Advanced head and neck cancers are one of the most challenging cancers facing the oncologists due to their aggressiveness attributable to the high hypoxic content and the tumour's ability to repopulate during radiotherapy. Alterations of radiotherapy fractionation schedules are possible ways to improve tumour control. Clinical trials have shown that both hyperfractionated radiotherapy (multiple fractions a day, over the same treatment time), and accelerated radiotherapy (higher doses per fraction, six days a week, over 5 weeks or less) are more effective than conventional radiotherapy in the management of head and neck cancer. However, the treatment choice between hyperfractionated and accelerated radiotherapy is still debated, due to very ...
Purpose Previous studies of synchronous chemoradiation therapy have modeled the additional effect o...
Advanced head and neck cancers are aggressive tumours, which require aggressive treatment. Treatment...
While repopulation is a clinically observed phenomenon after radiotherapy, repopulation of tumour ce...
Head and neck cancer represents a challenge for radiation oncologists due to accelerated repopulatio...
Current clinical studies support the role of neoadjuvant cisplatin administration prior to curative ...
Copyright © Institute of Physics and IOP Publishing Limited 2009.The aim of the present work was to ...
Objective: Altered fractionation radiotherapy is simulated on a set of virtual tumours to assess the...
A randomised phase II trial was initiated to explore the feasibility of concomitant cisplatin and ra...
Background: The effect of synchronous chemotherapy in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (...
Published Online: January 28, 2014Objective: A temporal Monte Carlo tumour growth and radiotherapy e...
There is often a considerable delay from initial tumour diagnosis to the start of radiotherapy treat...
Although chemotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of haematological tumours, in many common sol...
The tumour control probability (TCP) is a treatment planning tool that evaluates the probability of ...
Tumour hypoxia is the inadequate supply of oxygen in living tissue. Hypoxia is a major problem in th...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Recently, clinically validated multivariable normal tissue complication prob...
Purpose Previous studies of synchronous chemoradiation therapy have modeled the additional effect o...
Advanced head and neck cancers are aggressive tumours, which require aggressive treatment. Treatment...
While repopulation is a clinically observed phenomenon after radiotherapy, repopulation of tumour ce...
Head and neck cancer represents a challenge for radiation oncologists due to accelerated repopulatio...
Current clinical studies support the role of neoadjuvant cisplatin administration prior to curative ...
Copyright © Institute of Physics and IOP Publishing Limited 2009.The aim of the present work was to ...
Objective: Altered fractionation radiotherapy is simulated on a set of virtual tumours to assess the...
A randomised phase II trial was initiated to explore the feasibility of concomitant cisplatin and ra...
Background: The effect of synchronous chemotherapy in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (...
Published Online: January 28, 2014Objective: A temporal Monte Carlo tumour growth and radiotherapy e...
There is often a considerable delay from initial tumour diagnosis to the start of radiotherapy treat...
Although chemotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of haematological tumours, in many common sol...
The tumour control probability (TCP) is a treatment planning tool that evaluates the probability of ...
Tumour hypoxia is the inadequate supply of oxygen in living tissue. Hypoxia is a major problem in th...
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Recently, clinically validated multivariable normal tissue complication prob...
Purpose Previous studies of synchronous chemoradiation therapy have modeled the additional effect o...
Advanced head and neck cancers are aggressive tumours, which require aggressive treatment. Treatment...
While repopulation is a clinically observed phenomenon after radiotherapy, repopulation of tumour ce...