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Establishment and Initial Experience of Clinical FLASH Radiotherapy in Canine Cancer Patients

Konradsson, Elise LU ; Arendt, Maja L. ; Bastholm Jensen, Kristine ; Børresen, Betina ; Hansen, Anders E. ; Bäck, Sven LU ; Kristensen, Annemarie T. ; Munck af Rosenschöld, Per LU orcid ; Ceberg, Crister LU orcid and Petersson, Kristoffer LU (2021) In Frontiers in Oncology 11.
Abstract

FLASH radiotherapy has emerged as a treatment technique with great potential to increase the differential effect between normal tissue toxicity and tumor response compared to conventional radiotherapy. To evaluate the feasibility of FLASH radiotherapy in a relevant clinical setting, we have commenced a feasibility and safety study of FLASH radiotherapy in canine cancer patients with spontaneous superficial solid tumors or microscopic residual disease, using the electron beam of our modified clinical linear accelerator. The setup for FLASH radiotherapy was established using a short electron applicator with a nominal source-to-surface distance of 70 cm and custom-made Cerrobend blocks for collimation. The beam was characterized by... (More)

FLASH radiotherapy has emerged as a treatment technique with great potential to increase the differential effect between normal tissue toxicity and tumor response compared to conventional radiotherapy. To evaluate the feasibility of FLASH radiotherapy in a relevant clinical setting, we have commenced a feasibility and safety study of FLASH radiotherapy in canine cancer patients with spontaneous superficial solid tumors or microscopic residual disease, using the electron beam of our modified clinical linear accelerator. The setup for FLASH radiotherapy was established using a short electron applicator with a nominal source-to-surface distance of 70 cm and custom-made Cerrobend blocks for collimation. The beam was characterized by measuring dose profiles and depth dose curves for various field sizes. Ten canine cancer patients were included in this initial study; seven patients with nine solid superficial tumors and three patients with microscopic disease. The administered dose ranged from 15 to 35 Gy. To ensure correct delivery of the prescribed dose, film measurements were performed prior to and during treatment, and a Farmer-type ion-chamber was used for monitoring. Treatments were found to be feasible, with partial response, complete response or stable disease recorded in 11/13 irradiated tumors. Adverse events observed at follow-up ranging from 3-6 months were mild and consisted of local alopecia, leukotricia, dry desquamation, mild erythema or swelling. One patient receiving a 35 Gy dose to the nasal planum, had a grade 3 skin adverse event. Dosimetric procedures, safety and an efficient clincal workflow for FLASH radiotherapy was established. The experience from this initial study will be used as a basis for a veterinary phase I/II clinical trial with more specific patient inclusion selection, and subsequently for human trials.

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; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
canine cancer patients, dosimetry, flash, normal tissue, radiation oncology, radiotherapy, ultra-high dose rate
in
Frontiers in Oncology
volume
11
article number
658004
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • pmid:34055624
  • scopus:85107130902
ISSN
2234-943X
DOI
10.3389/fonc.2021.658004
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d53e49b9-e647-4159-a940-49641547bfe4
date added to LUP
2021-06-24 10:36:40
date last changed
2024-04-20 08:53:44
@article{d53e49b9-e647-4159-a940-49641547bfe4,
  abstract     = {{<p>FLASH radiotherapy has emerged as a treatment technique with great potential to increase the differential effect between normal tissue toxicity and tumor response compared to conventional radiotherapy. To evaluate the feasibility of FLASH radiotherapy in a relevant clinical setting, we have commenced a feasibility and safety study of FLASH radiotherapy in canine cancer patients with spontaneous superficial solid tumors or microscopic residual disease, using the electron beam of our modified clinical linear accelerator. The setup for FLASH radiotherapy was established using a short electron applicator with a nominal source-to-surface distance of 70 cm and custom-made Cerrobend blocks for collimation. The beam was characterized by measuring dose profiles and depth dose curves for various field sizes. Ten canine cancer patients were included in this initial study; seven patients with nine solid superficial tumors and three patients with microscopic disease. The administered dose ranged from 15 to 35 Gy. To ensure correct delivery of the prescribed dose, film measurements were performed prior to and during treatment, and a Farmer-type ion-chamber was used for monitoring. Treatments were found to be feasible, with partial response, complete response or stable disease recorded in 11/13 irradiated tumors. Adverse events observed at follow-up ranging from 3-6 months were mild and consisted of local alopecia, leukotricia, dry desquamation, mild erythema or swelling. One patient receiving a 35 Gy dose to the nasal planum, had a grade 3 skin adverse event. Dosimetric procedures, safety and an efficient clincal workflow for FLASH radiotherapy was established. The experience from this initial study will be used as a basis for a veterinary phase I/II clinical trial with more specific patient inclusion selection, and subsequently for human trials.</p>}},
  author       = {{Konradsson, Elise and Arendt, Maja L. and Bastholm Jensen, Kristine and Børresen, Betina and Hansen, Anders E. and Bäck, Sven and Kristensen, Annemarie T. and Munck af Rosenschöld, Per and Ceberg, Crister and Petersson, Kristoffer}},
  issn         = {{2234-943X}},
  keywords     = {{canine cancer patients; dosimetry; flash; normal tissue; radiation oncology; radiotherapy; ultra-high dose rate}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Oncology}},
  title        = {{Establishment and Initial Experience of Clinical FLASH Radiotherapy in Canine Cancer Patients}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.658004}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/fonc.2021.658004}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}