31 results on '"Rieber, J"'
Search Results
2. Stereotactic MRI-guided radiation therapy for localized prostate cancer (SMILE): a prospective, multicentric phase-II-trial
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Ristau, J., Hörner-Rieber, J., Buchele, C., Klüter, S., Jäkel, C., Baumann, L., Andratschke, N., Garcia Schüler, H., Guckenberger, M., Li, M., Niyazi, M., Belka, C., Herfarth, K., Debus, J., and Koerber, S. A.
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- 2022
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3. MR-guided adaptive stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) of primary tumor for pain control in metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (mPDAC): an open randomized, multicentric, parallel group clinical trial (MASPAC)
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Pavic, M., Niyazi, M., Wilke, L., Corradini, S., Vornhülz, M., Mansmann, U., Al Tawil, A., Fritsch, R., Hörner-Rieber, J., Debus, J., Guckenberger, M., Belka, C., Mayerle, J., and Beyer, G.
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- 2022
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4. MR-guidance in clinical reality: current treatment challenges and future perspectives
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Corradini, S., Alongi, F., Andratschke, N., Belka, C., Boldrini, L., Cellini, F., Debus, J., Guckenberger, M., Hörner-Rieber, J., Lagerwaard, F. J., Mazzola, R., Palacios, M. A., Philippens, M. E. P., Raaijmakers, C. P. J., Terhaard, C. H. J., Valentini, V., and Niyazi, M.
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- 2019
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5. The impact of local control on overall survival after stereotactic body radiotherapy for liver and lung metastases from colorectal cancer: a combined analysis of 388 patients with 500 metastases
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Klement, Rainer J., Abbasi-Senger, N., Adebahr, S., Alheid, H., Allgaeuer, M., Becker, G., Blanck, O., Boda-Heggemann, J., Brunner, T., Duma, M., Eble, M. J., Ernst, I., Gerum, S., Habermehl, D., Hass, P., Henkenberens, C., Hildebrandt, G., Imhoff, D., Kahl, H., Klass, N. D., Krempien, R., Lewitzki, V., Lohaus, F., Ostheimer, C., Papachristofilou, A., Petersen, C., Rieber, J., Schneider, T., Schrade, E., Semrau, R., Wachter, S., Wittig, A., Guckenberger, M., and Andratschke, N.
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- 2019
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6. MR-guided adaptive stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) of primary tumor for pain control in metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (mPDAC): an open randomized, multicentric, parallel group clinical trial (MASPAC)
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Pavic, Matea; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3899-6152, Niyazi, M, Wilke, Lotte; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0702-2355, Corradini, Stefanie; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8709-7252, Vornhülz, M, Mansmann, U, Al Tawil, A, Fritsch, Ralph; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9639-3213, Hörner-Rieber, J, Debus, J, Guckenberger, Matthias; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7146-9071, Belka, Claus; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1287-7825, Mayerle, J, Beyer, G, Pavic, Matea; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3899-6152, Niyazi, M, Wilke, Lotte; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0702-2355, Corradini, Stefanie; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8709-7252, Vornhülz, M, Mansmann, U, Al Tawil, A, Fritsch, Ralph; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9639-3213, Hörner-Rieber, J, Debus, J, Guckenberger, Matthias; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7146-9071, Belka, Claus; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1287-7825, Mayerle, J, and Beyer, G
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Pain symptoms in the upper abdomen and back are prevalent in 80% of patients with metastatic pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (mPDAC), where the current standard treatment is a systemic therapy consisting of at least doublet-chemotherapy for fit patients. Palliative low-dose radiotherapy is a well-established local treatment option but there is some evidence for a better and longer pain response after a dose-intensified radiotherapy of the primary pancreatic cancer (pPCa). Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) can deliver high radiation doses in few fractions, therefore reducing chemotherapy-free intervals. However, prospective data on pain control after SBRT of pPCa is very limited. Therefore, we aim to investigate the impact of SBRT on pain control in patients with mPDAC in a prospective trial. METHODS This is a prospective, double-arm, randomized controlled, international multicenter study testing the added benefit of MR-guided adaptive SBRT of the pPca embedded between standard of care-chemotherapy (SoC-CT) cycles for pain control and prevention of pain in patients with mPDAC. 92 patients with histologically proven mPDAC and at least stable disease after initial 8 weeks of SoC-CT will be eligible for the trial and 1:1 randomized in 3 centers in Germany and Switzerland to either experimental arm A, receiving MR-guided SBRT of the pPCa with 5 × 6.6 Gy at 80% isodose with continuation of SoC-CT thereafter, or control arm B, continuing SoC-CT without SBRT. Daily MR-guided plan adaptation intents to achieve good target coverage, while simultaneously minimizing dose to organs at risk. Patients will be followed up for minimum 6 and maximum of 18 months. The primary endpoint of the study is the "mean cumulative pain index" rated every 4 weeks until death or end of study using numeric rating scale. DISCUSSION An adequate long-term control of pain symptoms in patients with mPDAC is an unmet clinical need. Despite improvements in systemic treatment, local c
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- 2022
7. Stereotactic MRI-guided radiation therapy for localized prostate cancer (SMILE): a prospective, multicentric phase-II-trial
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Ristau, J, Hörner-Rieber, J, Buchele, C, et al, Andratschke, N, Garcia Schüler, H, Guckenberger, Matthias; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7146-9071, Ristau, J, Hörner-Rieber, J, Buchele, C, et al, Andratschke, N, Garcia Schüler, H, and Guckenberger, Matthias; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7146-9071
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Normofractionated radiation regimes for definitive prostate cancer treatment usually extend over 7-8 weeks. Recently, moderate hypofractionation with doses per fraction between 2.2 and 4 Gy has been shown to be safe and feasible with oncologic non-inferiority compared to normofractionation. Radiobiologic considerations lead to the assumption that prostate cancer might benefit in particular from hypofractionation in terms of tumor control and toxicity. First data related to ultrahypofractionation demonstrate that the overall treatment time can be reduced to 5-7 fractions with single doses > 6 Gy safely, even with simultaneous focal boosting of macroscopic tumor(s). With MR-guided linear accelerators (MR-linacs) entering clinical routine, invasive fiducial implantations become unnecessary. The aim of the multicentric SMILE study is to evaluate the use of MRI-guided stereotactic radiotherapy for localized prostate cancer in 5 fractions regarding safety and feasibility. METHODS The study is designed as a prospective, one-armed, two-stage, multi-center phase-II-trial with 68 patients planned. Low- and intermediate-risk localized prostate cancer patients will be eligible for the study as well as early high-risk patients (cT3a and/or Gleason Score ≤ 8 and/or PSA ≤ 20 ng/ml) according to d'Amico. All patients will receive definitive MRI-guided stereotactic radiation therapy with a total dose of 37.5 Gy in 5 fractions (single dose 7.5 Gy) on alternating days. A focal simultaneous integrated boost to MRI-defined tumor(s) up to 40 Gy can optionally be applied. The primary composite endpoint includes the assessment of urogenital or gastrointestinal toxicity ≥ grade 2 or treatment-related discontinuation of therapy. The use of MRI-guided radiotherapy enables online plan adaptation and intrafractional gating to ensure optimal target volume coverage and protection of organs at risk. DISCUSSION With moderate hypofractionation being the standard in definitive radiation th
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- 2022
8. MR-guidance in clinical reality: Current treatment challenges and future perspectives
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Klinische Fysica RT, Cancer, MS Radiotherapie, Corradini, S., Alongi, F., Andratschke, N., Belka, C., Boldrini, L., Cellini, F., Debus, J., Guckenberger, M., Hörner-Rieber, J., Lagerwaard, F. J., Mazzola, R., Palacios, M. A., Philippens, M. E.P., Raaijmakers, C. P.J., Terhaard, C. H.J., Valentini, V., Niyazi, M., Klinische Fysica RT, Cancer, MS Radiotherapie, Corradini, S., Alongi, F., Andratschke, N., Belka, C., Boldrini, L., Cellini, F., Debus, J., Guckenberger, M., Hörner-Rieber, J., Lagerwaard, F. J., Mazzola, R., Palacios, M. A., Philippens, M. E.P., Raaijmakers, C. P.J., Terhaard, C. H.J., Valentini, V., and Niyazi, M.
