Permanent Iodine-125 Implant and External Beam Radiation Therapy for the Treatment of Malignant Brain Tumors

Abstract
Survival data of 114 patients treated for malignant brain tumors with 125I interstitial radiation therapy at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Mich. (1986–1990), are presented. The first 64 patients were treated with temporary 125I implants with a total prescribed dose of 60 Gy at a dose rate of 40 cGy/h. In order to reduce the risk of injury to the surrounding normal tissue associated with high-dose brachytherapy, a new approach was initiated using permanent implants with a lower dose rate; 50 patients were treated after surgical resection with permanent implantation of 125I seeds at a lower dose rate of 4–7 cGy/h, with a total dose of 10,000–12,000 cGy, and concurrent external radiation therapy of 5,000 cGy. The rationale of this protocol was to increase the effectiveness of the low-dose-rate implant by a concurrent ''daily'' boost of external radiation, thus inhibiting the proliferation of tumor cells during the protracted low-dose radiation treatment. Survival was compared between groups with permanent and temporary implants in terms of effectiveness in tumor control as well as impact on clinical condition. Low-dose-rate implant with concurrent external radiation therapy seems to offer the best chance for long-term survival without deterioration in the clinical condition.

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