Thermoradiotherapy in the management of superficial malignant tumors
- PMID: 9815966
Thermoradiotherapy in the management of superficial malignant tumors
Abstract
In recent years there have been numerous randomized and nonrandomized studies conducted to assess the efficacy of hyperthermia combined with either radiation therapy or chemotherapy, especially in the treatment of superficially seated malignant tumors. The major impact of hyperthermia is currently on locoregional control of tumor. Heat may be directly cytotoxic to tumor cells or inhibit repair of both sublethal and potentially lethal damage after radiation. These effects are augmented by the physiological conditions in tumors which lead to states of acidosis and hypoxia. Blood flow is often impaired in tumor relative to normal tissue, and hyperthermia may lead to a further decrease in blood flow and augment heat sensitivity. Three major areas of clinical investigation have borne the greatest fruit for hyperthermia as adjunctive therapy to radiation therapy. These include recurrent and primary breast lesions, melanoma, and head and neck neoplasms. The thermal enhancement ratio was increased in all cases and is estimated to be 1.4 for neck nodes, 1.5 for breast, and 2 for malignant melanoma. In general, the most important prognostic factors for complete response are radiation dose, tumor size, and minimal thermal parameters (minimum thermal dose, mean minimum temperature or temperature exceeded by 90% of thermal sensors). The number of heat fractions administered per week appears to have no bearing on the overall response, which may be indicative of the effects of thermotolerance. The total number of heat fractions delivered also appears to be irrelevant provided adequate heat is delivered in one or two sessions. The major prognostic factors for the duration of local control are tumor histology, concurrent radiation therapy dose, tumor depth, and mean minimum temperature.
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