Surgical Radiation to the Liver
I was wondering if anyone has had radiation to the liver and what your experience was like.
Thanks,
Catherine
Comments
-
CyberKnife?
Could this be CyberKnife treatments or Stereotactical Radiation?
I've done CyberKnife on the liver to help cut out the remaining tumor that RFA could not reach. It worked very well. 3-5 treatments of intense radio surgery using intense radiation.
If this is an option, then it is very solid and can be very effective.
I was hoping for the stereotactical radiation on my lungs, but do not appear to be a candidate, so I have no experience with this, but I did read it and it is promising as well.
Craig0 -
Craig what about toxicity to the liverSundanceh said:CyberKnife?
Could this be CyberKnife treatments or Stereotactical Radiation?
I've done CyberKnife on the liver to help cut out the remaining tumor that RFA could not reach. It worked very well. 3-5 treatments of intense radio surgery using intense radiation.
If this is an option, then it is very solid and can be very effective.
I was hoping for the stereotactical radiation on my lungs, but do not appear to be a candidate, so I have no experience with this, but I did read it and it is promising as well.
Craig
specially if you are on chemo too?
Best!0 -
I don't really know.Sundanceh said:CyberKnife?
Could this be CyberKnife treatments or Stereotactical Radiation?
I've done CyberKnife on the liver to help cut out the remaining tumor that RFA could not reach. It worked very well. 3-5 treatments of intense radio surgery using intense radiation.
If this is an option, then it is very solid and can be very effective.
I was hoping for the stereotactical radiation on my lungs, but do not appear to be a candidate, so I have no experience with this, but I did read it and it is promising as well.
Craig
I just read about Stereotactical and it sounds like just what he described but I go for 5 1/2 weeks and the information about SBRT talks about having only 3 - 5 sessions. I do have to go for a special hour long CT and then a simulation from which they will take 10 days to plan how to go about it.
I do remember the doc saying that there are all kinds of names for the treatment based on from whom the equipment is bought: Gamma, Cyber and so on. The only thing at Duke that they don't have is the Proton beam.
I wonder if mine is going to take longer because it is not an actual tumor but a side of the liver. I guess these are questions for next week.
Thanks,
Catherine0 -
No Chemo Yetpepebcn said:Catherine on Monday l will visit
my radiologist to discuss about when to start my radiation, l will keep you informed, are you on chemo right now? lm in the same scheme you are or where so similar situation, Keep in touch!
Pepe.
But the doc said I would be taking Xeloda during the treatments to enhance the radiation. I don't know what they will put me on after that. Probably back to Folfox or Xelfox.
Catherine0 -
Good Questionpepebcn said:Craig what about toxicity to the liver
specially if you are on chemo too?
Best!
Pepe
I was not on chemo at the time of my procedure, so I don't know the definite answer here. From reading Catherine's reply, it sounds like they are wanting to do both to enhance the treatments, so I can only gather that they have no issues in administering both at the same time.
Catherine: mine is going to be 5-6 weeks as well, so it sounds like the new stuff is out for me as well. My understanding is this is external beam radiation, that they can "shape" to target the area in questions, while sparing surrounding tissue.
I'll be so interested in hearing what happens with you - you can teach me:)
-Craig0 -
I think this is what I will be having.Sundanceh said:Good Question
Pepe
I was not on chemo at the time of my procedure, so I don't know the definite answer here. From reading Catherine's reply, it sounds like they are wanting to do both to enhance the treatments, so I can only gather that they have no issues in administering both at the same time.
Catherine: mine is going to be 5-6 weeks as well, so it sounds like the new stuff is out for me as well. My understanding is this is external beam radiation, that they can "shape" to target the area in questions, while sparing surrounding tissue.
I'll be so interested in hearing what happens with you - you can teach me:)
-Craig
I would think yours is similar. All places like to claim they are the only ones but.......
Do you think this is just regular radiation with a bunch of "fancy" talk? When do you start and how is your recovery coming?
Gated Therapy
Treatment to tumors located in the thoracic and abdominal regions, such as lung and liver, is always a challenging task because of respiratory organ motions. Traditional approach is to expand each treatment field to ensure the entire tumor volume is included in the radiation filed. To minimize radiation damage to extra normal tissues due field expansion, Duke has adopted respiratory control techniques to synchronize the radiation beam with tumor motion. With this technique, the treatment margin added to accommodate the organ motion could be reduced to minimize the radiation dose to normal tissues. Advanced technologies are used to achieve this goal, such as the use of Varian RPM system to monitor respiratory pattern, On-Board Imager to verify target motion, and electronic portal imaging system to verify real-time radiation delivery.
IMRT
Tumors to be treated are often surrounded by normal structures. The dose tolerances to the normal critical organs are one of the limiting factors to radiation dose prescribed to tumor. With the IMRT technique, one will be able to shape the radiation dose to the target and then minimize the dose to critical organs. Therefore, the expected dose could be prescribed to tumor while limiting the radiation damage to the normal tissue within the tolerance. The IMRT involves complicated treatment planning process (called inverse planning) and a dedicated delivery process using dynamic multi-leaf collimator (MLC). A comprehensive quality assurance program specific for both machine and individual patient was very critical and was developed at Duke to ensure the quality treatment of IMRT. We use latest Varian Eclipse inverse planning system and Clinac 21EX machine with120-leaf MLC to delivery fine radiation dose to the target.
IGRT
Image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) is a process of using various imaging technologies to locate a tumor target prior to a radiation therapy treatment. This process is aimed to improve the treatment accuracy so that the need for large target margins which have traditionally been used to compensate for errors in localization. As a result, the amount of healthy tissue exposed to radiation can be reduced, minimizing the incidence of side effects. At Duke, physicians applied advanced imaging techniques using CT, MRI, PET/CT, and SPECT to accurately delineate treatment target. Recently, Duke Physicians are able to use state-of-art in-room on-board imaging and cone-beam CT technologies to visualize the treatment tumor three-dimensionally prior to the delivery of radiation beam. IGRT is complementary to IMRT. IMRT is used to improve the radiation delivery precision and IGRT is used to improve the radiation delivery accuracy.0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 396 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.3K Kidney Cancer
- 670 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 537 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 652 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards