Abstract
The stomach is one of the most deforming organs caused by respiratory motions and daily variation by food intake. Applying radiotherapy has been quite a challenge due to the high risk of missing the target as well as radiation exposure to large volumes of normal tissue. However, real-time magnetic resonance (MR)-guided radiotherapy with adaptive planning could focus the high dose radiation to the target area while minimizing neighboring normal tissue exposure and compensate for not only daily but real-time variation. Here is a case report of a patient with recurrent gastric cancer and multiple co-morbidities, unsuitable for both resection and chemotherapy, who underwent MR guided adaptive radiotherapy.
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CITATION STYLE
Chun, S.-J., Jeon, S. H., & Chie, E. K. (2018). A Case Report of Salvage Radiotherapy for a Patient with Recurrent Gastric Cancer and Multiple Comorbidities Using Real-time MRI-guided Adaptive Treatment System. Cureus. https://doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2471
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