High-tech cancer fighter
2/26/2007 Staten Island, NY Diane O'Donnell Staten Island Advance (www.silive.com) TomoTherapy combines daily CT scans to check for any changes in size or location of a tumor with the ability to target it with high doses of radiation while decreasing damage to the surrounding healthy tissues and organs Paul Lewek takes off his Mets baseball cap and settles his lanky 6-foot-5 frame onto a movable table connected to a large donut-shaped machine. For the 57-year-old retired cop, this is day 11 of his 6 1/2 week Monday to Friday regimen of TomoTherapy, a relatively new approach to treating cancerous tumors. After having his right tonsil and a golf ball-size mass removed from his neck in December to battle advanced tonsillar cancer, Lewek shruggingly accepts the routine. Lewek is the first head-and-neck cancer patient to be treated with the more than $3 million, state-of-the-art machine at TomoTherapy of Staten Island, housed in West Brighton-based Regional Radiology. The TomoTherapy Hi-Art System machine, which debuted on the Island last month, is one of only two in the New York City area and 71 nationwide. According to Patty Kitowski, marketing communications manager of Madison, Wis.-based TomoTherapy Incorporated, which created the machine, there are 102 units worldwide. TomoTherapy combines daily CT scans to check for any changes in size or location of a tumor with the ability to accurately target it with high doses of radiation while sparing healthy surrounding tissue to a greater degree than was previously possible. The process is achieved through Image [...]