Hospital News

2009 Press Releases

Monmouth Medical Center: Cutting Out Cancer – Without a Knife 

Cancer is a deadly enemy – particularly when it has spread from one organ to another. In these cases, where previously doctors often had no treatment options, a technology called stereotactic body radiosurgery now offers new hope for keeping that enemy at bay.

“Stereotactic” means the system localizes a tumor in three dimensions, and “radiosurgery” hints at its power. “Where traditional radiation uses a low daily dose for five to seven weeks, this approach applies a high dose in very few treatments, trying to completely ablate – or destroy – the tumor,” explains Mitchell Weiss, MD, chairman of radiation oncology at Monmouth Medical Center. “That’s why the term radiosurgery was coined. It essentially means doing surgery with a radiation beam rather than with a scalpel. And it can get to remote places in the body that would be very difficult for a surgeon to reach.”

At Monmouth’s Institute for Advanced Radiation Oncology, stereotactic radiosurgery is now performed using a system called TomoTherapy, which employs a large donut-shaped computed tomography (CT) scanner through with the patient passes.

“TomoTherapy is a marriage of a CT unit and a linear accelerator, a device that creates high-energy X-ray beams,” explains Rita Saible, chief therapist in the radiation oncology unit. It takes fresh images of the anatomy that allows doctors to see the location of the tumor immediately before treatment to make necessary adjustments. Then it delivers radiation beams in a helical 360-degree pattern into the patient’s body in different computer-chosen directions and intensities to kill cancer cells and leave healthy tissue intact.”

Using TomoTherapy for sterotactic radiosurgery is significantly improving the delivery of radiation to many parts of the body including the liver, spine, lungs, brain, and the head and neck.

“The liver is an ideal application for TomoTherapy because it moves a lot as the patient breathes, so the system’s real-time imaging becomes a big advantage,” says Dr. Weiss. While tumors originating in the liver still usually require surgery, he explains, cancers that have spread to the liver from other parts of the body can often be treated with the virtual “knife” of radiosurgery.

Dr. Weiss says, “The big advantage of TomoTherapy for lung cancer patients is allowing higher dose levels than we were able to use before, thus improving outcomes.”

Patients with brain tumors will benefit from TomoTherapy’s precise targeting of high radiation doses – potentially as much as 10 times as high as those traditionally employed.

“It lets us target the brain tumor with very high doses – doses that in the past would have required neurosurgeon to attach a surgical frame to the head to hold it in position,” Dr. Weiss says.

Gaining international, national and state recognition for its clinical research into advanced methods of radiation therapy in recent years, the Institute for Advanced Radiation Oncology at the Leon Hess Cancer Center’s achievements paved the way for Monmouth Medical Center to become the first hospital in Monmouth County to earn accreditation from the American College of Radiation Oncology for the quality, safety and appropriateness of its radiation therapy.

For more information on TomoTherapy or the Leon Hess Cancer Center, or for referral to a cancer specialist, call 1-888-724-7123 or visit www.mmccancer.com.

Date: January 19, 2009

CONTACT: Kristine A. Brown
Director of Public Relations
732-557-3902


[ top ] [ back to News Index ]

 
Monmouth Health & Life
Call Center
Cord Blood Banking Program
Nurses
Careers