Developing and disseminating conformal radiotherapy and intensity modulated radiotherapy
Submitting Institution
Institute of Cancer ResearchUnit of Assessment
Clinical MedicineSummary Impact Type
HealthResearch Subject Area(s)
Physical Sciences: Other Physical Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences: Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Summary of the impact
The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) has made seminal contributions to
the development and
dissemination of conformal radiotherapy and intensity modulated
radiotherapy (IMRT), leading to
changes in clinical practice, reduced treatment complications and improved
cure rates. ICR
researchers developed conformal radiotherapy, which allowed better shaping
of the high-dose
radiation volume around a tumour, and they then refined this technique to
create IMRT, which
makes possible the definition of a high dose volume with a concave border
allowing further sparing
of critical normal tissue. IMRT is now the approved treatment regime for
many cancers such as
prostate, breast and head and neck in the USA, the UK and many European
countries.
Underpinning research
Radiation therapy has been revolutionised by the ability to delineate
tumours and adjacent normal
structures in three dimensions using specialised scanners and planning
software. ICR researchers
have played a key role in this field through the research-based
development of conformal
radiotherapy and then IMRT. In the 1980s, Professor Steve Webb (ICR
Faculty) pioneered the
application of the mathematical technique, simulated annealing to solve
optimisation problems in
radiotherapy treatment planning, and then developed new ways to deliver
beam modulation. These
are the underpinning technologies behind conformal radiotherapy and IMRT.
Conformal
radiotherapy was further refined by Webb to optimise beam modulation for
IMRT delivery (Ref 1).
During the early development of conformal radiotherapy in the UKonly the
ICR (with its clinical
partner the Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, RM) and a few other
centres had equipment
capable of delivering this treatment, but the objective was to make the
technology widely available.
Between 1994 and 2000, the Webb team worked with an industrial partner,
Elekta AB, and carried
out research to develop techniques using a commercial accelerator that
could accurately and
reproducibly deliver conformal radiotherapy.
In September 2000, the ICR/RM team was the first internationally to treat
patients with full-course-
fractions of IMRT (Ref 2); this clinical research study was led by
radiation oncologist Professor
David Dearnaley (ICR Faculty).
In the 2000s, Webb continued his research to more precisely define the
conformal shaping of the
high-dose level radiotherapy volume of the tumour and to variably modulate
the dose-delivery
across the tumour volume. This led to significant advances in what became
known as IMRT
delivery. This had a major benefit in avoiding normal tissue irradiation
and also enabled motion-compensation
to be introduced into treatment delivery (Ref 3). The clinical advantages
of IMRT are
that side effects are reduced, higher radiation doses are concentrated on
the tumour and therefore
improved cancer cure rates can be achieved. Because of the reduced
irradiation to healthy tissue,
IMRT permits hypofractionation of radiation dose delivery (a smaller
number of large dose
fractions), improving the cost-effectiveness of radiotherapy (Ref 4).
These advantages have been
the subject of research trials in the clinic by the ICR/RM, which have
confirmed the expected
benefits.
An early ICR/RM prospective randomised trial of conformal versus standard
radiotherapy in
prostate cancer demonstrated a reduction in toxicity. This was followed by
a further prospective
trial to explore radiation dose-escalation to 74Gy compared with the
"standard" 64Gy dose. The
trial demonstrated treatment benefits (Ref 5) and led on to a large
national MRC trial under the
leadership of Dearnaley and Professor Alan Horwich (ICR Faculty), which
confirmed these results.
Other important clinical research trials of IMRT initiated by the ICR/RM
include the demonstration
of tolerance and efficacy of hypofractionated IMRT in prostate cancer (Ref
4), which was then
confirmed in a national multicentre trial. The ICR/RM also led the world's
first IMRT Phase III
clinical trial in head and neck cancer with Professor Chris Nutting (ICR
Honorary Faculty) as the
Chief Investigator (Ref 6), which showed a significant improvement in
quality of life and a reduction
in debilitating side effects of treatment. Nutting and his team have also
demonstrated that IMRT
can improve local tumour control in head and neck cancers (Ref 7), and
this is currently being
tested in a head and neck IMRT trial run in conjunction with Professor
Judith Bliss (ICR Faculty) in
the ICR's Clinical Trials & Statistics Unit (Cancer Research UK trial
number CRUK/10/018).
