Turning up the heat helps shrink tumors
3/10/2006 Baltimore, MD Judy Foreman Baltimore Sun (www.baltimoresun.com) A year ago, when Gayle Driscoll's cancer recurred on her skin, the 63-year-old retired teacher from Barnstable, Mass., tried an experimental treatment that gave her radiation therapy some extra oomph. Every time she lay down for radiation treatment on her chest, her tumors were also heated with a device that emitted radio frequency waves. After six weeks, the skin tumors were gone. The heat therapy called hyperthermia was meant only as a local treatment - and the cancer ultimately spread to her bones - but it was "psychologically important" to her to see the tumors in her skin disappear, she said. Hyperthermia, in which microwaves are used to raise the temperature of a tumor - or the patient's whole body - to 104 to 106 degrees Fahrenheit, is a new twist on an old treatment idea that has gained new currency recently, thanks to some successful studies. Hyperthermia significantly boosts the killing power of chemotherapy and radiation. It is generally used to help prevent local recurrences, but some doctors speculate that it may improve overall survival as well. At least eight studies in recent years have shown that adding hyperthermia to chemotherapy or radiation can improve local control of cancers of the esophagus, cervix, head and neck, brain, melanoma and breast cancers that have spread to the chest wall, said Dr. Mark Dewhirst, director of the hyperthermia program at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. Scientists who have observed first hand [...]