Authors
HP Kok, P Wust, Paul R Stauffer, F Bardati, GC Van Rhoon, J Crezee
Publication date
2015/12
Source
Radiation Oncology
Volume
10
Pages
1-14
Publisher
BioMed Central
Description
Locoregional hyperthermia, i.e. increasing the tumor temperature to 40–45 °C using an external heating device, is a very effective radio and chemosensitizer, which significantly improves clinical outcome. There is a clear thermal dose-effect relation, but the pursued optimal thermal dose of 43 °C for 1 h can often not be realized due to treatment limiting hot spots in normal tissue. Modern heating devices have a large number of independent antennas, which provides flexible power steering to optimize tumor heating and minimize hot spots, but manual selection of optimal settings is difficult. Treatment planning is a very valuable tool to improve locoregional heating. This paper reviews the developments in treatment planning software for tissue segmentation, electromagnetic field calculations, thermal modeling and optimization techniques. Over the last decade, simulation tools have become more advanced. On …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
HP Kok, P Wust, PR Stauffer, F Bardati, GC Van Rhoon… - Radiation Oncology, 2015