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- 2019
9. MR-guidance in clinical reality: current treatment challenges and future perspectives
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Corradini, S; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8709-7252, Alongi, F, Andratschke, N, Belka, C, Boldrini, L, Cellini, F, Debus, J, Guckenberger, M, Hörner-Rieber, J, Lagerwaard, F J, Mazzola, R, Palacios, M A, Philippens, M E P, Raaijmakers, C P J, Terhaard, C H J, Valentini, V, Niyazi, M, Corradini, S; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8709-7252, Alongi, F, Andratschke, N, Belka, C, Boldrini, L, Cellini, F, Debus, J, Guckenberger, M, Hörner-Rieber, J, Lagerwaard, F J, Mazzola, R, Palacios, M A, Philippens, M E P, Raaijmakers, C P J, Terhaard, C H J, Valentini, V, and Niyazi, M
- Abstract
Magnetic Resonance-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) marks the beginning of a new era. MR is a versatile and suitable imaging modality for radiotherapy, as it enables direct visualization of the tumor and the surrounding organs at risk. Moreover, MRgRT provides real-time imaging to characterize and eventually track anatomical motion. Nevertheless, the successful translation of new technologies into clinical practice remains challenging. To date, the initial availability of next-generation hybrid MR-linac (MRL) systems is still limited and therefore, the focus of the present preview was on the initial applicability in current clinical practice and on future perspectives of this new technology for different treatment sites.MRgRT can be considered a groundbreaking new technology that is capable of creating new perspectives towards an individualized, patient-oriented planning and treatment approach, especially due to the ability to use daily online adaptation strategies. Furthermore, MRL systems overcome the limitations of conventional image-guided radiotherapy, especially in soft tissue, where target and organs at risk need accurate definition. Nevertheless, some concerns remain regarding the additional time needed to re-optimize dose distributions online, the reliability of the gating and tracking procedures and the interpretation of functional MR imaging markers and their potential changes during the course of treatment. Due to its continuous technological improvement and rapid clinical large-scale application in several anatomical settings, further studies may confirm the potential disruptive role of MRgRT in the evolving oncological environment.
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- 2019
10. The impact of local control on overall survival after stereotactic body radiotherapy for liver and lung metastases from colorectal cancer: a combined analysis of 388 patients with 500 metastases
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Klement, Rainer J; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1401-4270, Abbasi-Senger, N, Adebahr, S, Alheid, H, Allgaeuer, M, Becker, G, Blanck, O, Boda-Heggemann, J, Brunner, T, Duma, M, Eble, M J, Ernst, I, Gerum, S, Habermehl, D, Hass, P, Henkenberens, C, Hildebrandt, G, Imhoff, D, Kahl, H, Klass, N D, Krempien, R, Lewitzki, V, Lohaus, F, Ostheimer, C, Papachristofilou, A, Petersen, C, Rieber, J, Schneider, T, Schrade, E, Semrau, R, Wachter, S, Wittig, A, Guckenberger, Matthias; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7146-9071, Andratschke, N; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3647-5916, Klement, Rainer J; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1401-4270, Abbasi-Senger, N, Adebahr, S, Alheid, H, Allgaeuer, M, Becker, G, Blanck, O, Boda-Heggemann, J, Brunner, T, Duma, M, Eble, M J, Ernst, I, Gerum, S, Habermehl, D, Hass, P, Henkenberens, C, Hildebrandt, G, Imhoff, D, Kahl, H, Klass, N D, Krempien, R, Lewitzki, V, Lohaus, F, Ostheimer, C, Papachristofilou, A, Petersen, C, Rieber, J, Schneider, T, Schrade, E, Semrau, R, Wachter, S, Wittig, A, Guckenberger, Matthias; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7146-9071, and Andratschke, N; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3647-5916
- Abstract
Background: The aim of this analysis was to model the effect of local control (LC) on overall survival (OS) in patients treated with stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for liver or lung metastases from colorectal cancer. Methods: The analysis is based on pooled data from two retrospective SBRT databases for pulmonary and hepatic metastases from 27 centers from Germany and Switzerland. Only patients with metastases from colorectal cancer were considered to avoid histology as a confounding factor. An illness-death model was employed to model the relationship between LC and OS. Results: Three hundred eighty-eight patients with 500 metastatic lesions (lung n = 209, liver n = 291) were included and analyzed. Median follow-up time for local recurrence assessment was 12.1 months. Ninety-nine patients with 112 lesions experienced local failure. Seventy-one of these patients died after local failure. Median survival time was 27.9 months in all patients and 25.4 months versus 30.6 months in patients with and without local failure after SBRT. The baseline risk of death after local failure exceeds the baseline risk of death without local failure at 10 months indicating better survival with LC. Conclusion: In CRC patients with lung or liver metastases, our findings suggest improved long-term OS by achieving metastatic disease control using SBRT in patients with a projected OS estimate of > 12 months.
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- 2019
11. Alpha/beta values in pediatric medulloblastoma: implications for tailored approaches in radiation oncology.
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Jazmati D, Sohn D, Hörner-Rieber J, Qin N, Bölke E, Haussmann J, Schwarz R, Niggemeier ND, Borkhardt A, Babor F, Brozou T, Felek M, Tamaskovics B, Melchior P, Beez T, Timmermann B, Remke M, Corradini S, Schulz RT, Preugschas RL, Budach W, and Matuschek C
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- Humans, Child, Radiation Oncology methods, Cell Line, Tumor, Medulloblastoma radiotherapy, Medulloblastoma pathology, Cerebellar Neoplasms radiotherapy, Cerebellar Neoplasms pathology, Radiation Tolerance, Dose Fractionation, Radiation
- Abstract
Background: Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant pediatric brain tumor, typically treated with normofractionated craniospinal irradiation (CSI) with an additional boost over about 6 weeks in children older than 3 years. This study investigates the sensitivity of pediatric medulloblastoma cell lines to different radiation fractionation schedules. While extensively studied in adult tumors, these ratios remain unknown in pediatric cases due to the rarity of the disease., Materials and Methods: Five distinct medulloblastoma cell lines (ONS76, UW228-3, DAOY, D283, D425) were exposed to varying radiation doses and fractionation schemes. In addition, ONS76 and UW228-3 stably overexpressing MYC were analyzed. Alpha/beta values, representing fractionation sensitivity, were quantified using the linear-quadratic model of radiation survival., Results: The study unveiled elevated alpha/beta ratios across diverse medulloblastoma cell lines, with a weighted mean alpha/beta value of 11.01 Gy (CI: 5.23-16.79 Gy). Neither TP53 status nor the levels of MYC expression influenced fractionated radiosensitivity. Furthermore, differences in alpha/beta values cannot be correlated with molecular subgroups (p = 0.07) or radiosensitivity (SF2)., Conclusion: These in vitro findings strongly recommend normofractionated or hyperfractionated radiotherapy for paediatric medulloblastoma cases due to consistently high alpha/beta values across subgroups. Conversely, hypofractionated radiotherapy is not advisable within a curative approach. This study presents significant potential by enabling the estimation of radiobiological fractionations and dose effects in young, vulnerable patients, highlighting its importance for advancing patient-specific therapeutic strategies., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: According to our ethics commission board, ethical approval was not deemed necessary for the irradiation of cell lines, as it is not a mandatory requirement. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2025
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12. Intrafraction organ movement in adaptive MR-guided radiotherapy of abdominal lesions - dosimetric impact and how to detect its extent in advance.
