| Information
on the Cyclotron Proton Beam, Neurosurgical Radiosurgery Unit
Paul H. Chapman,
M.D. chapman@helix.mgh.harvard.edu
Languages: English, Arabic, German
| For referrals
or more information contact:
Louise B. Hanscom Proton Radiosurgery Group ACC-745
Neurosurgical Service Massachusetts General Hospital Parkman Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02114 Phone: 617.726.3887
LHanscom@partners.org | |
| Note: For
information about proton beam treatment for prostate cancer contact: |
| Note:
For information about proton beam treatment for skull base chordomas contact:
|
Note: For
information about proton beam treatment for spine chordomas contact:
Thomas
F. DeLaney, M.D. Tel: 617.726.7869 Fax: 617.724-9532 |
| | The
Purpose of this Center is to provide a complete range of services for the diagnosis,
and treatment with non-invasive proton beam radiosurgery and fractionated radiosurgery
for brain and spinal tumors and arteriovenous malformations.
Patients may be referred for consultation only, care in partnership with referring
physician, or complete management Proton
Beam Home | Proton Beam Referrals |
Information Publications
| Links Bragg
Peak Proton Beam Radiosurgery Unit The
Proton Beam Unit was founded in 1962 and has the largest experience with stereotactic
radiosurgery of any center in the United States. Proton beam offers certain theoretical
advantages over other modalities of stereotactic radiosurgery (i.e. gamma knife
and linear accelerators) because it makes use of the quantum wave properties of
protons to reduces doses to surrounding tissue beyond the target to a theoretical
minimum of zero. In practice, the proton facility offers advantages for the treatment
of unusually shaped brain tumors and arteriovenous malformations. The homogeneous
doses delivered also makes fractionated therapy possible. Proton beam radiosurgery
also has the ability to treat tumors outside of the cranial cavity. These properties
make it the ideal post-resection therapy for many chordomas and certain chondrosarcomas
of the spine and skull base as well as an excellent mode of therapy for many other
types of tumors. HCL:
The Harvard
Cyclotron Laboratory (HCL) has now closed. The 'Particles
Newsletters' have been transfered to the MGH
PTCOG web and the main PSI-PTCOG
system. NPTC:
Information, proton radiosurgery treatments and support services have been transfered
to the new The Northeast
Proton Therapy Center (NPTC). Located on the main hospital campus of the Massachusetts
General Hospital (MGH), the NPTC represents the forefront of technological
advancement in radiation therapy. The construction of the facility was jointly
funded by the hospital and the National Cancer Institute to meet the increasing
medical demand for high precision radiation therapy provided by proton therapy.
The program builds on more than forty years of pioneering work and experience
gained by the physicians, physicists, and clinical support personnel at Harvard
University's Cyclotron Laboratory where more than nine thousand patients were
treated with proton therapy from 1961 to it's closing in 2002. Selected
Publications - Chapman
PH, Tarbell: Proton beam therapy. In: Pediatric Neurosurgery. Surgery of the Developing
Nervous System, 4th ed. Ed: McLone DG: WB Saunders: Philadelphia, pp. 1255-1262,
2001.
-
Loeffler JS, Singer RJ, Chapman PH, Ogilvy CS: Proton-beam radiation therapy.
In: LINAC and Gamma Knife Radiosurgery. Ed: Germano IM. The American Association
of Neurological Surgeons: Park Ridge, IL, pp. 71-74, 2000.
-
Harsh G, Loeffler JS, Thornton A, Smith A, Bussiere M, Chapman PH: Stereotactic
Proton Radiosurgery. Neurosurg Clin N Am 1999; 10:243-256.
-
Tatter SB, Butler WE, Chapman PH. Technical and clinical aspects of proton-beam
stereotactic radiosurgery. In: Textbook of Stereotactic and functional Neurosurgery.
Eds: Gildenberg PL, Tasker RR. McGraw-Hill, New York pp. 705-710, 1998.
-
Serago CF, Thornton
AF, Urie MM, Chapman P, Verhey L, Rosenthal SJ, Gall KP, Niemierko A: Comparison
of proton and x-ray conformal dose distributions for radiosurgery applications.
Med Phys 22:2111-16, 1995.
- Butler
WE, Ogilvy CS, Chapman PH, Verhy L , Zervas NT. "Stereotactic alignment for
Bragg peak radiosurgery." In Radiosurgery: Baseline and Trends, ed.
L. Steiner. 85-91. New York: Raven Press, 1992.
- Chapman
PH, Ogilvy CS , Butler WE. "A new stereotactic alignment system for charged-particle
radiosurgery at the Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory, Boston." In Stereotactic
Radiosurgery, ed. Eben Alexander III, Jay S. Loeffler, and L. Dade Lunsford.
105-108. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1993.
- De
Salles AA, Asfora WT, Abe M, Kjellberg RN: Transposition of target information
from the magnetic resonance and computed tomography scan images to conventional
X-ray stereotactic space. Applied Neurophysiology 50: 23-32, 1987.
- Gall
KP, Verhey LJ, Wagner M: Computer-assisted positioning of radiotherapy patients
using implanted radiopaque fiducials. Medical Physics 20: 1153-9, 1993.
- Kjellberg
RN, Hanamura T, Davis KR, Lyons SL , Adams RD: Bragg-peak proton-beam therapy
for arteriovenous malformations of the brain. New England Journal of Medicine
309: 269-74, 1983.
- Kjellberg
RN, Shintani A, Frantz AG, Kliman B: Proton-beam therapy in acromegaly. New England
Journal of Medicine 278: 689-95, 1968.
- Urie
MM, Fullerton B, Tatsuzaki H, Birnbaum S, Suit HD, Convery K, Skates , Goitein
M: A dose response analysis of injury to cranial nerves and/or nuclei following
proton beam radiation therapy. International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology,
Physics 23: 27-39, 1992.
|