Proton therapy for selected low grade glioma patients in the Netherlands

Proton therapy offers an attractive alternative to conventional photon-based radiotherapy in low grade glioma patients, delivering radiotherapy with equivalent efficacy to the tumour with less radiation exposure to the brain. In the Netherlands, patients with favourable prognosis based on tumour and patient characteristics can be offered proton therapy. Radiation-induced neurocognitive function decline is a major concern in these long surviving patients. Although level 1 evidence of superior clinical outcome with proton therapy is lacking, the Dutch National Health Care Institute concluded tha... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van der Weide, HL
Kramer, MCA
Scandurra, D
Eekers, DBP
Klaver, YLB
Wiggenraad, RGJ
Romero, A
Coremans, IEM
Boersma, L
van Vulpen, M (Marco)
Langendijk, JA
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Reihe/Periodikum: van der Weide , HL , Kramer , MCA , Scandurra , D , Eekers , DBP , Klaver , YLB , Wiggenraad , RGJ , Romero , A , Coremans , IEM , Boersma , L , van Vulpen , M & Langendijk , JA 2021 , ' Proton therapy for selected low grade glioma patients in the Netherlands ' , Radiotherapy and Oncology , vol. 154 , pp. 283-290 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2020.11.004
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27618174
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://pure.eur.nl/en/publications/d3f00aff-1a3b-47dc-92ce-ab821ea40ffa

Proton therapy offers an attractive alternative to conventional photon-based radiotherapy in low grade glioma patients, delivering radiotherapy with equivalent efficacy to the tumour with less radiation exposure to the brain. In the Netherlands, patients with favourable prognosis based on tumour and patient characteristics can be offered proton therapy. Radiation-induced neurocognitive function decline is a major concern in these long surviving patients. Although level 1 evidence of superior clinical outcome with proton therapy is lacking, the Dutch National Health Care Institute concluded that there is scientific evidence to assume that proton therapy can have clinical benefit by reducing radiation-induced brain damage. Based on this decision, proton therapy is standard insured care for selected low grade glioma patients. Patients with other intracranial tumours can also qualify for proton therapy, based on the same criteria. In this paper, the evidence and considerations that led to this decision are summarised. Additionally, the eligibility criteria for proton therapy and the steps taken to obtain high-quality data on treatment outcome are discussed.