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Buchele C, Renkamp CK, Regnery S, Behnisch R, Rippke C, Schlüter F, Hoegen-Saßmannshausen P, Debus J, Hörner-Rieber J, Alber M, and Klüter S
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- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Abdominal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Abdominal Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Aged, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods, Movement, Dose Fractionation, Radiation, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided methods, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Organs at Risk radiation effects, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Radiotherapy Dosage
- Abstract
Introduction: Magnetic resonance guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) allows daily adaptation of treatment plans to compensate for positional changes of target volumes and organs at risk (OARs). However, current adaptation times are relatively long and organ movement occurring during the adaptation process might offset the benefit gained by adaptation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the dosimetric impact of these intrafractional changes. Additionally, a method to predict the extent of organ movement before the first treatment was evaluated in order to have the possibility to compensate for them, for example by adding additional margins to OARs., Materials & Methods: Twenty patients receiving adaptive MRgRT for treatment of abdominal lesions were retrospectively analyzed. Magnetic resonance (MR) images acquired at the start of adaptation and immediately before irradiation were used to calculate adapted and pre-irradiation dose in OARs directly next to the planning target volume. The extent of organ movement was determined on MR images acquired during simulation sessions and adaptive treatments, and their agreement was evaluated. Correlation between the magnitude of organ movement during simulation and the duration of simulation session was analyzed in order to assess whether organ movement might be relevant even if the adaptation process could be accelerated in the future., Results: A significant increase in dose constraint violations was observed from adapted (6.9%) to pre-irradiation (30.2%) dose distributions. Overall, OAR dose increased significantly by 4.3% due to intrafractional organ movement. Median changes in organ position of 7.5 mm (range 1.5-10.5 mm) were detected within a median time of 17.1 min (range 1.6-28.7 min). Good agreement was found between the range of organ movement during simulation and adaptation (66.8%), especially if simulation sessions were longer and multiple MR images were acquired. No correlation was determined between duration of simulation sessions and magnitude of organ movement., Conclusion: Intrafractional organ movement can impact dose distributions and lead to violations of OAR tolerance doses, which impairs the benefit of daily on-table plan adaptation. By application of simulation images, the extent of intrafractional organ movement can be predicted, which possibly allows to compensate for them., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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13. Compliance of volunteers in a fully-enclosed patient rotation system for MR-guided radiation therapy: a prospective study.
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Beyer C, Paul KM, Dorsch S, Echner G, Dinkel F, Welzel T, Seidensaal K, Hörner-Rieber J, Jäkel O, Debus J, and Klüter S
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- Humans, Prospective Studies, Male, Female, Adult, Rotation, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Motion Sickness etiology, Patient Compliance, Anxiety etiology, Healthy Volunteers, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided methods
- Abstract
Background: Particle therapy makes a noteworthy contribution in the treatment of tumor diseases. In order to be able to irradiate from different angles, usually expensive, complex and large gantries are used. Instead rotating the beam via a gantry, the patient itself might be rotated. Here we present tolerance and compliance of volunteers for a fully-enclosed patient rotation system in a clinical magnetic resonance (MR)-scanner for potential use in MR-guided radiotherapy, conducted within a prospective evaluation study., Methods: A patient rotation system was used to simulate and perform magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-examinations with 50 volunteers without an oncological question. For 20 participants, the MR-examination within the bore was simulated by introducing realistic MRI noise, whereas 30 participants received an examination with image acquisition. Initially, body parameters and claustrophobia were assessed. The subjects were then rotated to different angles for simulation (0°, 45°, 90°, 180°) and imaging (0°, 70°, 90°, 110°). At each angle, anxiety and motion sickness were assessed using a 6-item State-Trait-Anxiety-Inventory (STAI-6) and a modified Motion Sickness Assessment Questionnaire (MSAQ). In addition, general areas of discomfort were evaluated., Results: Out of 50 subjects, three (6%) subjects terminated the study prematurely. One subject dropped out during simulation due to nausea while rotating to 45°. During imaging, further two subjects dropped out due to shoulder pain from positioning at 90° and 110°, respectively. The average result for claustrophobia (0 = no claustrophobia to 4 = extreme claustrophobia) was none to light claustrophobia (average score: simulation 0.64 ± 0.33, imaging 0.51 ± 0.39). The mean anxiety scores (0% = no anxiety to 100% = maximal anxiety) were 11.04% (simulation) and 15.82% (imaging). Mean motion sickness scores (0% = no motion sickness to 100% = maximal motion sickness) of 3.5% (simulation) and 6.76% (imaging) were obtained across all participants., Conclusion: Our study proves the feasibility of horizontal rotation in a fully-enclosed rotation system within an MR-scanner. Anxiety scores were low and motion sickness was only a minor influence. Both anxiety and motion sickness showed no angular dependency. Further optimizations with regard to immobilization in the rotation device may increase subject comfort., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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14. Efficacy and toxicity of photon, proton, and carbon ion radiotherapy in the treatment of intracranial solitary fibrous tumor/hemangiopericytoma.
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Ton M, Deng M, Meixner E, Eichkorn T, Krämer A, Seidensaal K, Hörner-Rieber J, Lischalk J, Herfarth K, Debus J, and König L
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- Male, Humans, Female, Protons, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local radiotherapy, Retrospective Studies, Hemangiopericytoma radiotherapy, Hemangiopericytoma pathology, Hemangiopericytoma surgery, Solitary Fibrous Tumors radiotherapy, Solitary Fibrous Tumors pathology, Heavy Ion Radiotherapy adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Solitary fibrous tumors (SFT) of the central nervous system are rare and treatment options are not well established. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical outcomes of radiotherapy (RT) and re-radiotherapy (re-RT) for de novo intracranial SFT and recurrent intracranial SFT., Methods: This retrospective study analyzed efficacy and toxicity of different RT modalities in patients who received radiotherapy (RT) for intracranial SFT at Heidelberg University Hospital between 2000 and 2020 following initial surgery after de novo diagnosis ("primary group"). We further analyzed the patients of this cohort who suffered from tumor recurrence and received re-RT at our institution ("re-irradiation (re-RT) group"). Median follow-up period was 54.0 months (0-282) in the primary group and 20.5 months (0-72) in the re-RT group. RT modalities included 3D-conformal RT (3D-CRT), intensity-modulated RT (IMRT), stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), proton RT, and carbon-ion RT (C12-RT). Response rates were analyzed according to RECIST 1.1 criteria., Results: While the primary group consisted of 34 patients (f: 16; m:18), the re-RT group included 12 patients (f: 9; m: 3). Overall response rate (ORR) for the primary group was 38.3% (N = 11), with 32.4% (N = 11) complete remissions (CR) and 5.9% (N = 2) partial remissions (PR). Stable disease (SD) was confirmed in 5.9% (N = 2), while 41.2% (N = 14) experienced progressive disease (PD). 14% (N = 5) were lost to follow up. The re-RT group had 25.0% CR and 17.0% PR with 58.0% PD. The 1-, 3-, and 5-year progression-free survival rates were 100%, 96%, and 86%, respectively, in the primary group, and 81%, 14%, and 14%, respectively, in the re-RT group. Particle irradiation (N = 11) was associated with a lower likelihood of developing a recurrence in the primary setting than photon therapy (N = 18) (OR = 0.038; p = 0.002), as well as doses ≥ 60.0 Gy (N = 15) versus < 60.0 Gy (N = 14) (OR = 0.145; p = 0.027). Risk for tumor recurrence was higher for women than for men (OR = 8.07; p = 0.014) with men having a median PFS of 136.3 months, compared to women with 66.2 months., Conclusion: The data suggests RT as an effective treatment option for intracranial SFT, with high LPFS and PFS rates. Radiation doses ≥ 60 Gy could be associated with lower tumor recurrence. Particle therapy may be associated with a lower risk of recurrence in the primary setting, likely due to the feasibility of higher RT-dose application., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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15. Correction : Pulmonary magnetic resonance-guided online adaptive radiotherapy of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer: the PUMA trial.
