Purpose: Second cancers are among the most serious sequelae for cancer survivors who receive radiotherapy. This article aims to review current knowledge regarding how the risk of radiotherapy-associated second cancer can be minimized by biological measures and to discuss relevant research needs. Results: The risk of second cancer can be reduced not only by physical measures to decrease the radiation dose to normal tissues but also by biological means that interfere with the critical determinants of radiation-induced carcinogenesis. Requirements for such biological means include the targeting of tumor types relevant to radiotherapy-associated risk, concrete safety and efficacy evidence and feasibility and minimal invasiveness. Mechanistic in...
Recent advances in radiotherapy have enabled the use of different types of particles, such as proton...
International audienceIn the era of modern radiation therapy, the compromise between the reductions ...
Second cancers after uterine cervical cancer treated with radiation therapy.\nBackground: Characteri...
John Ng,1 Igor Shuryak2 1Weill Cornell Medical College, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY...
While radio-induced cancers are well known since the first years of the xxth century, they did not r...
Bystander or non-targeted effect is known to be an interesting phenomenon in radiobiology. The genet...
More than half of all cancer patients receive radiotherapy as a part of their treatment. With the in...
Currently, 17–19% of all new primary malignancies occur in survivors of cancer, causing substantial ...
Although radiation carcinogenesis has been shown both experimentally and epidemiologically, the use ...
Purpose. To review recent studies to better understand the risk of second cancer after ion beam radi...
As the number of cancer survivors grows, prediction of radiotherapy-induced second cancer risks beco...
AbstractCurrently, 17–19% of all new primary malignancies occur in survivors of cancer, causing subs...
PURPOSE: In radiation risk analysis the state-of-the-art approach is based on descriptive models whi...
One of the most common cancers in women is breast cancer. The incidence of breast cancer is great an...
Bystander or non-targeted effect is known to be an interesting phenomenon in radio-biology. The gene...
Recent advances in radiotherapy have enabled the use of different types of particles, such as proton...
International audienceIn the era of modern radiation therapy, the compromise between the reductions ...
Second cancers after uterine cervical cancer treated with radiation therapy.\nBackground: Characteri...
John Ng,1 Igor Shuryak2 1Weill Cornell Medical College, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, New York, NY...
While radio-induced cancers are well known since the first years of the xxth century, they did not r...
Bystander or non-targeted effect is known to be an interesting phenomenon in radiobiology. The genet...
More than half of all cancer patients receive radiotherapy as a part of their treatment. With the in...
Currently, 17–19% of all new primary malignancies occur in survivors of cancer, causing substantial ...
Although radiation carcinogenesis has been shown both experimentally and epidemiologically, the use ...
Purpose. To review recent studies to better understand the risk of second cancer after ion beam radi...
As the number of cancer survivors grows, prediction of radiotherapy-induced second cancer risks beco...
AbstractCurrently, 17–19% of all new primary malignancies occur in survivors of cancer, causing subs...
PURPOSE: In radiation risk analysis the state-of-the-art approach is based on descriptive models whi...
One of the most common cancers in women is breast cancer. The incidence of breast cancer is great an...
Bystander or non-targeted effect is known to be an interesting phenomenon in radio-biology. The gene...
Recent advances in radiotherapy have enabled the use of different types of particles, such as proton...
International audienceIn the era of modern radiation therapy, the compromise between the reductions ...
Second cancers after uterine cervical cancer treated with radiation therapy.\nBackground: Characteri...