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Baptist Hospital
Leads The Way With Innovative Approach To Cancer
| Cancer specialists
and radiologists at Baptist Hospital are teaming two of the most
promising advances in their fields to destroy tumors without damaging
nearby healthy tissues. Only a handful of U.S. hospitals have been
able to take this leading-edge approach. |
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It involves a three-dimensional
radiation therapy known as IMRT and a scanner capable of spotting
changes both in bodily structures and in the way cells
use nutrients such as sugar and oxygen. By combining these technologies,
Baptist Hospital doctors are able to pinpoint tumors – some so small
they normally would escape detection – and target them with radiation
doses that match their exact size, shape and intensity.
The scanner is a two-in-one imaging system that combines PET scans – or
positron emission tomography – with CT scans. PET scans detect changes
in the metabolism of cells. These changes can happen before physical changes
take place, making PET an excellent tool for early diagnosis. CT – or
computed tomography – uses X-rays and high-speed computers to
provide doctors with a non-surgical way of looking inside the body.
It rapidly
produces two-dimensional pictures that are translated into 3-D images
for in-depth evaluation by radiologists.
By providing both anatomic and metabolic information from a single
procedure, PET/CT allows doctors to spot increased cell activity while
relating
it to the body’s internal anatomy. This helps doctors to more quickly
determine whether someone has cancer, if it is spreading, whether treatment
is working or if there’s been a recurrence. PET/CT not only improves
a physician’s ability to diagnose and monitor disease, it also
helps predict the likely outcome of various treatment choices and identify
the
best options to take.
Radiation oncologists at Baptist Hospital quickly recognized the potential
benefits of using PET/CT in combination with IMRT. Intensity modulated
radiation therapy transmits thousands of tiny radiation beams in patterns
conforming exactly to the tumor being targeted. By precisely matching
IMRT’s
radiation to the exquisite detail of PET/CT in their treatment planing
system, the risk of toxicity or damage to healthy tissue is greatly
reduced. This allows doctors to concentrate treatment intensity on
cancers with
higher, more effective doses, resulting in better outcomes and improved
quality of life for patients.
It takes cooperation between physicians and technologists of different
departments to combine PET/CT with IMRT. Since PET/CT has a diagnostic
function and IMRT is used for treatment, they operate in separate locations
and departments. For the two systems to work together, however, patients
must be positioned in exactly the same way for both the scan and radiation
treatment. Identical tables and customized plastic body or head molds
position the patient to ensure alignment – but Baptist Hospital’s
award-winning culture makes the process work.
The system has already been used to treat head-and-neck cancers, but
radiation oncologists foresee its application for other malignancies,
especially
cancers of the esophagus, pancreas and lung – one of the three
most frequently treated cancers treated at Baptist Hospital.
Learn more about our IGRT here...
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