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Regnery S, de Colle C, Eze C, Corradini S, Thieke C, Sedlaczek O, Schlemmer HP, Dinkel J, Seith F, Kopp-Schneider A, Gillmann C, Renkamp CK, Landry G, Thorwarth D, Zips D, Belka C, Jäkel O, Debus J, and Hörner-Rieber J
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- 2023
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16. Comparison of different dose accumulation strategies to estimate organ doses after stereotactic magnetic resonance-guided adaptive radiotherapy.
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Regnery S, Leiner L, Buchele C, Hoegen P, Sandrini E, Held T, Deng M, Eichkorn T, Rippke C, Renkamp CK, König L, Lang K, Adeberg S, Debus J, Klüter S, and Hörner-Rieber J
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- Humans, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Precision Medicine, Organs at Risk radiation effects, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Re-irradiation is frequently performed in the era of precision oncology, but previous doses to organs-at-risk (OAR) must be assessed to avoid cumulative overdoses. Stereotactic magnetic resonance-guided online adaptive radiotherapy (SMART) enables highly precise ablation of tumors close to OAR. However, OAR doses may change considerably during adaptive treatment, which complicates potential re-irradiation. We aimed to compare the baseline plan with different dose accumulation techniques to inform re-irradiation., Patients & Methods: We analyzed 18 patients who received SMART to lung or liver tumors inside prospective databases. Cumulative doses were calculated inside the planning target volumes (PTV) and OAR for the adapted plans and theoretical non-adapted plans via (1) cumulative dose volume histograms (DVH sum plan) and (2) deformable image registration (DIR)-based dose accumulation to planning images (DIR sum plan). We compared cumulative dose parameters between the baseline plan, DVH sum plan and DIR sum plan using equivalent doses in 2 Gy fractions (EQD2)., Results: Individual patients presented relevant increases of near-maximum doses inside the proximal bronchial tree, spinal cord, heart and gastrointestinal OAR when comparing adaptive treatment to the baseline plans. The spinal cord near-maximum doses were significantly increased in the liver patients (D2% median: baseline 6.1 Gy, DIR sum 8.1 Gy, DVH sum 8.4 Gy, p = 0.04; D0.1 cm³ median: baseline 6.1 Gy, DIR sum 8.1 Gy, DVH sum 8.5 Gy, p = 0.04). Three OAR overdoses occurred during adaptive treatment (DIR sum: 1, DVH sum: 2), and four more intense OAR overdoses would have occurred during non-adaptive treatment (DIR sum: 4, DVH sum: 3). Adaptive treatment maintained similar PTV coverages to the baseline plans, while non-adaptive treatment yielded significantly worse PTV coverages in the lung (D95% median: baseline 86.4 Gy, DIR sum 82.4 Gy, DVH sum 82.2 Gy, p = 0.006) and liver patients (D95% median: baseline 87.4 Gy, DIR sum 82.1 Gy, DVH sum 81.1 Gy, p = 0.04)., Conclusion: OAR doses can increase during SMART, so that re-irradiation should be planned based on dose accumulations of the adapted plans instead of the baseline plan. Cumulative dose volume histograms represent a simple and conservative dose accumulation strategy., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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17. Magnetic resonance guided SBRT reirradiation in locally recurrent prostate cancer: a multicentric retrospective analysis.
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Boldrini L, Romano A, Chiloiro G, Corradini S, De Luca V, Verusio V, D'Aviero A, Castelluccia A, Alitto AR, Catucci F, Grimaldi G, Trapp C, Hörner-Rieber J, Marchesano D, Frascino V, Mattiucci GC, Valentini V, Gentile P, and Gambacorta MA
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- Male, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Radiosurgery methods, Re-Irradiation adverse effects, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology
- Abstract
Aims: Reirradiation of prostate cancer (PC) local recurrences represents an emerging challenge for current radiotherapy. In this context, stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) allows the delivery of high doses, with curative intent. Magnetic Resonance guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) has shown promising results in terms of safety, feasibility and efficacy of delivering SBRT thanks to the enhanced soft tissue contrast and the online adaptive workflow. This multicentric retrospective analysis evaluates the feasibility and efficacy of PC reirradiation, using a 0.35 T hybrid MR delivery unit., Methods: Patients affected by local recurrences of PC and treated in five institutions between 2019 and 2022 were retrospectively collected. All patients had undergone previous Radiation Therapy (RT) in definitive or adjuvant setting. Re-treatment MRgSBRT was delivered with a total dose ranging from 25 to 40 Gy in 5 fractions. Toxicity according to CTCAE v 5.0 and treatment response were assessed at the end of the treatment and at follow-up., Results: Eighteen patients were included in this analysis. All patients had previously undergone external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) up to a total dose of 59.36 to 80 Gy. Median cumulative biologically effective dose (BED) of SBRT re-treatment was 213,3 Gy (103,1-560), considering an α/β of 1.5. Complete response was achieved in 4 patients (22.2%). No grade ≥ 2 acute genitourinary (GU) toxicity events were recorded, while gastrointestinal (GI) acute toxicity events occurred in 4 patients (22.2%)., Conclusion: The low rates of acute toxicity of this experience encourages considering MRgSBRT a feasibile therapeutic approach for the treatment of clinically relapsed PC. Accurate gating of target volumes, the online adaptive planning workflow and the high definition of MRI treatment images allow delivering high doses to the PTV while efficiently sparing organs at risk (OARs)., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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18. Pulmonary magnetic resonance-guided online adaptive radiotherapy of locally advanced: the PUMA trial.
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Regnery S, de Colle C, Eze C, Corradini S, Thieke C, Sedlaczek O, Schlemmer HP, Dinkel J, Seith F, Kopp-Schneider A, Gillmann C, Renkamp CK, Landry G, Thorwarth D, Zips D, Belka C, Jäkel O, Debus J, and Hörner-Rieber J
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods, Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung radiotherapy, Lung Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided methods
- Abstract
Background: Patients with locally-advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) are often ineligible for surgery, so that definitive chemoradiotherapy (CRT) represents the treatment of choice. Nevertheless, long-term tumor control is often not achieved. Intensification of radiotherapy (RT) to improve locoregional tumor control is limited by the detrimental effect of higher radiation exposure of thoracic organs-at-risk (OAR). This narrow therapeutic ratio may be expanded by exploiting the advantages of magnetic resonance (MR) linear accelerators, mainly the online adaptation of the treatment plan to the current anatomy based on daily acquired MR images. However, MR-guidance is both labor-intensive and increases treatment times, which raises the question of its clinical feasibility to treat LA-NSCLC. Therefore, the PUMA trial was designed as a prospective, multicenter phase I trial to demonstrate the clinical feasibility of MR-guided online adaptive RT in LA-NSCLC., Methods: Thirty patients with LA-NSCLC in stage III A-C will be accrued at three German university hospitals to receive MR-guided online adaptive RT at two different MR-linac systems (MRIdian Linac®, View Ray Inc. and Elekta Unity®, Elekta AB) with concurrent chemotherapy. Conventionally fractioned RT with isotoxic dose escalation up to 70 Gy is applied. Online plan adaptation is performed once weekly or in case of major anatomical changes. Patients are followed-up by thoracic CT- and MR-imaging for 24 months after treatment. The primary endpoint is twofold: (1) successfully completed online adapted fractions, (2) on-table time. Main secondary endpoints include adaptation frequency, toxicity, local tumor control, progression-free and overall survival., Discussion: PUMA aims to demonstrate the clinical feasibility of MR-guided online adaptive RT of LA-NSCLC. If successful, PUMA will be followed by a clinical phase II trial that further investigates the clinical benefits of this approach. Moreover, PUMA is part of a large multidisciplinary project to develop MR-guidance techniques., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05237453 ., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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19. Health-related quality of life and patient-reported symptoms after postoperative proton beam radiotherapy of cervical and endometrial cancer: 2-year results of the prospective phase II APROVE-trial.
