Litcius/Paper detail

External beam radiation dose escalation for high grade glioma

Mohammed Latif Khan, Hany Soliman, Arjun Sahgal, James Perry, Wei Xu, May Tsao

2020Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews25 citationsDOI

Abstract

This is an updated version of the original Cochrane Review published in Issue 8, 2016. High grade glioma (HGG) is a rapidly growing brain tumour in the supporting cells of the nervous system, with several subtypes such as glioblastoma (grade IV astrocytoma), anaplastic (grade III) astrocytoma and anaplastic (grade III) oligodendroglioma. Studies have investigated the best strategy to give radiation to people with HGG. Conventional fractionated radiotherapy involves giving a daily radiation dose (called a fraction) of 180 cGy to 200 cGy. Hypofractionated radiotherapy uses higher daily doses, which reduces the overall number of fractions and treatment time. Hyperfractionated radiotherapy which uses a lower daily dose with a greater number of fractions and multiple fractions per day to deliver a total dose at least equivalent to external beam daily conventionally fractionated radiotherapy in the same time frame. The aim is to reduce the potential for late toxicity. Accelerated radiotherapy (dose escalation) refers to the delivery of multiple fractions per day using daily doses of radiation consistent with external beam daily conventionally fractionated radiotherapy doses. The aim is to reduce the overall treatment time; typically, two or three fractions per day may be delivered with a six to eight hour gap between fractions.

Topics & Concepts

RadiationDe-escalationExternal beam radiationGliomaPhysicsNuclear medicineMedical physicsMedicineRadiation therapyOpticsCancer researchRadiologyInternal medicineGlioma Diagnosis and TreatmentRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical ImagingMedical Imaging Techniques and Applications