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Assumptions
in the radiotherapy of glioblastoma
Hochberg FH, Pruitt A
In the light of
advances in computerized tomography (CT), we have retrospectively evaluated the
assumptions that underlie the radiation therapy of glioblastoma:
(1) No neuroradiologic technique provides an accurate delineation of tumor bulk
and location,
(2) glioblastoma is commonly multicentric, and
(3) a major source of therapeutic failure is recurrence beyond radiotherapy
fields.
1. CT scans, performed on glioblastoma patients within 2 months of postmortem
examination, defined both gross and microscopic tumor extent (within a 2-cm
margin) in all but 6 of 35 patients evaluated. The major source of error was
subependymal spread (four patients).
2. Multicentricity occurred in only 4% of untreated and 6% of treated
(radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy) patients. All multicentric lesions
were identified on CT scans.
3. Serial CT scans on 42 patients revealed that glioblastoma recurred within a
2-cm margin of the primary site in 90%. Occurrences outside this margin were
accurately delineated by CT in all instances. Because most patients show
recurrence within or in close proximity to the original site, current radiation
doses would appear to be inadequate for therapy of the primary tumor. CT scan
accuracy may permit smaller-field and higher-dose irradiation therapy for
glioblastoma.
PMID: 6252514 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=6252514&dopt=Abstract
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