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Meixner E, Wark A, Forster T, Weykamp F, Lang K, König L, Lindel K, Oelmann-Avendano JT, Krisam J, Schneeweiss A, Ellerbrock M, Mielke T, Hörner-Rieber J, Herfarth K, Debus J, and Arians N
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Quality of Life, Protons, Prospective Studies, Pain, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Endometrial Neoplasms radiotherapy, Endometrial Neoplasms surgery, Gastrointestinal Diseases
- Abstract
Introduction: The APROVE-trial investigated the tolerability of postoperative proton beam therapy in women with cervical or endometrial cancer. The present analysis evaluated the secondary endpoints of health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and patient-reported symptoms., Methods: 25 patients were included in this prospective phase-II-trial and treated with postoperative radiotherapy using protons alone or in combination with chemotherapy. To attain general and gynecologic-specific HRQOL measures, the EORTC-QLQ-C30 questionnaires combined with -QLQ-CX24 for cervical and -QLQ-EN24 for endometrial cancer were assessed at baseline, at the end of RT and up to 2 years after radiotherapy. The results were compared to an age-matched norm reference population. Symptoms were assessed using Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) and institutional patient-reported symptoms grading., Results: Scores regarding global health status were markedly impaired at baseline (mean: 58.0 ± 20.1) compared to reference population data, but significantly (p = 0.036) improved and evened out to comparable norm values 2 years after proton therapy (mean: 69.9 ± 19.3). Treatment caused acute and long-term worsening of pain (p = 0.048) and gastrointestinal symptoms (p = 0.016) for women with endometrial cancer, but no higher-grade CTCAE ≥ 3° toxicity was observed. Dosimetric evaluation of rectum, sigmoid, large and small bowel showed no correlation with the reported gastrointestinal symptoms. After 2 years, fatigue had significantly improved (p = 0.030), whereas patients with cervical cancer experienced more often lymphedema (p = 0.017). Scores for endometrial cancer pertaining to sexual activity (p = 0.048) and body image (p = 0.022) had improved post treatment; in the latter this effect persisted after 2 years., Conclusion: Proton beam therapy in the adjuvant setting was well tolerated with only low-grade side effects concerning gastrointestinal symptoms, lymphedema and pain. Overall quality of life was impaired at baseline, but patients were able to recover to values comparable to norm population 2 years after proton therapy. Larger studies are needed to confirm whether the benefit of proton therapy translates into a clinical effect. Sexual dysfunction remains an important issue., Trial Registration: The trial was registered at https://clinicaltrials.gov (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03184350, 09th June 2017)., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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20. Magnetic resonance guided adaptive stereotactic body radiotherapy for lung tumors in ultracentral location: the MAGELLAN trial (ARO 2021-3).
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Regnery S, Ristau J, Weykamp F, Hoegen P, Sprengel SD, Paul KM, Buchele C, Klüter S, Rippke C, Renkamp CK, Pohl M, Meis J, Welzel T, Adeberg S, Koerber SA, Debus J, and Hörner-Rieber J
- Subjects
- Humans, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Prospective Studies, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Lung Neoplasms surgery, Radiosurgery methods, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided methods
- Abstract
Background: Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) is a standard treatment for inoperable primary and secondary lung tumors. In case of ultracentral tumor location, defined as tumor contact with vulnerable mediastinal structures such as the proximal bronchial tree (PBT) or esophagus, SBRT is associated with an increased risk for severe complications. Magnetic resonance (MR)-guided SBRT can mitigate this risk based on gated dose delivery and daily plan adaptation. The MAGELLAN trial aims to find the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of MR-guided SBRT of ultracentral lung tumors (ULT)., Patients and Methods: MAGELLAN is a prospective phase I dose escalation trial. A maximum of 38 patients with primary and secondary ULT with a tumor size ≤ 5 cm will be enrolled. Ultracentral location is defined as an overlap of the planning target volume (PTV) with the PBT or esophagus. Patients are treated at a 0.35 Tesla MR-linac (MRIdian® Linac, ViewRay Inc. ) employing a gating strategy and daily plan adaptation. Dose escalation starts at 10 × 5.5 Gy (biologically effective dose BED
3/10 : 155.83 Gy/85.25 Gy), may proceed up to 10 × 6.5 Gy (BED3/10 : 205.83 Gy/107.25 Gy) and is guided by a customized time-to-event continual reassessment method (TITE CRM) with backup element, which alternately assigns patients to dose escalation and backup cohorts., Discussion: The results of the MAGELLAN trial will guide further research and clinical implementation of MR-guided SBRT as ablative treatment of ULT. Moreover, the combination of MR-guided radiotherapy with TITE-CRM including a backup element may serve as blueprint for future radiation dose escalation studies in critical locations., Trial Registration: Registered at ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04925583 on 14th June 2021., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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21. Patient positioning and immobilization procedures for hybrid MR-Linac systems.
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Cuccia F, Alongi F, Belka C, Boldrini L, Hörner-Rieber J, McNair H, Rigo M, Schoenmakers M, Niyazi M, Slagter J, Votta C, and Corradini S
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- Abdominal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Head and Neck Neoplasms radiotherapy, Humans, Thoracic Neoplasms radiotherapy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Neoplasms radiotherapy, Particle Accelerators, Patient Positioning, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided methods
- Abstract
Hybrid magnetic resonance (MR)-guided linear accelerators represent a new horizon in the field of radiation oncology. By harnessing the favorable combination of on-board MR-imaging with the possibility to daily recalculate the treatment plan based on real-time anatomy, the accuracy in target and organs-at-risk identification is expected to be improved, with the aim to provide the best tailored treatment. To date, two main MR-linac hybrid machines are available, Elekta Unity and Viewray MRIdian. Of note, compared to conventional linacs, these devices raise practical issues due to the positioning phase for the need to include the coil in the immobilization procedure and in order to perform the best reproducible positioning, also in light of the potentially longer treatment time. Given the relative novelty of this technology, there are few literature data regarding the procedures and the workflows for patient positioning and immobilization for MR-guided daily adaptive radiotherapy. In the present narrative review, we resume the currently available literature and provide an overview of the positioning and setup procedures for all the anatomical districts for hybrid MR-linac systems., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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22. Biologically consistent dose accumulation using daily patient imaging.
