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Varian Medical Systems, Inc. Announces New Mexico Installation

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | March 17, 2009
RapidArc Radiotherapy Technology
PALO ALTO, CA/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Gary Troutman, a 51-year old man with a tumor in his brain, was the first New Mexico resident to receive a RapidArc™ stereotactic radiotherapy treatment earlier this month at the New Mexico Cancer Center in Albuquerque. The stereotactic radiotherapy treatment utilizing RapidArc technology, developed by Varian Medical Systems , enabled doctors to target Troutman's tumor faster and more accurately than was possible with earlier treatment technologies.

To treat a metastatic brain tumor believed to have spread from an earlier bout with lung cancer, Troutman received five stereotactic radiotherapy treatments over a two week period, the last three of which were delivered using RapidArc. "With RapidArc, we were able to cut his treatments from 50 minutes to ten minutes," said Bryan Goss, MD, radiation oncologist. "That's 40 minutes he did not have to spend immobilized in the treatment room."

Troutman said, "You never know what the future holds, but I feel really fortunate to be here after two bouts with cancer."
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The New Mexico Cancer Center has also used RapidArc radiotherapy to treat prostate cancer. John Sadler, 60, was the first patient at the center to receive RapidArc treatment for prostate cancer. His was a course of image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT), delivered five days a week for eight weeks. He was midway through his course of treatment when the doctors at the New Mexico Cancer Center started using RapidArc.

"When the doctors switched over to RapidArc, I was grateful because the treatments went by so fast," said Sadler, a veteran of the Gulf and Vietnam Wars. "Before then, my treatments were taking 20 minutes, and I was finding that very stressful. But when the process dropped to 90 seconds per treatment, I hardly had any time to think--it was over so quickly!"

"RapidArc really helped John get through his treatments easier," said Gregg Franklin, MD, radiation oncologist. "But there are other benefits to a speedier treatment. It can increase our accuracy because the chance of tumor motion is reduced when treatments are shorter."

Tumors can move during longer treatments, due to the natural movement of internal organs. For example, the prostate can shift by several millimeters as the bladder fills, which has the potential to compromise treatment accuracy. "In the case of prostate cancer, when a treatment takes only 90 seconds to deliver, we are better able to deliver the dose right where we want it and spare the surrounding healthy tissue," said Dr. Franklin.