Evidence of the quality of the ICR's research in the field of IMRT and
its key contribution is the
recent award of the EFOMP Medal to Professor Webb by the European
Federation of
Organisations for Medical Physics at the SFPM-EFOMP conference in
Strasbourg, France
(http://www.efomp.org/index.php/efomp-medal-awardees).
References to the research
All ICR authors are in bold and ICR team leaders/Faculty are in bold and
underlined.
2. Adams EJ, Convery DJ, Cosgrove VP, McNair HA, Staffurth JN,
Vaarkamp J, Nutting
CM, Warrington AP, Webb S, Balyckyi J, Dearnaley DP.
2004, Clinical implementation of
dynamic and step-and-shoot IMRT to treat prostate cancer with high risk of
pelvic lymph node
involvement, Radiother Oncol. 70, 1-10. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2003.09.004)
3. Webb S. 2005, The effect on IMRT conformality of
elastic tissue movement and a practical
suggestion for movement compensation via the modified dynamic multileaf
collimator (dMLC)
technique, Phys Med Biol. 50 (6), 1163-1190. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/50/6/009)
4. Dearnaley D, Syndikus I, Sumo G, Bidmead M,
Bloomfield D, Clark C, Gao A, Hassan S,
Horwich A, Huddart R, Khoo V, Kirkbride P, Mayles H,
Mayles P, Naismith O, Parker C,
Patterson H, Russell M, Scrase C, South C, Staffurth J, Hall E.
2012, Conventional versus
hypofractionated high-dose intensity-modulated radiotherapy for prostate
cancer: preliminary
safety results from the CHHiP randomised controlled trial, Lancet Oncol.
13, 43-54
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70293-5)
5. Dearnaley DP, Hall E, Lawrence D, Huddart
RA, Eeles R, Nutting CM, Gadd J,
Warrington A, Bidmead M, Horwich A. 2005, , Phase
III pilot study of dose escalation using
conformal radiotherapy in prostate cancer: PSA control and side effects,
Br J Cancer. 92, 488-98.
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6602301)
6. Nutting CM, Morden JP, Harrington KJ,
Urbano TG, Bhide SA, Clark C, Miles EA, Miah
AB, Newbold K, Tanay M, Adab F, Jefferies SJ, Scrase
C, Yap BK, A'Hern RP, Sydenham
MA, Emson M, Hall E; PARSPORT trial
management group. 2011, Parotid-sparing intensity
modulated versus conventional radiotherapy in head and neck cancer
(PARSPORT): a phase
3 multicentre randomised controlled trial, Lancet Oncol. 12,127-36.
(http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1470-2045(10)70290-4)
7. Miah AB, Bhide SA, Guerrero-Urbano MT, Clark C, Bidmead AM, St
Rose S, Barbachano
Y, A'hern R, Tanay M, Hickey J, Nicol R, Newbold KL, Harrington KJ,
Nutting CM. 2012,
Dose-escalated intensity-modulated radiotherapy is feasible and may
improve locoregional
control and laryngeal preservation in laryngo-hypopharyngeal cancers, Int
J Radiat Oncol Biol
Phys. 82, 539-47. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2010.09.055)
Selected Research Grants:
1. Webb S — `Development of polymer gel dosimetry and application to
conformal (including
intensity modulated) radiotherapy', EPSRC, 2000-2003, £152,975
2. Dearnaley D — `Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) for Prostate Cancer',
MRC, 2003-2006,
£300,000
Details of the impact
Impact on health
The development by ICR researchers of conformal radiotherapy and then the
refinement of that
technique to create effective and deliverable IMRT has revolutionised
radiation therapy. The
impact has been seen both in terms of more effective disease control and
improvements in patient
wellbeing by decreasing the side-effects of healthy tissue irradiation.
Tumours can be precisely
targeted within a high intensity radiation volume, while adjacent normal
structures can be spared,
leading to reduced side effects. Because of reduced irradiation of
adjacent tissues, higher doses
can be delivered to the tumour — resulting in improved cure rates. In
addition, cost-effective
hypofractionation can be employed, providing economic benefit to the NHS
(Research Ref 4
above).