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Niebuhr NI, Splinter M, Bostel T, Seco J, Hentschke CM, Floca RO, Hörner-Rieber J, Alber M, Huber P, Nicolay NH, and Pfaffenberger A
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- Humans, Male, Organs at Risk, Radiation Dose Hypofractionation, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Uncertainty, Prostatic Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided methods, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods
- Abstract
Background: This work addresses a basic inconsistency in the way dose is accumulated in radiotherapy when predicting the biological effect based on the linear quadratic model (LQM). To overcome this inconsistency, we introduce and evaluate the concept of the total biological dose, bEQD
d ., Methods: Daily computed tomography imaging of nine patients treated for prostate carcinoma with intensity-modulated radiotherapy was used to compute the delivered deformed dose on the basis of deformable image registration (DIR). We compared conventional dose accumulation (DA) with the newly introduced bEQDd , a new method of accumulating biological dose that considers each fraction dose and tissue radiobiology. We investigated the impact of the applied fractionation scheme (conventional/hypofractionated), uncertainties induced by the DIR and by the assigned α/β-value., Results: bEQDd was systematically higher than the conventionally accumulated dose with difference hot spots of 3.3-4.9 Gy detected in six out of nine patients in regions of high dose gradient in the bladder and rectum. For hypofractionation, differences are up to 8.4 Gy. The difference amplitude was found to be in a similar range to worst-case uncertainties induced by DIR and was higher than that induced by α/β., Conclusion: Using bEQDd for dose accumulation overcomes a potential systematic inaccuracy in biological effect prediction based on accumulated dose. Highest impact is found for serial-type late responding organs at risk in dose gradient regions and for hypofractionation. Although hot spot differences are in the order of several Gray, in dose-volume parameters there is little difference compared with using conventional or biological DA. However, when local dose information is used, e.g. dose surface maps, difference hot spots can potentially change outcomes of dose-response modelling and adaptive treatment strategies.- Published
- 2021
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23. Acute toxicity of normofractionated intensity modulated radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost compared to three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy with sequential boost in the adjuvant treatment of breast cancer.
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Krug D, Köder C, Häfner MF, Arians N, Harrabi SB, Koerber SA, Forster T, Schlampp I, Sohn C, Heil J, Hof H, Hörner-Rieber J, and Debus J
- Subjects
- Breast Neoplasms pathology, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Female, Humans, Mastodynia etiology, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Radiodermatitis etiology, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Breast Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiotherapy, Conformal adverse effects, Re-Irradiation adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) improves dose homogeneity and late toxicity compared to simple tangential techniques in adjuvant whole-breast radiotherapy for patients with breast cancer. Simultaneous-integrated boost (SIB) radiotherapy shortens the overall treatment time and improves dose homogeneity. However, prospective randomized trials regarding IMRT with SIB for adjuvant radiotherapy in breast cancer are lacking., Methods: The IMRT-MC2 (MINT) trial is a phase III prospective randomized controlled trial comparing IMRT with SIB (Arm A: whole breast 28 × 1.8 Gy, Boost 28 × 2.3 Gy) to 3D-conformal radiotherapy with a sequential boost (Arm B: whole breast 28 × 1.8 Gy, boost 8 × 2 Gy) in patients with breast cancer after BCS. Indication for boost radiotherapy was defined as age < 70 years or age > 70 years with presence of additional risk factors. This is a retrospective analysis of acute toxicity at one of two trial sites., Results: Five hundred two patients were randomized, of which 446 patients were eligible for this analysis. There was no statistically significant difference in terms of any grade radiation dermatitis between the two treatment arms at the end of treatment (p = 0.26). However, radiation dermatitis grade 2/3 (29.1% vs. 20.1 and 3.5% vs. 2.3%) occurred significantly more often in Arm A (p = 0.02). Breast/chest wall pain at the first follow-up visit was significantly more common in patients treated on Arm B (p = 0.02)., Conclusions: Treatment on both arms was well tolerated, however there were some differences regarding radiodermatitis and breast pain. Further analyses are ongoing., Trial Registration: clinicaltrials.gov , NCT01322854 , registered 24th March 2011.
- Published
- 2020
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24. Fatigue following radiotherapy of low-risk early breast cancer - a randomized controlled trial of intraoperative electron radiotherapy versus standard hypofractionated whole-breast radiotherapy: the COSMOPOLITAN trial (NCT03838419).
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Forster T, Jäkel C, Akbaba S, Krug D, Krempien R, Uhl M, Häfner MF, König L, Koerber SA, Harrabi S, Bernhardt D, Behnisch R, Krisam J, Hennigs A, Sohn C, Heil J, Debus J, and Hörner-Rieber J
- Subjects
- Aged, Breast Neoplasms surgery, Fatigue epidemiology, Female, Humans, Intraoperative Period, Middle Aged, Radiation Dose Hypofractionation, Radiotherapy, High-Energy methods, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods, Research Design, Breast Neoplasms radiotherapy, Fatigue etiology, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant adverse effects, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant methods
- Abstract
Background: Fatigue is one of the most common and distressing side-effects of breast cancer radiotherapy. According to current guidelines, accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) may be considered as an alternative treatment option for women with early-stage low-risk breast cancer. One method for APBI is single-dose intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) applied directly to the tumor bed during breast conserving surgery (BCS). The COSMOPOLITAN trial therefore aims to analyze the intensity of fatigue following single-shot IORT with electrons (IOERT) compared to conventional hypofractionated whole breast irradiation (WBI) in low risk early breast cancer patients., Methods: This trial is conducted as a multicenter, prospective, randomized, two-arm phase II study comparing the intensity of fatigue in early-stage breast cancer (cT1cN0cM0, tumor size < 2,5 cm, ER pos. Her2neu neg., age > 50 years) treated either with WBI or APBI after BCS. Secondary outcomes investigated are tumor control, overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS), acute and chronic toxicity, quality of life (QoL) and cosmesis. A total of 202 patients will be randomized into two arms: Patients in arm A will receive WBI (40.05 Gy, 15 fractions) after surgical resection, while patients in arm B will receive IOERT (21 Gy to the 90%-isodose) during BCS. Fatigue will be assessed 12 weeks post surgery with the help of the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy (FACIT) Fatigue Scale., Discussion: The present trial aims to evaluate treatment response to compare single-shot intraoperative electron APBI to conventional WBI following BCS in early-stage low risk breast cancer patients. Fatigue is selected as the primary, patient-reported endpoint due its major clinical relevance., Trial Registration: The study is prospectively registered on February 12th, 2019: Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT03838419. "Intraoperative Electron Radiotherapy for Low-risk Early Breast Cancer (COSMOPOLITAN)"., Study Status: Ongoing study. Start of recruitment was December 2019.
- Published
- 2020
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25. Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) for adrenal metastases of oligometastatic or oligoprogressive tumor patients.
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König L, Häfner MF, Katayama S, Koerber SA, Tonndorf-Martini E, Bernhardt D, von Nettelbladt B, Weykamp F, Hoegen P, Klüter S, Susko MS, Debus J, and Hörner-Rieber J
- Subjects
- Adrenal Gland Neoplasms surgery, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms surgery, Prognosis, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated methods, Retrospective Studies, Survival Rate, Adrenal Gland Neoplasms secondary, Neoplasms pathology, Radiosurgery mortality, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Local ablative treatment strategies are frequently offered to patients diagnosed with oligometastatic disease. Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT), as ablative treatment option, is well established for lung and liver metastases, whereas for isolated adrenal gland metastases the level of evidence is scarce., Material and Methods: This single-institution analysis of oligometastatic or oligoprogressive disease was limited to patients who received SBRT to adrenal metastasis between 2012 and 2019. Patient, tumor, treatment characteristics, and dosimetric parameters were analyzed for evaluation of their effect on survival outcomes., Results: During the period of review 28 patients received ablative SBRT to their adrenal gland metastases. Most common primary tumors were non-small cell lung cancers (46%) with most patients diagnosed with a single adrenal gland metastasis (61%), which occurred after a median time of 14 months. SBRT was delivered to a median biological effective dose at α/β of 10 (BED
10 ) of 75 Gy (range: 58-151 Gy). Median gross tumor volume (GTV) and median planning target volume (PTV) were 42 and 111 mL, respectively. The homogeneity and conformity indices were 1.17 (range: 1.04-1.64) and 0.5 (range: 0.4.0.99), respectively, with the conformity index being affected by dose restrictions to organs at risk (OARs) in 50% of the patients. Overall response rate based on RECIST criteria was 86% (CR = 29%, PR = 57%) with 2-year local control (LC) of 84.8%, 2-year progression-free survival (PFS) of 26.3%, and 1-and 2-year overall survival (OS) of 46.6 and 32.0%, respectively. During follow up, only two local recurrences occurred. A trend for superior LC was seen if BED10 was ≥75Gy (p = 0.101) or if the PTV was < 100 ml (p = 0.072). SBRT was tolerated well with only mild toxicity., Conclusion: SBRT for adrenal metastases resulted in promising LC with low toxicity. Treatment response appeared to be superior, if SBRT was applied with higher BED. As the close proximity of OARs often limits the application of sufficiently high doses, further dose escalations strategies and techniques should be investigated in future.- Published
- 2020
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26. Salvage radiotherapy for recurrent hypopharyngeal and laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) after first-line treatment with surgery alone: a 10-year single-centre experience.
