Abstract

The concomitant boost technique is a variant of accelerated fractionation whereby the boost is delivered as a second daily fraction during the basic treatment course to reduce the total duration of treatment. From April 1972 through June 1983, 53 patients with advanced squamous cell carcinoma of various sites in the head and neck region were treated for cure at U.T. M. D. Anderson Hospital with this technique. In 12 patients, the concomitant boost was used because of rapid recurrence following surgical resection either before or after initiation of planned postoperative radiotherapy; the remaining patients had rapidly growing untreated or recurrent disease in the primary site, neck, or both. In most cases, the concomitant boost was delivered in fractions of 120-150 cGy, separated by 3-6 h from the basic daily treatment of 180-200 cGy. The boost treatments were given 2-3 times a week for 3-5 weeks, delivering an average of about 17 Gy in 12 fractions. Two different treatment techniques were used. Patients with predominantly neck disease (30) were treated with glancing AP and PA fields or with appositional electron beam portals to spare the mucous membranes, while those with advanced or rapidly progressive primary lesions, with or without nodal disease (23), received their concomitant boost through lateral photon or high energy electron beams to include the primary tumor site. As expected, the acute mucosal reactions were most severe in the latter group, but only three patients required interruption of treatment because of severe mucositis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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