As a result of the outcome of the ICR/RM clinical research trials
programme, IMRT is now the
approved treatment technique for many cancers in the UK and elsewhere,
with changes made in
clinical guidelines to implement this. For example, IMRT is standard
treatment for early prostate
cancer, benefiting about 8,500 men per year in the UK [1]. This treatment
modality is now
recommended in guideline publications from the European Association of
Urology (EAU), the
European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) [2] and from the US [3]. The
dose and fractions
that are recommended in these guidelines are based on the ICR/RM trials,
which are referenced
as evidence in the guidelines.
IMRT is also being used in the treatment of breast cancer (NICE guideline
CG80 [4]), lung cancer
(NICE guideline QS17 [5]) and metastatic spinal cord compression (NICE
guideline CG75 [6]). The
patient benefit that is attributable to IMRT, which stems from the changes
in clinical guidelines in
the UK, has recently been positively assessed by Cancer Research UK [7].
IMRT is in widespread use for head and neck cancers to reduce parotid
gland dose and avoid the
complication of "dry mouth". The ICR and the RM led the national PARSPORT
trial of parotid-sparing
radiotherapy and from that demonstrated the dose constraints to be applied
(Research Ref
6 above). The national implementation of IMRT for head and neck cancer has
been led by a
number of different levers, for example, the National Cancer Action Team
recommended that it
should be made available in all centres for head and neck cases following
the PARSPORT trial.
The ICR has had a significant impact on healthcare practice through its
important role in the
implementation of the proper and effective delivery of IMRT throughout the
UK, leading to gains in
efficiency and productivity in the NHS. Using test cases, ICR medical
physicists train staff in other
UK hospitals to use this technique, thus driving the modernisation of
radiotherapy throughout the
NHS. The ICR runs a national IMRT course each year involving around 70
trainee radiography
practitioners. All new radiotherapy equipment can deliver IMRT but without
the training provided by
the ICR/RM not all the hospitals would have the capability to use it.
Thanks to the UK
Governments Radiotherapy Innovation Fund (£23m), 22% of patients receiving
radiotherapy were
given IMRT in April 2013, up from around 14% in Aug 2012 [8]. The fund's
primary objective is to
extend NHS capacity to deliver IMRT, and as such this initiative has also
funded a nationwide
IMRT fundamentals course under the leadership of Professor Nutting, in
collaboration with the
Royal College of Radiologists, to increase clinician involvement in and
awareness of IMRT.
Impact on commerce
In addition to the clinical impact of the ICR research on the development
and implementation of
conformal radiotherapy and IMRT, the research has also had a commercial
impact. The ICR
worked with the company Elekta AB to develop techniques for its
accelerators to enable them to
effectively deliver conformal radiotherapy and subsequently IMRT. Elekta
formed an international
IMRT research consortium from 1994 to 2001 to help to develop IMRT
delivery technology.
Professor Webb was Chair from 1998-2000 and played an active role
throughout. Elekta continues
to market accelerators with IMRT capability, based on this research, to
this day. This has added
considerable shareholder value to Elekta [9].
ICR's collaboration with Elekta was never exclusive and many other
companies developing IMRT
technology were helped by the ICR's publications and expertise (for
example, Varian, BrainLab
and Calypso).
Professor Webb also worked with DKFZ, through a Visiting Professorship,
helping their spinoff
company MRC Systems (later part of Siemens) to develop IMRT technology.
Sources to corroborate the impact
[1] Hounsome et al National Cancer Intelligence Network Report 2012
[2] Horwich A, Parker C, Bangma C, Kataja V, On behalf of the ESMO
Guidelines Working Group.
(2010) Ann. Onc. 21 (suppl 5), v129-v133. (http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdq174)
[3] NCCN (2011 Pros-4) - http://www.nccn.org/professionals/physician_gls/pdf/prostate.pdf
[4] NICE guideline CG80 - http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/live/12132/43312/43312.pdf
[5] NICE guideline QS17 - http://publications.nice.org.uk/quality-standard-for-lung-cancer-qs17/quality-statement-11-optimal-radiotherapy
[6] NICE guideline CG75 - http://publications.nice.org.uk/metastatic-spinal-cord-compression-cg75/research-recommendations
[7] CRUK Radiotherapy report p6-8, Aug 2013
[8] http://www.cancerresearchuk.org/cancer-info/news/archive/pressrelease/2013-07-11-radiotherapy-innovation-fund
[9] VP Scientific Research, Eleckta, Redhill, UK (identifier 1)