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Akbaba S, Held T, Lang K, Hoerner-Rieber J, Zaoui K, Forster T, Rieken S, Plinkert P, Debus J, and Adeberg S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Chemoradiotherapy adverse effects, Chemoradiotherapy methods, Cisplatin administration & dosage, Female, Humans, Hypopharyngeal Neoplasms drug therapy, Hypopharyngeal Neoplasms mortality, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Laryngeal Neoplasms drug therapy, Laryngeal Neoplasms mortality, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local drug therapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local mortality, Salvage Therapy adverse effects, Salvage Therapy mortality, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck drug therapy, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck mortality, Hypopharyngeal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Laryngeal Neoplasms radiotherapy, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local radiotherapy, Salvage Therapy methods, Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck radiotherapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Salvage surgery of recurrent hypopharyngeal and laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) results in limited local control and survival rates. As a result of recent technological progress, radiotherapy (RT) has become a valuable, potentially curative therapeutic option. Thus, we aimed to determine prognostic factors for survival outcome in order to optimize patient selection for salvage radiotherapy after failure of first-line treatment with surgery alone in this special patient cohort., Methods: Seventy-five patients (85% male, median age of 64 years) underwent salvage RT in a secondary setting for recurrent hypopharyngeal or laryngeal SCC after prior surgery alone between 2007 and 2017. On average, patients were treated with one prior surgery (range 1-4 surgeries). Median time between surgery and salvage RT was 7 months (range 1-47 months) for initially advanced tumors (T3/4, N+, extracapsular spread) and 18 months (range 5-333 months) for initially early stage tumors. The majority of patients received concomitant chemotherapy (n = 48; 64%) or other kind of systemic treatment concurrent to radiotherapy (n = 10; 13%)., Results: Median follow-up was 41 months (range 3-120 months). Overall, fifteen patients were diagnosed with local failure (all were in-field) at last follow-up (20%). Median time to recurrence was 35 months (range 3-120 months) and 3-year local progression-free survival (LPFS) was 75%, respectively. Dose-escalated RT with 70.4 Gy applied in 2.1 Gy or 2.2 Gy fractions corresponding an EQD2 > 70 Gy (p = 0.032) and the use of concomitant cisplatin weekly chemotherapy (p = 0.006) had a significant positive impact on LPFS. 3-year OS and DPFS were 76 and 85%, respectively. No toxicity-related deaths occurred. Reported grade > 3 side effects were rare (n = 4/70, 6%)., Conclusion: Salvage radiotherapy resulted in excellent local control rates while radiation dose and the use of cisplatin weekly chemotherapy were identified as prognostic factors for LPFS. Nevertheless, patient selection for curative salvage treatment remains challenging.
- Published
- 2019
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27. Whole brain radiation therapy alone versus radiosurgery for patients with 1-10 brain metastases from small cell lung cancer (ENCEPHALON Trial): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
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Bernhardt D, Hommertgen A, Schmitt D, El Shafie R, Paul A, König L, Mair-Walther J, Krisam J, Klose C, Welzel T, Hörner-Rieber J, Kappes J, Thomas M, Heußel CP, Steins M, Kieser M, Debus J, and Rieken S
- Subjects
- Clinical Trials, Phase II as Topic, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Humans, Prospective Studies, Small Cell Lung Carcinoma secondary, Brain Neoplasms radiotherapy, Brain Neoplasms secondary, Cranial Irradiation, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Radiosurgery, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Small Cell Lung Carcinoma pathology
- Abstract
Background: Conventional whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) has been established as the treatment standard in patients with cerebral metastases from small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), however, it has only modest efficacy and limited prospective data is available for WBRT as well as local treatments such as stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS)., Methods/design: The present single-center prospective randomized study, conducted at Heidelberg University Hospital, compares neurocognitive function, as objectively measured by significant deterioration in Hopkins Verbal Learning Test - Revised total recall at 3 months. Fifty-six patients will be randomized to receive either SRS of all brain metastases (up to ten lesions) or WBRT. Secondary endpoints include intracranial progression (local tumor progression and number of new cerebral metastases), extracranial progression, overall survival, death due to brain metastases, local (neurological) progression-free survival, progression-free survival, changes in other cognitive performance measures, quality of life and toxicity., Discussion: Recent evidence suggests that SRS might be a promising treatment option for SCLC patients with brain metastases. The present trial is the first to prospectively investigate the treatment response, toxicity and neurocognition of WBRT and SRS in SCLC patients., Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03297788 . Registered September 29, 2017.
- Published
- 2018
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28. Establishing stereotactic body radiotherapy with flattening filter free techniques in the treatment of pulmonary lesions - initial experiences from a single institution.
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Rieber J, Tonndorf-Martini E, Schramm O, Rhein B, König L, Adeberg S, Meyerhof E, Mohr A, Kappes J, Hoffmann H, Debus J, and Rieken S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Female, Filtration, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Lung Neoplasms secondary, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated, Survival Rate, Lung Neoplasms surgery, Particle Accelerators instrumentation, Radiosurgery
- Abstract
Background: Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) using flattening filter free (FFF)-techniques has been increasingly applied during the last years. However, clinical studies investigating this emerging technique are still rare. Hence, we analyzed toxicity and clinical outcome of pulmonary SBRT with FFF-techniques and performed dosimetric comparison to conventional techniques using flattening filters (FF)., Materials and Methods: Between 05/2014 and 06/2015, 56 consecutive patients with 61 pulmonary lesions were treated with SBRT in FFF-mode. Central lesions received 8 × 7.5 Gy delivered to the conformally enclosing 80 %-isodose, while peripheral lesions were treated with 3 × 15 Gy, prescribed to the 65 %-isodose. Early and late toxicity (after 6 months) as well as initial clinical outcomes were evaluated. Furthermore, [deleted] plan quality and efficiency were evaluated by analyzing conformity, beam- on and total treatment delivery times in comparison to plans with FF-dose application., Results: Median follow-up time was 9.3 months (range 1.5-18.0 months). Early toxicity was low with only 5 patients (8.9 %) reporting CTCAE 2° or higher side-effects. Only one patient (1.8 %) was diagnosed with radiation-induced pneumonitis CTCAE 3°, while 2 (3.6 %) patients suffered from pneumonitis CTCAE 2°. After 6 months, no toxicity greater than CTCAE 2° was reported. 1-year local progression-free survival, distant progression-free survival and overall survival were 92.8 %, 78.0 %, and 94.4 %, respectively. While plan quality was similar for FFF- and FF-plans in respect to conformity (p = 0.275), median beam-on time as well as total treatment time were significantly reduced for SBRT in FFF-mode compared to FF-mode (p ≤ 0.001, p ≤ 0.001)., Conclusions: Patient treatment with SBRT using FFF-techniques is safe and provides promising clinical results with only modest toxicity at significantly increased dose delivery speed.
