Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
Radiation Oncology
James M Metz, MD is the Henry K. Pancoast Professor and Chair of Radiation Oncology at the University of Pennsylvania. He oversees the academic practices at 18 radiation treatment facilities including the Roberts Proton Center. He has been intimately involved with the development of the Roberts Proton Center through the RFP process, contracting, construction, opening, and ramp up of the center to full operations. He is also overseeing the development of two single room proton centers at Lancaster General Hospital in central Pennsylvania and at Virtua Voorhees Hospital in South Jersey, both of which are scheduled to open in 2022. Dr. Metz is also Executive Director of OncoLink, the world’s largest Internet resource for cancer information and proton-based training. His clinical interests include the multidisciplinary management of gastrointestinal cancers, integration of proton therapy in the cancer treatment paradigm, and the expansion of quality and safety initiatives to improve clinical outcomes for patients.

Moderator of 1 Session

FLASH in Pre-Clinical and Clinical Settings
Session Type
FLASH in Pre-Clinical and Clinical Settings
Date
30.11.2022
Session Time
12:05 - 12:35
Room
Hall 113-114

Presenter of 1 Presentation

FLASH-RT with Short and Mid-Term Perspectives

Session Type
FLASH in Pre-Clinical and Clinical Settings
Date
30.11.2022
Session Time
17:05 - 17:35
Room
Hall 113-114
Lecture Time
17:05 - 17:30

Abstract

Abstract Body

FLASH radiation has emerged as a potential game changer in radiation oncology. Preclinical data has shown electrons, protons, and photons are all capable of being delivered at FLASH dose rates (>40 Gy / sec). Each of these modalities have shown normal tissue sparing while comparable tumor control rates for a variety of targets. However, electrons are limited by the superficial nature of the treatment or loss of tissue sparing when higher energies are utilized. Current linear accelerators in the clinic cannot deliver FLASH dose rates with photons and clinical units are likely many years away. Clinical application of FLASH radiation will likely be first seen on a broad scale with protons; accelerators in the clinic today can reach FLASH dose rates and protons have the ability to treat deep seated tumors commonly seen in the adult population. The mechanism of action of FLASH radiation has yet to be fully elucidated although there are numerous hypotheses. However, preclinical studies with protons have shown sparing of the stem cells and stem cell compartment in a number of organ systems. Vendors are investing heavily in proton technology to bring clinical trials to rapid fruition. Significant investigation continues to define the FLASH effect, understand the mechanism of action, and mature the technology to deliver the best possible treatment. This presentation will review the state of the art data and assess where clinical use of FLASH radiation may be defined. It will also discuss the design and implementation of clinical trials to delineate the future of FLASH in the patient setting.

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