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Daily Image Guided Radiation Therapy for Prostate Cancer: An assessment of treatment plan reproducibility.Knight, Kellie Ann January 2006 (has links)
Doctor of Health Science / It is well documented that for prostate cancer patients undergoing radiation therapy there is a correlation between target volume displacement and changes in bladder and rectal volumes. However, these studies have used a methodology that has captured only a subset of all treatment positions. This research used daily Computer Tomography (CT) imaging to comprehensively assess organ volumes, organ motion and their effect on dose, something that has never been performed previously, thus adding considerably to the understanding of the topic. Daily CT images were obtained using a Siemens Primus Linear Accelerator equipped with an in-room Somatom CT unit in the accelerator suite, marketed as ‘Primatom’, to accurately position the patient prior to treatment delivery. The internal structures of interest were contoured on the planning workstation by the investigator. The daily volume and location of the organs were derived from the computer to assess and analyse internal organ motion. The planned dose distribution was then imported onto the treatment CT datasets and used to compare the planned dose to i) the actual isocentre, where the isocentre was actually placed for that fraction, ii) the uncorrected isocentre, by un-doing any on-line corrections performed by the treatment staff prior to treatment delivery, and iii) the future isocentre, by placing the isocentre relative to internal organ motion on a daily basis. The results of this study did not confirm a statistically significant decrease in rectum volumes over time (hypothesis 1), however large fluctuations in bladder volume were confirmed (hypothesis 2). Internal organ motion for the rectum and bladder was demonstrated to be related to organ filling. Ideal planning volumes for these organs have been reported to minimise systematic and random uncertainty in the treatment volumes. An observed decrease in prostate volume over time, a systematic uncertainty in the location of the prostate at the time of the planning CT scan and a significant relationship between prostate centre of volume and rectum and bladder volumes has resulted in a recommendation that patients should be re-scanned during treatment to ensure appropriate clinical target volume coverage. A significant relationship between rectal and bladder volumes and the dose delivered to these organs was found (hypothesis 3). The dose delivered to the planning target volume was not related to the rectal or bladder volumes, although it was related to the motion of these organs. Despite these results only minimal effects on the dose delivered to any of the three isocentres occurred, indicating that the planned dose was accurately delivered using the methodology presented here (hypothesis 4). However the results do indicate that the patient preparation instructions need to be improved if margins are to be reduced in the future. It is unrealistic to assume that Image Guided Radiation Therapy will ever become routine practice due to infrastructure costs and time limitations. This research will inform radiation therapy centres of the variables associated with prostate cancer treatment on a daily basis, something that has never before been realistically achievable. As a result centres will be able to devise protocols to improve treatment outcomes.
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Daily Image Guided Radiation Therapy for Prostate Cancer: An assessment of treatment plan reproducibility.Knight, Kellie Ann January 2006 (has links)
Doctor of Health Science / It is well documented that for prostate cancer patients undergoing radiation therapy there is a correlation between target volume displacement and changes in bladder and rectal volumes. However, these studies have used a methodology that has captured only a subset of all treatment positions. This research used daily Computer Tomography (CT) imaging to comprehensively assess organ volumes, organ motion and their effect on dose, something that has never been performed previously, thus adding considerably to the understanding of the topic. Daily CT images were obtained using a Siemens Primus Linear Accelerator equipped with an in-room Somatom CT unit in the accelerator suite, marketed as ‘Primatom’, to accurately position the patient prior to treatment delivery. The internal structures of interest were contoured on the planning workstation by the investigator. The daily volume and location of the organs were derived from the computer to assess and analyse internal organ motion. The planned dose distribution was then imported onto the treatment CT datasets and used to compare the planned dose to i) the actual isocentre, where the isocentre was actually placed for that fraction, ii) the uncorrected isocentre, by un-doing any on-line corrections performed by the treatment staff prior to treatment delivery, and iii) the future isocentre, by placing the isocentre relative to internal organ motion on a daily basis. The results of this study did not confirm a statistically significant decrease in rectum volumes over time (hypothesis 1), however large fluctuations in bladder volume were confirmed (hypothesis 2). Internal organ motion for the rectum and bladder was demonstrated to be related to organ filling. Ideal planning volumes for these organs have been reported to minimise systematic and random uncertainty in the treatment volumes. An observed decrease in prostate volume over time, a systematic uncertainty in the location of the prostate at the time of the planning CT scan and a significant relationship between prostate centre of volume and rectum and bladder volumes has resulted in a recommendation that patients should be re-scanned during treatment to ensure appropriate clinical target volume coverage. A significant relationship between rectal and bladder volumes and the dose delivered to these organs was found (hypothesis 3). The dose delivered to the planning target volume was not related to the rectal or bladder volumes, although it was related to the motion of these organs. Despite these results only minimal effects on the dose delivered to any of the three isocentres occurred, indicating that the planned dose was accurately delivered using the methodology presented here (hypothesis 4). However the results do indicate that the patient preparation instructions need to be improved if margins are to be reduced in the future. It is unrealistic to assume that Image Guided Radiation Therapy will ever become routine practice due to infrastructure costs and time limitations. This research will inform radiation therapy centres of the variables associated with prostate cancer treatment on a daily basis, something that has never before been realistically achievable. As a result centres will be able to devise protocols to improve treatment outcomes.
