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Cancer,
Radiation Therapy
Prior to
the advent of the x-ray and radioactive isotopes, cancers were
treated by removing them surgically. Many cancers grew undetected
because imaging techniques had not yet been developed. The Roentgen
ray, later referred to as the x-ray and named for the German physicist
and discoverer Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen in the late 19th century,
would change both the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. (See
X-rays in Diagnostic Medicine.)
Skin damage
arising from careless use of x-rays led to early ideas for the
therapeutic use of radiation on human tissue, though its ionizing
effect was not understood at the time. Today scientists understand
that some cancer cells are more susceptible to damage from ionizing
electromagnetic radiation than are ordinary cells. The therapeutic
use of x-rays began in 1896 when Emil Grubbe used x-radiation
to treat a patient with breast cancer. In 1902, Guido Holtzknecht
created a chromo-radiometer, which could record and measure the
radiation dose administered to a patient, paving the way for systematic
use of radiation therapy. One of the first applications of x-ray
therapy was to treat ringworm infection. If enough radiation was
applied to kill the fungus, hair on the skin fell out, but if
too much was applied, the hair did not grow back and the skin
was burned. Thus the nemesis of treatment was defined: the narrow
margin between enough and too much. By the 1920s, however, x-ray
machines were routinely used in hospitals for clinical treatment.
The French
physicist, Henri Becquerel is credited with the discovery of natural
radioactivity when he observed that uranium salts produced images
on nearby photographic plates. Other radioactive elements, first
polonium and then radium, were discovered by French chemists Marie
and Pierre Curie. Perhaps the first medical application of radium
occurred when Marie's husband Pierre burned his arm with it. The
Curies lent radium to Paris physicians, and one early documented
case in 1907 described the removal of a child's facial angioma
using a crossfire technique.
The first
x-ray therapy was administered using radon gas in tubes. The challenge
was then and continued to be the manipulation of a ray (which
is straight) into a body that has contours, many layers, and organs
of different densities and sensitivities. The objective was to
obtain adequate tissue depth with rays without destruction of
surrounding cells.
In 1913,
the first external beam machine used a cathode, or "Coolidge,"
tube for treating superficial tumors. It was referred to as an
orthovoltage applicator and was very slow. Although these machines
were extremely limited, they introduced a new genre of technology
to medicine known as x-ray therapy, later called radiation therapy.
In the 1930s, the use of so-called radium bombs (telecurietherapy)
led to refined treatment times, shielding to avoid exposure of
healthy tissue, and prescribed doses of radiation. However, results
at that time were only palliative.
The Van de
Graaff generator, built in 1931, was able to build up a high electrostatic
charge and thus high voltages of up to a million volts. A medical
Van de Graaff, in which electrically accelerated particles were
used to bombard atoms and produce radiation, was first used in
a clinical setting in 1937. Throughout the 1940s, radiation treatment
with the Van de Graaff allowed a very narrow, targeted beam, higher
energy (about 2 MeV), and less treatment time than with gas tubes.
But as with most other cancer treatments of the 1940s, these efforts
were still palliative and only temporarily relieved pain or reduced
the size of a tumor.
The first
circular electron accelerator, named the betatron, was built in
1940 by Donald Kerst and Robert Seber. Originally designed for
research in atomic physics in the United States, the betatron
was soon adopted for clinical use. Its first clinical application
was by Konrad Gund in 1942 in Germany during World War II, and
it was first used by Kerst in the US in 1948. Both directly produced
electrons, and x-rays produced by accelerators were an ideal source
for therapy and a considerable improvement over the energy that
could be achieved with gas and vacuum tubes (higher energy rays
have better penetration properties). The betatron energy range
of 13-45 MeV, with 25 MeV being optimal for therapy, made the
device suitable. Linear electron accelerators were developed simultaneously
by D.W. Fry in England and William Hansen in the U.S. The first
patient to be treated in London with a linear accelerator was
in 1953.
Until the
new specialty of radiation oncology was recognized in the 1960s
in the US, diagnostic radiologists administered radiation therapy.
