75%) and high minimum tumor temperature (Tmin(av) > or = 41 degrees C). Treatment toxicity was acceptable: whereas 8 (31%) patients experienced acute side effects, which subsided within weeks, 7 (27%) developed long-term complications. Thermal damage was associated with IHT treatments exceeding maximum average temperatures of > or = 44 degrees C and maximum peak temperatures of > or = 45 degrees C.
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Am. J. Clin. Oncol. · Jun 1990
ReviewInitial results of phase I/II interstitial thermoradiotherapy for primary advanced and local recurrent tumors.
Since January 1986 in a phase I/II study, 45 lesions (30 head and neck, 11 pelvic, and 4 other lesions) in 44 patients (24 men, 20 women; age 18-81 years) received a combination of interstitial Ir-192 radiotherapy (IRT) and interstitial 915 MHz MW hyperthermia (IHT) supplemented by external radiation (ERT). In June 1989, evaluation was performed for lesions with minimum follow-up (FU) of 6 months and FU periods between 6 and 39 months (mean: 16 months, SD +/- 9). The tumors comprised 21 advanced primary (AP) lesions without prior ERT, 18 local recurrent (LR) and 6 local metastatic (LM) lesions with variable prior treatment modes; 24 lesions had received prior ERT between 40 and 70 Gy, 23 chemotherapy and 30 prior surgery. ⋯ Six patients died prior to 12 months FU, three with LC and three with progressive disease. So far 10 (22%) patients have developed distant metastases. Acute side-effects occurred in 15 lesions (33%) resulting in 12 (27%) long-term complications with 3 lesions (7%) requiring surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)