Guest guest Posted December 25, 2007 Report Share Posted December 25, 2007 An article today in the New York Times spoke about proton therapy for cancer--including, of course, prostate cancer. Not the most positive article--it talks about the expense of the facilities, and compares the overall effectiveness (accuracy, relative lack of side effects, etc.) to IMRT. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/26/health/25cnd-proton.html? _r=1 & ei=5089 & en=df70e491e0fa0d00 & ex=1356325200 & adxnnl=1 & oref=slogin & par tner=rssyahoo & emc=rss & adxnnlx=1198630859-dY9+G9j+C7n4U69AsArZrg (You'll probably need a free subscription) --Steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2007 Report Share Posted December 26, 2007 Does anyone know if rad onc Dr. Zeitman at MGH/Harvard works with tradiational radiation or with Proton Beam toys? If the US can spend hundreds of billions of dollars to fight a war for oil in the middle east, then it can spend a few billion for proton beams. I had PBRT and my goodies didn't get fried. Most PBRT nay-sayers point only to marginal improvement in outcomes to justify their position that it costs too much. QOL after treatment is as valuable or more valuable than outcome. If it wasn't, then a simple surgical castration and cremation would be the " cheapest " way to go. I wonder which treatment Dr. Zeitman will choose if he is dx'd with prostate cancer . . . > > An article today in the New York Times spoke about proton therapy for > cancer--including, of course, prostate cancer. > > Not the most positive article--it talks about the expense of the > facilities, and compares the overall effectiveness (accuracy, relative > lack of side effects, etc.) to IMRT. > > > http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/26/health/25cnd-proton.html? > _r=1 & ei=5089 & en=df70e491e0fa0d00 & ex=1356325200 & adxnnl=1 & oref=slogin & pa r > tner=rssyahoo & emc=rss & adxnnlx=1198630859-dY9+G9j+C7n4U69AsArZrg > > (You'll probably need a free subscription) > > > --Steve > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 26, 2007 Report Share Posted December 26, 2007 edited In the article that Kathy comments on is the following paragraph: " Proton radiation is reported to have several advantages over traditional x-ray radiation. First, the success rates reported in the limited literature available suggest that it is a more effective form of radiation therapy. Second, proton radiation can clearly be targeted more precisely than traditional radiation, thus minimizing the loss of normal tissue and harm to nearby organs (e.g., Hug, 2004; Slater et al., 2004; Suit et al., 2003). Third, proton radiation can be safely administered in higher doses than traditional radiation (e.g., Zietman et al., 2005; Hug, 2004). " My research has indicated that:- The Bragg peak effect " stops " the radiation at the target, and releases the energy there. Thus the damage that occurs when X-ray radiation travels on through the body and other organs in the path of the scattering X-rays does NOT occur with protons. Dr. Zeitman is indeed at MGH, and is a proponent of proton radiation treatment for most other cancers than prostate. He would prefer that prostate cancer patients be treated with IMRT, primarily I believe, because MGH does not have the treatment capability (in capacity – number of treatments per day) that some other centers have, and he believes that the proton machine should be used to treat some of the other life threatening cancers of perhaps higher priority. As to comparisons, I have quoted this article before, but here again is a study comparing protons with X-ray photons and IMRT: " Results: With photon- and proton-based radiotherapy techniques similar dose distributions were determined for PTV I-III: mean and maximum PTV dose values were between 99-104% and 102-107% of the normalized total doses (70 Gy), respectively. Conformity indices varied from 1.4 to 1.5 for the photon techniques, whereas for proton- beam radiotherapy values ranged from 1.1 to 1.4. Both the 3-D conformal and the IMRT photon treatment technique resulted in increased mean doses ( & #8764; 40-80%) for OARs [Organs At Risk] when compared to protons. With both photon techniques non-target tissue volumes were irradiated to higher doses (mean dose difference > 70%) compared to proton-beam radiotherapy. Differences occurred mainly at the low and medium dose levels, whereas in high dose levels similar values were obtained. In comparison to conformal 3-D treatments IMRT reduced doses to OARs in the medium dose range, especially for the rectal wall. " Fuller Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 29, 2007 Report Share Posted December 29, 2007 This is exactly what I would expect Fuller to post. This argument is getting stale. Blair Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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