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principles of radiation oncology
cmbm exam V
41
Chemistry
Graduate
02/17/2010

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Term
what are the physics behind radiation therapy?
Definition
radiation therapy works due to cellular absorption of radiation, leading to ionization of biologic materials
Term
ionizing radiation can be classified as ____ or _____ ?
Definition
electromagnetic or particulate
Term
what are the 2 kinds of electromagnetic radiation? how are they produced?
Definition
gamma rays (produced spontaneously from elements suchs as cobalt/radium), x rays (produced from linear accelerators)
Term
where would lower voltages of x ray be used? higher?
Definition
lower doses would be head/neck, higher would be pelvis
Term
what is a unit of radiation deliverance?
Definition
1 gray (100 centigrade)
Term
what is teletherapy?
Definition
external beam radiation, uses an external machine to deliver radiation -> most common type used
Term
what is bradytherapy?
Definition
when the radiation source is placed w/in the region to be treated (also called implants, can be temp/permanent)
Term
what does ionizing radiation do on a biological level? what are most effects of ionizing radiation due to?
Definition
ionizing radiation deposits energy as it traverses the absorbed medium, cutting DNA (directly/indirectly), preventing it from dividing. most effects of ionizing radiation are indirect (about 70%) due to free radical formation, which leads to DNA ligation
Term
what is the therapeutic ratio?
Definition
all cells (CA/non-CA) can die from DNA damage, but normal cells have a greater ability to repair the damage, so the hope is that normal cells will repair themselves more efficiently. a good therapeutic ratio consists of more CA cells affected by radiation and this would be apparent in radiosensitive tumors
Term
what is fractionation? why is it done?
Definition
the total radiation dose is fractionated (spread out over time) for several important reasons: fractionation allows normal cells time to recover, while tumor cells are generally less efficient in repair between fractions. fractionation also allows tumor cells that were in a relatively radio-resistant phase of the cell cycle during one treatment to cycle into a sensitive phase of the cycle before the next fraction is given.
Term
when is fractionation radiation delivered? how is it modulated for palliative care?
Definition
~1.8-2 Gy every day for 1-9 wks depending on if palliative care or not. fraction size is increased and the dosage (total tx time) is decreased for palliative treatment.
Term
how is dosage determined for radiation therapy?
Definition
what kind of cancer, site of tx, other planned modalities (chemotherapy/sx)
Term
what radiation dose does lymphoma usually respond to?
Definition
36-40 Gy (don't worry about too much)
Term
what radiation dose does epithelial malignacy usually respond to?
Definition
50 Gy (don't worry about too much)
Term
what radiation dose does gross disease usually respond to?
Definition
70 Gy (don't worry about too much)
Term
what can be treated with radiation?
Definition
almost everything can be treated with radiation, (B. prostate, lung, head and neck, brain tumors, lung cancer, cervical cancer, skin cancer, etc. all effective in radiation treatment)
Term
where does sx usually fail in tumor tx? radiation?
Definition
sx usually fails to be effective at periphery of tumors, while radiation usually fails at the core - so they work well in concert
Term
what is preoperative radiation tx? why is it used? disadvantages? when is this commonly done?
Definition
preoperative radiation sterilizes the edges of the resection, so the surgeon knows they're not cutting through the tumor's edge. it allows for better (preoperative) oxygenation of the area (less oxygen can lead to more resistant tumor cells). preoperative radiation may also shrink an unresectable tumor to make it resectable. disadvanrages: it can lead to a higher rate of sx complications, pts may have already been irradiated. this is commonly used for GI tumors.
Term
what is postoperative radiation tx? why is it used? disadvantages? when is this commonly done?
Definition
postoperative radiation is advantageous b/c tx can be given based on operative findings for the tumor. disadvantages include a potential larger field to cover all sites of likely tumor seeding and increased hypoxia (due to sx compromised vasculature). it is commonly used in GI, head and neck, breast CA, and sarcomas
Term
what are the 3 major branches of oncology?
Definition
medical, radiation and surgical oncology
Term
how are radiation and chemotherapy combined?
