Imaging Technology News 9/08 - (Page 33) > > special report cians to treat patients with much tighter margins, eliminating the need to extend margins to compensate for a moving target, and thus spare healthy surrounding tissue. The Synchrony System tracks both movement of the tumor and breathing patterns of the patient. The robotic arm adjusts and compensates for these movements ensuring more accurate treatment and eliminating breath-holding or gating requirements, allowing patients to breathe normally throughout their treatment. Physicians also use the Xsight Spine and Xsight Lung Tracking Systems, which integrate with the CyberKnife Stereotactic Radiosurgery System (SBRT). Xsight eliminates the need for surgical implantation of fiducials by using actual bony structure of the spine and highly sophisticated image processing techniques to orient and locate the lesion during the delivery of radiosurgery treatments for spinal and lung tumors. Xsight Spine is used for treating lesions throughout the spinal region — including cervical, thoracic, lumbar and sacral tumors. Operational Efficiency: To improve operational efficiency, Medical Physicist Steve Humphries, Ph.D., has integrated the open source DICOM image viewer/manipulator/3D and 4D rendering tool/storage-archives-PACS application “OSIRIX” throughout the center’s internal and external operations. Patient Care: The staff are very patient oriented, and patients say the room is beautiful and they feel very comfortable with the staff. Teamwork: The team may include a surgeon, radiation oncologist, medical oncologist, medical physicist, nurse, radiation therapist and other team members within the clinic. The team is experienced and cross-trained, enabling the clinicians to understand each other’s perspective. The doctor can plan, the physicist and RTT can contour and know what the prescriptions should be, contributing to operational efficiency. As a result, the time it takes to move a patient between consult and treatment is very brief. Teamwork : Administration support is key to MCC’s success with a strong commitment to being at the forefront of technology, operating efficiently and profitably and providing world-class cancer care since MCC’s opening. This commitment stems from the CEO, Joseph McClure, M.D., Ph.D., M.B.A., through MIMA’s leadership, the staff and physicians at MCC, and on through to the director of radiation oncology, Fred Fangman, R.T.T. Teamwork has held MCC together and given the center a stellar local reputation, despite the challenges of growing pains and continued reimbursement challenges. 4. Central Arkansas Radiation Therapy Institute (Little Rock, AR) Innovation: Central Arkansas Radiation Therapy Institute (CARTI), a nonprofit radiation therapy center with seven facilities located throughout Arkansas, installed the BrainLAB ExacTrac X-Ray 6D image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) system, enabling doctors to pinpoint tumors with increased accuracy and treat a wider variety of indications. Operational Efficiency: Implementing the new system offered a high level treatment accuracy, resulting in fewer complications and better treatment outcomes, as well as improved workflow to maximize patient output. Customer Service: In addition to the physical aspects of cancer, patients are also faced with problems ranging from transportation needs to family concerns. The office staff at CARTI assists with housing, transportation, financial concerns, cancer education materials and a plethora of other services for the patients’ and families’ mental and emotional well-being. Teamwork: With the arrival of the ExacTrac X-Ray 6D system, patients with tumors that were previously considered not suitable for precision radiotherapy now have new hope due to the technology’s ability to precisely deliver a highly focused radiation dose right to the tumor. Greater accuracy means that oncologists can now treat a wider range of indications, including prostate, lung, liver and spine. 3. MIMA Cancer Center (Melbourne, FL) Innovation: Starting in 2004, the MIMA Cancer Center (MCC) was the first radiation oncology department in the world to install image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) technology on all of its machines and routinely use the technology on all curative patients. MCC transitioned to Varian OBI/CBCT technology in late 2005. In 2006, routine use of Varian’s respiratory gating technology was brought online for the treatment of lung and upper abdominal tumors. MCC has had three IGRT abstracts accepted at ASTRO in the last two years and three major publications in the peer-reviewed literature. In 2007, routine use of Varian’s respiratory gating technology was brought online for the treatment of lung and upper abdominal tumors. Operational Efficiency: MCC opened in 2003 and is part of Melbourne Internal Medicine Associates (MIMA), a 100-plus multispecialty physician group in Brevard County, FL, and a $150-million-dollar-a-year corporation. MIMA is paperless with an advanced EMR and PACS. MCC’s chief physicist, Joseph Ting, Ph.D., establishes synergistic and strategic partnerships with major vendors, particularly Varian, to keep MCC at the forefront of technology. The center’s medical director, Todd Scarbrough, M.D., has modeled much of the flow and philosophy of the MCC after his former institution, which earned Outpatient Care Technology’s inaugural 2006 Outpatient Excellence Award for Oncology Centers. “Growth” and “efficiency” have been the watchwords of MCC since its inception as a single-linear accelerator/one radiation oncologist/eight staff member/100 annual patients enterprise in 2003. Today, the center houses approximately 45 staff members, three linear accelerators (with a fourth in construction), dedicated CT and PET/CT technology, and treats upwards of 1,000 patients per year. Patient Care: MIMA prides itself on outstanding customer service and its continued improvement. Press Ganey Associates Inc. patient satisfaction measurement services are employed MIMA-wide for purposes of assessing and improving patient satisfaction. Patient satisfaction questionnaires at MCC, completed at the end of patients’ treatments, are continuously monitored and analyzed. MCC and MIMA score well above the national average in terms of patient satisfaction in most metrics. MIMA, due to its cohesiveness and size, affords a continuity of care and breadth of service (surgery, radiology, infusion center/chemotherapy, etc.) unmatched in central Florida. 