- Published
- 2016
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29. Outcome and prognostic factors of multimodal therapy for pulmonary large-cell neuroendocrine carcinomas.
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Rieber J, Schmitt J, Warth A, Muley T, Kappes J, Eichhorn F, Hoffmann H, Heussel CP, Welzel T, Debus J, Thomas M, Steins M, and Rieken S
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Carcinoma, Large Cell pathology, Carcinoma, Large Cell surgery, Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine pathology, Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine surgery, Chemoradiotherapy, Female, Humans, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms surgery, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Treatment Outcome, Carcinoma, Large Cell therapy, Carcinoma, Neuroendocrine therapy, Lung Neoplasms therapy
- Abstract
Background: There is controversy whether patients diagnosed with large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) should be treated according to protocols for non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) or small cell lung cancers (SCLC), especially with regard to the administration of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI). This study was set up to determine the incidence of brain metastases and to investigate the outcome following multimodal treatment in 70 patients with LCNEC., Methods: Seventy patients with histologically confirmed LCNEC were treated at the University Hospital of Heidelberg between 2001 and 2014. Data were collected retrospectively. Al most all patients received thoracic surgery as initial treatment (94 %). Chemotherapy was administered in 32 patients as part of the initial treatment. Fourteen patients were treated with adjuvant or definitive thoracic radiotherapy according to NSCLC protocols. Cranial radiotherapy due to brain metastases, mostly given as whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT), was received by fourteen patients. Statistical analysis was performed using the long-rank test and the Kaplan-Meier method., Results: Without PCI, the detected rate for brain metastases was 25 % after a median follow-up time of 23.4 months, which is comparable to NSCLC patients in general. Overall (OS), local (LPFS), brain metastases-free survival (BMFS) and extracranial distant progression-free survival (eDPFS) was 43, 50, 63 and 50 % at 5 years, respectively. Patients with incomplete resection showed a survival benefit from adjuvant radiotherapy. The administration of adjuvant chemotherapy improved the general worse prognosis in higher pathologic stages., Conclusion: In LCNEC patients, the administration of radiotherapy according to NSCLC guidelines appears reasonable and contributes to acceptable results of multimodal treatment regimes. The low incidence of spontaneous brain metastases questions a possible role of PCI.
- Published
- 2015
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30. Contrast enhanced transesophageal echocardiography in patients with atrial fibrillation referred to electrical cardioversion improves atrial thrombus detection and may reduce associated thromboembolic events.
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Jung PH, Mueller M, Schuhmann C, Eickhoff M, Schneider P, Seemueller G, Dutton R, Rieber J, Kääb S, and Sohn HY
- Subjects
- Aged, Causality, Comorbidity, Contrast Media, Female, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Image Enhancement methods, Incidence, Male, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Treatment Outcome, Atrial Fibrillation diagnostic imaging, Atrial Fibrillation prevention & control, Echocardiography, Transesophageal statistics & numerical data, Electric Countershock statistics & numerical data, Phospholipids, Sulfur Hexafluoride, Thromboembolism diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Aims: Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is the gold standard for the detection of thrombi in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) before undergoing early electrical cardioversion (CV). However, TEE generates inconclusive results in a considerable number of patients. This study investigated the influence of contrast enhancement on interpretability of TEE for the detection of left atrial (LA) thrombi compared to conventional TEE and assessed, whether there are differences in the rate of thromboembolic events after electrical cardioversion., Methods: Of 180 patients with AF (51 females, 65.2±13 years) who were referred to CV, 90 were examined with native imaging and contrast enhancement within the same examination (group 1), and 90 were examined with native TEE alone and served as control (group 2). Cineloops of the multiplane examination of the LA and LA appendage (LAA) were stored digitally before and, in group 1, after intravenous bolus application of a transpulmonary contrast agent. Images of group 1 were assessed offline and the diagnosis of LA thrombi was made semi-quantitatively: 1= thrombus present; 2=inconclusive result; 3=no thrombus. The presence of spontaneous echocontrast (SEC) was registered and flow velocity in the LA appendage (LAA-flow) was measured. All patients in whom CV was performed were followed up for 1 year or until relapse of AF. CV related adverse events were defined as any thromboembolic event within 1 week after CV., Results: No serious adverse events occurred during TEE and contrast enhanced imaging. In group 1 atrial thrombi were diagnosed in 14 (15.6%) during native and in 10 (11.1%) patients during contrast enhanced imaging (p<0.001). Of the 10 patients with thrombi in the contrast TEE group, 7 revealed a decreased LAA-flow (≤0,3m/s) and 8 showed moderate or marked SEC. Uncertain results were significantly more common during native imaging than with contrast enhanced TEE (16 vs. 5 patients, p<0.01). Thrombi could definitely be excluded in 60 (66.7%) during conventional and in 75 patients (83.3%) during contrast enhanced TEE (p<0.01). CV was performed subsequently after exclusion of thrombi and at the discretion of the investigator. In group 1, 74 patients (82.2%) were cardioverted and no patient suffered a CV related complication (p=0.084). In group 2, 76 patients (84.4%) underwent CV, of whom 3 suffered a thromboembolic complication after CV (2 strokes, 1 peripheral embolism)., Conclusion: In patients with AF planned for CV contrast enhancement renders TEE images more interpretable, facilitates the exclusion of atrial thrombi and may reduce the rate of embolic adverse events.
- Published
- 2013
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31. Change in basic motor abilities, quality of movement and everyday activities following intensive, goal-directed, activity-focused physiotherapy in a group setting for children with cerebral palsy.
- Author
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Sorsdahl AB, Moe-Nilssen R, Kaale HK, Rieber J, and Strand LI
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Cerebral Palsy physiopathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Disability Evaluation, Female, Humans, Male, Social Environment, Treatment Outcome, Activities of Daily Living psychology, Cerebral Palsy therapy, Exercise Therapy methods, Motor Skills, Movement, Psychotherapy, Group methods
- Abstract
Background: The effects of intensive training for children with cerebral palsy (CP) remain uncertain. The aim of the study was to investigate the impact on motor function, quality of movements and everyday activities of three hours of goal-directed activity-focused physiotherapy in a group setting, five days a week for a period of three weeks., Methods: A repeated measures design was applied with three baseline and two follow up assessments; immediately and three weeks after intervention. Twenty-two children with hemiplegia (n = 7), diplegia (n = 11), quadriplegia (n = 2) and ataxia (n = 2) participated, age ranging 3-9 y. All levels of Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) and Manual Ability Classification System (MACS) were represented. Parents and professionals participated in goal setting and training. ANOVA was used to analyse change over repeated measures., Results: A main effect of time was shown in the primary outcome measure; Gross Motor Function Measure-66 (GMFM-66), mean change being 4.5 (p < 0.01) from last baseline to last follow up assessment. An interaction between time and GMFCS-levels was found, implying that children classified to GMFCS-levels I-II improved more than children classified to levels III-V. There were no main or interaction effects of age or anti-spastic medication. Change scores in the Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI) ranged 2.0-6.7, p < 0.01 in the Self-care domain of the Functional Skills dimension, and the Self-care and Mobility domains of the Caregiver Assistance dimension. The children's individual goals were on average attained, Mean Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS) T-score being 51.3. Non-significant improved scores on the Gross Motor Performance Measure (GMPM) and the Quality of Upper Extremities Skills Test (QUEST) were demonstrated. Significant improvement in GMPM scores were found in improved items of the GMFM, not in items that maintained the same score., Conclusions: Basic motor abilities and self-care improved in young children with CP after goal-directed activity-focused physiotherapy with involvement of their local environment, and their need for caregiver assistance in self-care and mobility decreased. The individualized training within a group context during a limited period of time was feasible and well-tolerated. The coherence between acquisition of basic motor abilities and quality of movement should be further examined.
- Published
- 2010
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