The Technical Committee and the Clinical Committee of the ESHO evaluated the experience of the institutes which are active in clinical regional hyperthermia using radiative equipment. Based on this evaluation, QA guidelines have been formulated. The focus of these guidelines lies on what must be done not on how it should be done. Subjects covered are: treatment planning, treatment, treatment documentation, requirements and characterization of equipment, safety aspects, hyperthermia staff requirements and instrumentation for quality assurance.
We demonstrate in vitro that the enhancing effect of increased temperature on the cytotoxicity of etoposide on neuroblastoma cells is not absent, but depends on scheduling. The temperature range used is achievable in total body hyperthermia. Thus, our results are relevant for possible treatment of disseminated neuroblastoma.
Patients with recurrent, progressed or otherwise, therapy resistant malignancies, whose diseases are not amenable to standard therapies, may benefit from hyperthermia (HT). Based on the number of 1600 newly diagnosed malignancies, in patients < 15 years of age, per annum of which 70% are successfully treated on the standard treatment protocols of the German Society of Pediatric Oncology and Hematology (GPOH) and allowing for various drop-outs for reasons such as lack of established protocols, insufficient state of health and others, this means that as many as 100 children per annum can be expected to be enrolled into phase I/II trials in Germany. In view of the promising results in adults, phase I/II HT studies have also been performed in children and adolescents with recurrent or advanced malignancies including Ewing's tumours, aggressive fibromatosis, and germ cell tumours. Recent results in paediatric studies indicate the feasibility of both regional deep HT and whole body HT, and the best case analysis reveals promising response rates (CR + PR) as well as some long-term remissions. Technical modifications, due to the smaller body diameters, led to mean intratumoural temperatures in paediatric patients similar to those reported for adults in whom an improved outcome was demonstrated. The results in children and adolescents even suggest that introduction of HT into standard treatment protocols may be promising to improve tumour response and event-free survival in patients with poor risk malignancies of childhood.
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