Definition
chemotherapy (given before/after radiation) can function as a radiation sensitizer, improve local radiation control, and *help with organ preservation (esp w/head&neck, anal, bladder, and breast CA)*
Term
what characterizes side effects associated with radiation therapy in the short (acute) term? long term? what influences these side effect?s
Definition
in the short term, radiation side effects occur in rapidly renewing tissues (mucosa, skin, small intestine), while being treated and disappear 4-6 weeks later. long term side effects (epithelial/stromal/vascular) show up ~6 months after therapy. tx size, fraction size, dose recieved all influence side effect characteristics.
Term
what is the "volume" of a tumor? what portion of this is targeted by radiation?
Definition
concentric regions extending out rom the tumor consisting of the gross tumor, the microextensions, the biological margin, and the geometrical port margin <- all of which has to be within the tx margins
Term
what is the 2D imaging technique?
Definition
an older way imaging technique where one slice was used to determine tumor volume
Term
what is the shrinking field technique?
Definition
start w/a large area, and decrease it as tumor shrinks (while increasing dosage)
Term
what characterizes pt assessments during radiation tx?
Definition
pt visits minimally once a week to make sure they are tolerating well, then are seen up to one month after treatment finished to check and see if acute side effects have cleared, then see every six months up to two years out, then see once a year so haven’t developed a reoccurrence or second or third malignancy
Term
what are different versions of external beam radiation therapy?
Definition
conventional ex beam RT, IMRT, IGRT, and stereotactic RT
Term
how are conventional RT fields generated? what are the fields of tx that are administered with this imaging technique?
Definition
conventional RT using a flurosimulator or w/a CATSCAN (can be 2 or 3D) to provide tumor imaging for 4 field tx (ant, post, and R&L laterals) and the multi-leaf collimator (MLC) conforms to the correct area for each radiation administration
Term
what is IMRT?
Definition
intensity modulator radiation therapy is where the the MLC changes its configuration as the tx is delivered to wrap the beam around tumors using very high radiation doses - often used in head&neck tx. it can also be used to differentially treat different structures within the same administration.
Term
what is IGRT? what is it commonly used for? what does it mean if it is sterotactic?
Definition
image guided radiation therapy - means you can actually see what you are treating while you are treating it, which is commonly used for brain metastasis, other primary CNS lesions, peripheral lung NSCLC, and intr-abdominal lesions <- for high dose/small volume tx. radiation therapy is stereotactic if different beams are converging from different angles
Term
what is respiratory gating? what is it used in tx of?
Definition
IGRT that takes into account lung movement during tx of peripheral lung tumors (NSCLC), so the beam is only fired when the tumor is in one position and turns off when it moves out of that field
Term
what are 3 versions of brachytherapy?
Definition
permanent implants, temporary implants and intra-operative radiation therapy (IORT)
Term
how would brachytherapy be used for prostate CA?
Definition
ultrasound inserted into the rectum, radioactive seeds are inserted through the peritoneum using a needle grid, and then the status is checked periodially with CAT scans or other imaging
Term
how would brachytherapy be used for cancers such as a sarcoma whose margins are still not clear after sx?
Definition
trochars are put in to mark the target areas for radiation treatment, catheters are then put in and iridium is administered
Term
what is a cyberknife?
Definition
linear accelerator on robotic arm with image recording in real time to take pt's movements into account
Term
what is tomotherapy?
Definition
this looks and functions like CT, but can also deliever radiation. it allows specificity of tx and is good for treating skin lesions
Term
what is the gamma knife?
Definition
the "grandfather" of stereotactics, it has colbalt sources behind large doors and is used exclusively on CNS lesions (will probably be phased out)
Term
what is a proton unit used for?
Definition
heavy particle tx, is able to produce a “Brag Peak” which deposits energy in high doses to a defined area and then leaves (does not linger over surrounding tissue)
Term
what is used in 90% of current radiation tx?
Definition
linear accelerators
Term
what is high dose radiation (HDR) used for?
Definition
this can be used in brachytherapy to mechanically push out catheters and is good for gynecologic malignancies, it is not as restrictive to the pt's lifestyle, and it provides good shielding for the rest of the body tissues (esp with eBx)
Term
what are the most cancers treated with?
Definition
combined modalities (sx, chemo, radiation)
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