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Facteurs nutritionnels associés à la présence de lésions précancéreuses de la prostate (PIN) chez des hommes ayant une hypertrophie bénigne de la protestateAhouandjinou, Theodora Vignon 13 April 2018 (has links)
La néoplasie intra-épithéliale prostatique, un des précurseurs possibles du cancer de la prostate, pourrait donner des renseignements sur les causes de ce dernier dans la mesure où ils cohabitent souvent. Dans une étude transversale, réalisée chez 510 hommes traités chirurgicalement pour une hypertrophie bénigne de la prostate, nous avons testé l'hypothèse que les facteurs de risque souvent associés au cancer de la prostate pouvaient être aussi associés à la présence de la néoplasie intra-épithéliale prostatique. La consommation alimentaire au cours de l'année précédant la chirurgie a été documentée par un questionnaire alimentaire détaillé administré par une diététiste. Le tissu prostatique prélevé à la chirurgie a été examiné par un seul pathologiste. Seuls les patients ayant une hypertrophie bénigne et aucune évidence de cancer ont été retenus pour l'étude. La présence de lésions précancéreuses de la prostate (PIN) a été observée chez 81 participants. La majorité des analyses a porté sur les relations entre les facteurs nutritionnels suspectés de jouer un rôle dans le cancer de la prostate et la présence de PIN. Les rapports de cotes ajustés (RC) et leurs intervalles de confiance (IC à 95%) ont été estimés à l'aide de la régression logistique pour les différentes variables des apports alimentaires. Les résultats sont pour la majorité non statistiquement significatifs, seule une importante consommation de carottes avec un RC, comparant le 3ème au premier tercile, de 1,84 (IC à 95% =1,00-3,40), et d'alpha-carotène avec un RC = 1,90 (IC à 95% =1,04-3,45) sont statistiquement significatifs. En regard du nombre d'associations évaluées ces résultats ne suggèrent aucune association entre les facteurs nutritionnels associés au cancer de la prostate et la présence de PIN.
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Effects of hormonal treatments, appraisal, and coping on cognitive and psychosocial functioning of men with non-localised prostate cancer /Green, Heather Joy. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Queensland, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Improving cryosurgical ablation of advanced state prostate cancer through identification of molecular targets in a prostrate cancer cell modelKlossner, Daniel Patrick. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Department of Biological Sciences, 2007. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Genetic predisposition to prostate cancer the contribution of the HPCX locus and TGFB1 gene /Yaspan, Brian L. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D. in Cancer Biology)--Vanderbilt University, May 2008. / Title from title screen. Includes bibliographical references.
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Computational modeling and real-time control of patient-specific laser treatment of prostate cancerFuentes, David Thomas A., January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Identification of the SV40 large T antigen integration site in TRAMP mice /Han, Yi, January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Missouri--Columbia, 2004. / "July 2004" Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (l. 64-66). Also issued on the Internet.
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Novel peptidylaminoarylmethyl phosphoramide mustards for activation by prostate-specific antigenWu, Xinghua. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Rutgers University, 2008. / "Graduate Program in Medicinal Chemistry." Includes bibliographical references (p. 156-174).
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Development of an in vitro model for investigating the properties of human prostate epithelial cells and prostatic carcinoma cells /Weaver, Jennifer. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of St Andrews, February 2009. / Restricted until 23rd February 2012.
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