5. Baptist Centers for Cancer Care’s Radiation Oncology Center (BCCC ROC) (Memphis, TN) Innovation: BCCC ROC bills itself as the first in the area to offer freestanding prostate brachytherapy with intraoperative dosimetry, three-dimensional high-dose rate brachytherapy, intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT), respiratory gating and linear accelerator-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) and stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT). In fact, within the last two years, BCCC ROC invested more than $5 million in equipment, which included the addition of a new HDR treatment area, upgrading its existing accelerator consoles to 4DTC and electronic medical record software as well as computer hardware. The facility also has initiated a “strong” gynecologic service and new SRS/SRT program. The multimillion-dollar investment in capital equipment and technology included a brachytherapy suite, IGRT and Trilogy system, plus an EMR and ARIA oncology information management system. Baptist uses GE Healthcare for computed tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET/CT) imaging; C.R. Bard for radioactive material for the ProSeed prostate brachytherapy implant technique; B-K Medical for ultrasound; PAR Scientific A/S for block cutters; Scanditronix Wellhofer for physics calibration equipment; and CIVCO Medical Solutions for immobilization devices and treatment supplies. Operational Efficiency: The planning systems move between treatment units, and the facility works with other hospitals within the organization to move critical patient information between systems. The team manages productivity, for example, by rotating through dosimetry for the therapists. This increases employee satisfaction/morale and provides professional development in a hard to recruit position to meet existing and future needs. Patient Care: A dedicated ambulance team transports hospital inpatients to the center, which is located next to a hotel that can serve as a convenient stop for outof-town patients and their families and friends. Teamwork: The facility works with sister hospitals to provide services to patients by sharing a medical physicist, dosimetrist and therapists. Medical oncologists are in private practice; radiologists are contracted by the hospital. special report > 33 http://new.reillycomm.com/imaging/special-report-b.php
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Imaging Technology News 9/08 Imaging Technology News 9/08 Contents IGRT How IGRT Targets the Prostate ASTRO Oncology Information Management Systems (OIMS) Imaging Leading the Intense Race Against Cancer SBRT - The New Treatment of Choice Top IMRT/IGRT Centers to Watch Molecular Imaging: Ready for the Limelight CR or DR in the ER? Have You Hit the Glass Ceiling? Imaging Technology News 9/08 Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging Technology News 9/08 (Page 1) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging Technology News 9/08 (Page 2) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Contents (Page 3) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Contents (Page 4) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - IGRT (Page 5) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - IGRT (Page 6) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - IGRT (Page 7) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - IGRT (Page 8) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - IGRT (Page 9) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - IGRT (Page 12) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - How IGRT Targets the Prostate (Page 13) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - How IGRT Targets the Prostate (Page 14) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - ASTRO (Page 15) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - ASTRO (Page 16) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Oncology Information Management Systems (OIMS) (Page 17) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 18) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 19) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 20) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 21) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 24) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 25) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Imaging (Page 26) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Leading the Intense Race Against Cancer (Page 27) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - SBRT - The New Treatment of Choice (Page 28) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - SBRT - The New Treatment of Choice (Page 29) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - SBRT - The New Treatment of Choice (Page 30) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - SBRT - The New Treatment of Choice (Page 31) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Top IMRT/IGRT Centers to Watch (Page 32) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Top IMRT/IGRT Centers to Watch (Page 33) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Molecular Imaging: Ready for the Limelight (Page 34) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Molecular Imaging: Ready for the Limelight (Page 35) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - CR or DR in the ER? (Page 36) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - CR or DR in the ER? (Page 37) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - CR or DR in the ER? (Page 38) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Have You Hit the Glass Ceiling? (Page 39) Imaging Technology News 9/08 - Have You Hit the Glass Ceiling? (Page 40)
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