First cancer centre in Germany to use Varian RapidArc treatment

31 January 2009

Three prostate cancer patients have become the first people in Germany to be treated using Varian's new, faster form of radiotherapy that potentially enables doctors to improve outcomes while extending more advanced care to more patients. Südharz Krankenhaus in Nordhausen delivered the faster treatment using RapidArc radiotherapy technology from Varian Medical Systems.

RapidArc delivers a precise and efficient treatment in a single or multiple arcs of the treatment machine around the patient and makes it possible to deliver advanced image-guided intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) two to eight times faster than is possible with conventional IMRT.

At Südharz Krankenhaus Nordhausen, doctors have been able to reduce the treatment time to just two and a half minutes compared with up to 30 minutes for complex IMRT treatments.

“It is very gratifying for me to begin treatments using the most modern moving arc method of radiotherapy,” says Dr Wolfgang Oehler, head of the radiotherapy department. “The three patients are excited to be the first in Germany to receive such treatments although the treatment was so quick that one patient questioned whether he had received the full dose. We assured him that he certainly had and he was pleased to only have to lie on the treatment table for a short time.”

Dr Oehler said RapidArc was a valuable weapon in the hospital’s goal of bringing down waiting lists. “We knew we needed a brilliant new method of shortening treatment times and avoiding waiting lists while improving the quality of the treatment and it was not a hard decision to select RapidArc,” he added.
 
Südharz Krankenhaus treats up to 900 patients a year using two Varian Clinac medical linear accelerators. The hospital pioneered advanced IMRT treatments in Germany, carrying out the country’s first such treatment in June 2001 and treating a further 2,733 patients with the highly conformal technique in the eight years since. 

The hospital’s work has been praised by the president of the German Cancer Aid Society, Prof Dr. Dagmar Schipanski. “For about seven years we have closely followed the IMRT activities at the Südharz Krankenhaus Nordhausen,” she said. “Clinicians at this centre have treated more than 2,500 patients with IMRT and built a huge clinical knowledge base and experience on advanced treatment techniques. As a citizen of the state of Thüringen I’m particularly proud that a clinic in our state has now become the first in Germany to introduce such an elegant and efficient technique as RapidArc.”

With RapidArc, Varian’s Clinac accelerator can target radiation beams at a tumor while continuously rotating around the patient. Conventional IMRT treatments are slower and more difficult for radiotherapy radiographers because they target tumors using a complex sequence of fixed beams from multiple angles.

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