Feb 17 2010
Calypso
Medical Technologies, Inc., a developer of targeting technology used
for accurate, precise real-time tracking of tumor targets, today
announced the online publication of a clinical study in Urology
(The GOLD JOURNAL). The prospective, multi-site study,
entitled, “Assessing the Impact of Margin Reduction (AIM),” is the first
outcomes-based study to evaluate the quality of life of high-dose
intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) to the prostate with tightly
contoured treatment technically described as “reduced treatment
margins.” The study findings demonstrate that the use of the Calypso
System during high dose external beam radiation for prostate cancer
resulted in a significant reduction in rectal and urinary
treatment-related side effects.
“Without any tracking at all, I used to use a ten millimeter treatment
margin. With Calypso, I use a three millimeter treatment margin and the
AIM study results demonstrate an improvement in patient-reported quality
of life”
“This is the first comparative study to show that margin reduction in prostate
cancer radiation therapy has clinically significant and measurable
benefits in decreasing acute toxicity and short-term side effects. By
reducing acute toxicity, we hope these patients may also experience a
significant reduction of long-term side effects,” said Dr. Constantine
Mantz, radiation oncologist at 21st Century Oncology in Cape
Coral, Fla. and lead investigator of the study. “When prostate cancer
patients evaluate treatment options, their objective is to select the
therapeutic approach that will cure the cancer while allowing them to
remain as fully functional as possible. The Calypso System, which
enables physicians to deliver increased doses of radiation directly to
the tumor while sparing the surrounding healthy organs from exposure, is
fundamental to our overall approach of treating prostate cancer.”
Organ motion is prevalent, variable and unpredictable during radiation
therapy and can be caused by normal physiologic events such as
digestion, breathing or coughing. Tracking and responding to this motion
is critical for radiation treatments because internal movement of the
organ and tumor increases the likelihood that the radiation beam will
miss the intended target and deliver radiation to the surrounding
healthy tissue, causing side effects. To ensure that the treatment
target stays within the path of the radiation beam, physicians typically
increase the planning treatment volume (PTV) margin, which is defined as
the area of healthy tissue surrounding the prostate tumor that is
exposed to the radiation beam. With real-time tracking of the target
using the Calypso technology, physicians are able to decrease the PTV
margins, thereby subjecting less healthy tissue to radiation.
Researchers compared the AIM study group of 64 patients to 153 patients
in a comparator study published in the New
England Journal of Medicine in 2008. Beacon® electromagnetic
transponders, which are the size of a grain of rice and emit signals
that track the location of the prostate with sub-millimeter accuracy,
were implanted into the prostates of the AIM study group. This level of
precision allowed researchers to reduce the PTV margin while at the same
time increase the radiation dose to 81 Gray (Gy) to more effectively
treat the cancer. Comparator patients were treated using standard
institutional processes and larger PTV margins.
In both groups, patient-reported quality of life was assessed before and
after the completion of radiation therapy using a clinically validated
questionnaire, the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC) that
measures several different domains of the patient’s health. Changes in
scores were compared between the AIM study and comparator groups while
accounting for important patient and cancer characteristics. The AIM
study group experienced significantly fewer side effects associated with
bowel urgency and frequency, fecal incontinence and urinary irritation
than the comparator group. AIM patients not receiving hormonal therapy
also experienced smaller, yet statistically significant advantages over
the comparator group in terms of sexual function.
“Without any tracking at all, I used to use a ten millimeter treatment
margin. With Calypso, I use a three millimeter treatment margin and the
AIM study results demonstrate an improvement in patient-reported quality
of life,” said Howard
M. Sandler, M.D., chair of radiation oncology at Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center’s Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute in Los
Angeles, lead author on the AIM study and investigator in the New
England Journal of Medicine comparator study. “Of all the
technologies that are available, the Calypso System is the only one that
can do real-time tracking as well as localization and provides an
important advantage in terms of keeping the radiation beam on the
prostate.”
The Calypso System, with its GPS for the Body® technology, is
the only product platform that provides real-time tumor tracking during
radiation treatment. Calypso Medical’s proprietary technology utilizes
miniature Beacon transponders implanted in the diseased organ to provide
accurate, precise, continuous information about the tumor target’s
position during external beam radiation therapy. Currently the Calypso
System is cleared by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) for use
in radiation therapy for the prostate and prostatic bed; however, the
technology is designed for body-wide applications.
“This study validates our long-held belief that the ability to track
tumor motion in real-time is a critical component in adapting radiation
therapy, as it assures the clinician and the patient that radiation is
delivered to the cancerous tissue while sparing healthy tissue and
decreasing unwanted side effects,” said Kenneth Russell, M.D., medical
director at Calypso Medical. “We are excited about these results as we
move forward in expanding the reach of our technology into applications
where the tumors experience higher velocity movement.”
SOURCE Calypso Medical Technologies, Inc.