Subsequently, the European Society for Therapeutic Radiation and
Oncology as well as many other organizations of these specialists
have formed worldwide.
In the early
1950s, a group of Canadian scientists isolated a highly radioactive
cobalt-60 isotope from a nuclear reactor. This provided a source
of gamma rays, popularly and misleadingly referred to as a "cobalt
bomb," which could be directed at patients. The Cobalt 60
machine emitted gamma rays of 1.25 MeV at a distance of 50 to
60 cm, and could penetrate deep tissues. Because of the danger
of exposure to these rays, buildings in which the machines were
located were required to have walls of very thick lead. Many of
the original cobalt gamma ray systems have been replaced with
linear accelerators.
In 1975,
the development of proton beam radiation allowed for higher doses
of radiation to target tissues while sparing adjacent cells. Since
that time much of the progress in radiation therapy has been through
the application of other technologies. Refinements have included
more stable machines, radiation at higher rates, modifications
to the treatment table, mobility of various machines, higher energy
outputs, and collimators (a device to direct the beam). Energy
is now described in millions rather than thousands of electron
volts. Most machines treat patients in the range of 10 to 25 MeV
or 18 to 20 MeV photons. The new collimator takes the place of
lead positioning blocks that were previously limited in shape
and size. One system consists of 25 moving parts that can shape
the direction of the treatment to conform to the target tumor.
Miniaturization
of technology has allowed for as many as 120 motors to fit in
the head of certain machines to deliver radiation to the patient.
The newest system of external beam radiation is IMRT (Intensity
Modulated Radiation Therapy), which links the treatment planning
system to the linear accelerator and the multileaf collimator.
IMRT has reduced the amount of radiation to surrounding tissues
and provided high resolution images of the patient's anatomy.
By the 1990s,
highly sophisticated imaging technology with the use of computed
tomography (CT) scans, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and ultrasound
facilitated more accurate treatment planning for radiation oncology.
Radionuclides delivered to bone tissue can identify malignant
tissues in a bone scan. More recently, the use of positron emission
tomography (PET) has enabled physicians to image metabolic processes
and to track tumor metastases from lung and bone tumors.
Another form
of radiation therapy, brachytherapy, uses application of a source
to tissues a short distance away. Typical sites are the lung,
where high doses of radiation are given over a two week period
through a catheter placed in the lung, and the cervix, where cesium-137
is placed in the vagina for a few hours. Radioactive iodine and
palladium are used to treat prostate cancer by placing or implanting
"seeds" (tiny titanium cylinders containing the radioactive
isotope) in the gland, and radioactive palladium is also used
in implants for tumors of the tongue. This is known as implant
therapy.
One tumor
site that posed the most difficult problems for both external
beam radiation therapy and implant technology was the brain because
it is covered by bone. The Gamma Knife, developed in 1968 by Lars
Leskall and Borge Larsson in Sweden, is an instrument that delivers
a concentrated radiation dose from Cobalt-60 sources. It fires
201 beams of radiation into the skull that intersect at the target
site. No one beam is powerful enough to harm surrounding tissue,
but the cumulative effect of this precision tool destroys the
tumor.
See also:
Cancer, Chemotherapy; Cancer, Surgical Techniques; Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance (NMR, MRI); Particle Accelerators: Cyclotrons,
Synchrotrons, Collider; Particle Accelerators, Linear; Positron
Emission Tomography (PET); Tomography in Medicine
Lana Thompson
Further Reading
Khan, Faiz.
The Physics of Radiation Therapy. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins.
1995.
Mould R F.
A century of X-Rays and Radioactivity in Medicine, Bristol:
Institute of Physics Publishing, 1993.
Oldham, Mark.
Radiation physics and applications in therapeutic medicine, Physics
Education, Volume 36 Number 6, November 2001.
Rosenow,
U. 1999. 50 years electron therapy with the betatron. Zeitschrift
für Medizinische Physik. 9(2): 73-76.
Thomas, A,
I Isherwood and P N T Wells (ed) 1995 The Invisible Light 100
Years of Medical Radiology (Blackwell Science, Oxford).
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