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PET/CT planning beneficial for head and neck cancer patients
CT has been the traditional choice for staging and radiation treatment therapy planning for head and neck squamous cell carcinomas, which account for approximately 5 percent of malignancies worldwide; but PET has been shown to have advantages over CT and other imaging modalities in detecting primary tumors, involved lymph nodes and distant metastatic disease not clearly otherwise identified. PET alone does have several disadvantages though, such as poor related to precise anatomic structures, but these negative impacts are significantly reduced when PET and CT are combined by fusing the separate scans taken on a hybrid scanner. While it has been proven in several studies that PET/CT imaging is feasible for head and neck radiation treatment planning, very few studies have been done to determine the clinical outcomes. So, scientists in the departments of Radiation Oncology, Radiology, Neoplastic and Related Disorders, and Otolaryngology at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee conducted this study to evaluate the clinical outcomes, including overall survival, disease-free survival and the occurence rate of recurrence of patients receiving PET/CT-guided radiation treatment and the correlation of the clinical outcomes to the maximum standard uptake value obtained on the PET scan. Between December 2002 and August 2006, 42 patients with a median age of 55, who were diagnosed with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma, were given PET/CT imaging as part of their radiation treatment planning. All patients were observed for at least six months following their therapy, with a mean follow-up time of 32 months. Overall survival of the 42 study patients was 82.8 percent at two years and 74.1 percent at three years, superior to the survival rate that was found in a Radiation Therapy Oncology Group study in which patients received standard fractionation or accelerated fractionation with concomitant boost. That study was the largest randomized trial of radiation treatment in locally advanced head and neck cancer. Disease free survival for the 42 study patients was 71 percent and 66.9 percent at two and three years respectively. The cumulative occurence rate of recurrence was 18.7 percent. The study also observed that standard uptake value is not a good predictor of local recurrence and that dose escalation based on standard uptake value is unlikely to be a fruitful therapy strategy. PET/CT provides a higher level of confidence that we are not missing tumors as we attempt to lessen therapy side effects by delivering radiation treatment that tightly conforms in three dimensions to a given tumor volume, said Christopher Schultz, M.D., professor of radiation oncology at the Medical College of Wisconsin. Most importantly the PET/CT guided conformal radiotherapy was clearly no worse, and based on our early results may in fact lead to superior clinical outcomes as in comparison to CT only planned radiotherapy. Posted by: Andria Source |
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