Title: PowerPointPrsentation
1Clinical aspects of carbon ion RT Daniela
Schulz-Ertner
2Particle therapy
3Lateral scattering
Protons
Carbon ions
5 cm
LBL data
4Dose distribution in nanometer scale
At Bragg peak
At start of Bragg peak
Entrance Channel
5Definition of RBE
6Calculations for different sensitivities
M. Scholz, GSI
7Which Tumors Are Best For Carbon?
Resistant Tumors
Sensitive Normal Tissues
8Potential indications for carbon ion RT
- Chordoma / low grade chondrosarcoma
- Malignant salivary gland tumors
- Malignant melanoma of the paranasal sinus
- Soft tissue sarcomas and bone tumors
- Lung cancer
- Liver tumors
- Prostate carcinoma
9Potential advantages of carbon ion RT
- precision
- reduced integral dose
- modification of the biological effectiveness
- High-LET effect, less pronounced OER
Clinical benefit ?
10Availability of carbon ion RT
NIRS, Chiba / Japan
Hyogo Ion Beam Medical Center / Japan
GSI, Darmstadt / Germany
11GSI Darmstadt
Availability for clinical applications 3 beam
time blocks / year 20 days
12Rasterscan-Technique
Irradiated volume
-
Isoenergetic levels
13Passive beam application - constant modulation
depth and intensity throughout the field
RBE as depth dependent factor Tsuji 1998
Active beam application (raster scanning) -
Adaption of modulation depth at each point -
Optimization of intensity at each scan spot
RBE calculation at each voxel
14Principle of the Local-Effect-Model (LEM)
- Input parameters
- radial dose distribution
- size of cell nucleus
- x-ray sensitivity (?/? ratio)
Scholz 1996
15Therapy parameters at GSI
- Immobilization
- intensity-controlled raster scanning with pulsed
- energy variation
- 3D treatment planning (CTMRI)
- VIRTUOS
- TRiP
- daily x-ray controls (comparison with DRR)
- PET (beam verification)
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18Carbon ion radiotherapy at GSI
19
15
41
131
58
19Results of carbon ion RT at NIRS
Locally advanced head and neck (phase II, n
134, 52.8 - 64.0 GyE / 16 Fx / 4 weeks) 2y-
LC 61 3y- OS 42
Yamamoto 2005
20Combined photon IMRT plus C12 boost total dose 72
CGE (54Gy18CGE)
60 CGE-Isodose line 39 CGE-Isodose line 54
CGE-Isodose line gt 66 CGE
Schulz-Ertner, Cancer 2005
21FSRT / IMRT vs FSRT / IMRTC12 for locally
advanced adenoid cystic carcinoma
OS
LC
- Acute toxicity acceptable
- late toxicity gt CTC Grade 2 lt 5
Schulz-Ertner, Cancer 2005
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23Chondrosarcoma G1/2
Prä OP
Post OP
Dosis in
Carbon ion RT Biologically optimized treatment
plan
24Carbon ion RT of skull base chordomas
25Carbon ion RT for skull base chordomas and
chondrosarcomas (phase I/II trial)
Schulz-Ertner, IJROBP 2004
26RT of chordomas and chondrosarcomas
Author, year n RT local control Romero, 1993
18 conv.RT 17 (CH) Debus, 2000 45 FSRT
50 / 5y (CH) Munzenrider, 1999 519 prot. (
phot) 73 / 5y (CH) 98 / 5y (CS) Castro,
1994 223 He 63 / 5y (CH) 78 / 5y
(CS) Noel, 2001 67 prot phot 71 / 3y
(CH) 85 / 3y (CS) Schulz-Ertner,
2004 67 C12 74 / 4y (CH)) 87 / 4y (CS)
27Phantom measurements
Position 2
Max. dose variation myelon 14 / mm for C12 8
/ mm for photon-IMRT
Karger PMB 2003
28Carbon ion RT of inoperable soft tissue sarcomas
Local control
Kamada, JCO 2004
29Stage I NSCLC (phase I/II, inoperable PT) 57.6 -
95.4 GyE, 18 Fx, 6 weeks, n 47, 72 GyE, 9 Fx, 3
weeks, n 34
5y-overall survival 42 5y-cause-specific
survival 60 radiation pneumonitis III 3/81
Miyamato et al. 2003
30Results of carbon ion RT at NIRS
Hepatocellular carcinoma (Protocol liver-2, phase
I/II) n 82 2y-local control 83 3y-overall
survival 45 cause of death mostly related to
progression of associated liver cirrhosis
31Dose escalation for localized prostate cancer
Pollack 2002, MD Anderson
32Zelefsky 2001, Memorial Sloan Kettering
33Dose-response curve for PC
Hanks 2002, Fox Chase
34Rationale for carbon ion RT in locally advanced
prostate cancer
- ?/ß low (1.5 3 Gy)
- hypofractionation ?
Fowler 2003
35Particle therapy for localized prostate cancer
- severe toxicity
- RT Dose n GI GU 5J-NED
- MDACC Conv. RT lt67 Gy 500 54 (4y)
- 67-77Gy 495 14.8 8.5 71 (4y)
- gt77 Gy 132 77 (4y)
- MSKCC IMRT 81.0-86.4 772 4.5 15 86
(3y,IR) 92 (3y,LR) late 1.5
II 81 (3y,HR) - LLUMC Protons 75CGE 1255 1 (III) 1 (III)
48 (HR) - NIRS Carbon 66.0GyE 170 1 (II) 6 (II) 79
(HR) -
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37Influence of organ motion on carbon ion RT
- Variance for 95 90-coverage / CTV
- 3.6 (SD 3.7) 2.8 (SD 2.8)
- Variance for the clinically relevant Dmin 6.2 Gy
/GTV, 12.5 Gy /CTV - Variance of the rectal volume gt 70 Gy lt3cm3
- (Kupelian 2002 rectal volume gt 70 Gy lt15cm3)
Nikoghosyan 2004
38Phase I/II trial Combined photon IMRT carbon
ion boostfor locally advanced prostate cancer
Photon IMRT 60 Gy / median CTV2 (prostate
seminal vesicles5mm individual safety
margin) Carbon ion RT 18 GyE (6 Fx) CTV1 /
prostate individual safety margin
39Photon IMRT and C12
IMRT
C12
40Carbon ion RT trials at GSI
Skull base CHCS ACC Phase I/II spinal/ sacral
CH CS Phase I/II Prostate
30 / year routine
10 / year routine
completed
15 / year
2003
2004
2005
2006
41Heavy Ion Therapy (HIT) in Heidelberg
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43Conclusions
- Randomized trials proving the superiority of
carbon ion RT in comparison to photon IMRT and
protons are lacking, but several combined
facilities are planned to be built in Europe and
will allow phase III trials in the future - Integration of carbon ion RT into
interdisciplinary treatment concepts necessary - First results of clinical phase I and II trials
performed at NIRS and GSI support the assumption
that carbon ions provide an enhanced biological
effectiveness in adenoid cystic carcinomas, H/N
melanomas, lung and liver tumors, large soft
tissue sarcomas, chordomas / chondrosarcomas and
prostate cancer - radiobiologic research will enable better
exploitation of the advantages of carbon ion RT
in future trials