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How Low Can You Go? The Radiobiology of Hypofractionation

Douglas Brand, Anna M. Kirby, John Yarnold, Navita Somaiah

2022Clinical Oncology54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hypofractionated radical radiotherapy is now an accepted standard of care for tumour sites such as prostate and breast cancer. Much research effort is being directed towards more profoundly hypofractionated (ultrahypofractionated) schedules, with some reaching UK standard of care (e.g. adjuvant breast). Hypofractionation exerts varying influences on each of the major clinical end points of radiotherapy studies: acute toxicity, late toxicity and local control. This review will discuss these effects from the viewpoint of the traditional 5 Rs of radiobiology, before considering non-canonical radiobiological effects that may be relevant to ultrahypofractionated radiotherapy. The principles outlined here may assist the reader in their interpretation of the wealth of clinical data presented in the tumour site-specific articles in this special issue.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRadiobiologyRadiation therapyProstate cancerMedical physicsAdjuvant radiotherapyStandard of careOncologyCancerRadiologySurgeryInternal medicineAdvanced Radiotherapy TechniquesRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical ImagingMRI in cancer diagnosis
How Low Can You Go? The Radiobiology of Hypofractionation | Litcius