Publication | Closed Access
Radiation therapy and hyperthermia improve the oxygenation of human soft tissue sarcomas.
187
Citations
11
References
1996
Year
Radiation MedicineTumor HypoxiaHyperthermiaRadiation TherapyTumor OxygenationMedicineHypoxia (Medicine)Resection SpecimenThermal TherapyHead And Neck CancerTissue OxygenationOncologyRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineCancer ResearchRadiologyHealth Sciences
The adverse prognostic impact of tumor hypoxia has been demonstrated in human malignancy. We report the effects of radiotherapy and hyperthermia (HT) on soft tissue sarcoma oxygenation and the relationship between treatment-induced changes in oxygenation and clinical treatment outcome. Patients receiving preoperative radiotherapy and HT underwent tumor oxygenation measurement pretreatment after the start of radiation/pre-HT and one day after the first HT treatment. The magnitude of improvement in tumor oxygenation after the first HT fraction relative to pretreatment baseline was positively correlated with the amount of necrosis seen in the resection specimen. Patients with <90% resection specimen necrosis experienced longer disease-free survival than those with > or = 90% necrosis. Increasing levels of tumor hypoxia were also correlated with diminished metabolic status as measured by P-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy.
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