Use of positron emission tomography with computed tomography decreases radiation to healthy tissues in patients with non-small cell lung cancer
Use of positron emission tomography in addition
to computed tomography can reduce radiation exposure to normal tissue
in some patients with non-small cell lung cancer, according to an
article in the March 1st issue of the International Journal of Radiation
Oncology*Biology*Physics.
The study, conducted on 21 patients with
non-small cell lung cancer, created two three-dimensional conformal
radiation treatment plans, one with CT-based planning and the second
with a combination of PET and CT-based planning. The researchers
found that, in general, the size of the radiation fields could be
decreased by using PET scan information, which meant less radiation
exposure of healthy lung tissue and the esophagus.
“This study underlines the great potential
benefit of incorporating PET scan data into radiotherapy planning,
both to decrease side-effects and increase cure rates,” said Dirk
de Ruysscher, MD, PhD, a radiation oncologist and co-author of the
study. “Because of the smaller radiation fields, the radiation dose
may theoretically be increased without increasing the side-effects
compared to CT-based planning alone. This may lead to a higher chance
of achieving tumor control.”
The study showed that the two non-invasive
imaging methods were combined because PET scans were shown to have
a higher accuracy than CT scans to predict which lymph nodes contain
cancer cells and which do not. PET scans alone do not give enough
anatomical information to accurately define the tumor volume.
|