Report from the Radiation Oncology Committee of the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG): Research Objectives Workshop 2003.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-1-2003
Abstract
To achieve the ultimate goal of cancer treatment, which is 100% cancer control with negligible toxicity, the therapeutic window must be enlarged, allowing for higher doses of beneficial treatments with reduced toxicity. The advent of image- and metabolism-guided therapy offers the best opportunity to date for combining modern radiation targeting and imaging techniques. Indeed, for the first time, it is reasonable to locally target metastatic disease with the goal of sterilization. Combining these focal radiation techniques with novel targeted antiproliferative agents and full-dose classic cytotoxic chemotherapy will become more effective as we learn to use these compounds in a less systemically toxic manner and as radiation fields become more defined. In addition, increasing numbers of biologic modifiers of normal tissue response are becoming available, and they suggest great promise for decreasing the normal tissue toxicity resulting from both radiation and chemotherapy treatments. Thus, radiation metastectomy for gross metastases, used together with systemic control of micrometastatic disease, may yield improved survival rates. This hypothesis is ready for testing in cancers of the breast, prostate, colon, and in sarcomas. Enlarging the therapeutic window is a major goal that would allow for an increasingly favorable therapeutic gain.
Volume
26
Issue
5
First Page
522
Last Page
529
ISSN
1537-453X
Published In/Presented At
Okunieff, P., Meyn, R. E., Teicher, B. A., Thomas, C. R., Jr, Gaspar, L. E., Raben, D., Giri, S., Lavey, R. S., Turrisi, A. T., 3rd, Swanson, G. P., Smalley, S. R., & Radiation Oncology Committee of the Southwest Oncology Group (2003). Report from the Radiation Oncology Committee of the Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG): Research Objectives Workshop 2003. American journal of clinical oncology, 26(5), 522–529. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.coc.0000092253.71406.2b
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
14528084
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article