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CyberKnife Robotic Radiosurgery System

Last Updated 8/2/2010 4:36:00 PM


CyberKnife Suite

El Camino Hospital offers the cutting-edge technology of the CyberKnife as part of its new Center for Advanced Radiotherapy and CyberKnife Radiosurgery. The CyberKnife is a radiation therapy device that is able to pinpoint solid tumors anywhere in the body with sub-millimeter accuracy using image-guidance technology. As a result, no incisions, anesthesia or hospitalization are required.
 
Precision and Power

For decades, the standard treatment of many tumors has involved surgery, radiation or a combination of both. In certain areas of the body, such as the brain, surrounding critical structures can be damaged in the process of surgical removal, resulting in side effects including paralysis, loss of speech and even death. In many instances, the CyberKnife is able to perform such "surgery" completely non-invasively--meaning, without any incisions. As a result, the risk of injury to surrounding structures is minimal, and patients go home the same day.

For many patients, undergoing traditional radiation therapy means daily treatment over several weeks. This is because with traditional radiation therapy, a significant amount of normal tissue is within the field of treatment. To allow these normal tissues to recover, lower doses of radiation must be given over many treatment sessions, and the total amount of radiation is limited. Because the CyberKnife can pinpoint the location of a tumor with extreme accuracy, one to five treatment sessions are all that are required, with a minimal dose to surrounding normal tissues and, often, a much higher dose to the tumor itself.
 
The Science Behind the System
The CyberKnife uses a miniaturized linear accelerator, modified for medical use, that is attached to a robotic arm--similar to those used in automobile assembly lines for welding parts. It is manufactured by Sunnyvale, California-based Accuray, Inc. The facility at El Camino Hospital will serve as a showcase site where, in addition to treating patients, doctors will perform research, incorporate the latest innovations in the technology, and train and host visiting physicians from around the world.
 
While the patient rests comfortably, the CyberKnife's robotic arm can move around him or her in a nearly 360-degree arc; multiple beams of radiation target a tumor. This mechanism allows the CyberKnife to be used to treat tumors anywhere in the body; it was originally designed by Dr. John Adler of Stanford University to treat brain tumors, because of its ability to avoid normal tissue, but now it is also often used to treat lung cancer and, increasingly, to treat tumors in the prostate, liver and pancreas.
 
Much of the CyberKnife's sophistication comes in its software programming. It can deliver radiation to a precise area of the body because it can recognize when a patient--or the patient's tumor--moves, and it can make instantaneous adjustments to accommodate that movement. In most cases, the patient's skull or skeleton or implanted markers are used to assist in localization of the tumor. In some instances, the patient wears a special light-emitting-diode (LED) vest, which the CyberKnife uses to gauge movement caused by respiration, and several X-Ray cameras, all of which are used by the system's software to track position and movement.
 
This image-guided approach differs from some other forms of stereotactic radiosurgery (which means that they use three-dimensional targeting to precisely beam radiation at tumors from multiple angles). With the Gamma Knife, for example, a rigid metal frame is typically affixed to the patient's skull with screws. These frames are only available for human skulls, limiting treatments to brain tumors, and of course, can cause discomfort or pain to the patient. Other companies have modified the same linear accelerator that has been used for more than 50 years to create devices to perform radiosurgery, but the CyberKnife was designed specifically to overcome the limitations of the Gamma Knife and traditional linear accelerators by utilizing the latest in robotics and computer technology.
 
CyberKnife: Now Open
El Camino Hospital completed construction of the new Center for Advanced Radiotherapy and CyberKnife Radiosurgery in February 2010. James R. Doty, M.D., director or the Neuroscience Institute at El Camino Hospital and an international expert in stereotactic radiosurgery and a pioneer in the use of the CyberKnife, and Robert Sinha, M.D., medical director of radiation oncology at El Camino Hospital and another stereotactic radiosurgery pioneer are co-directors of the facility. The facility trains physicians from around the world in the use of the CyberKnife and other advanced forms of radiotherapy.
 
For more information on the CyberKnife, visit the CyberKnife Society and CyberKnife.com.
 
 

Contact the Center for Advanced Radiotherapy and CyberKnife Radiosurgery

For more information or to schedule a consultation, fill out this short online form or call 650-940-7243.

CyberKnife Videos

These videos explain how the CyberKnife works, the device's benefits and what forms of cancer it can be used to treat.

CyberKnife: Treatment Overview


CyberKnife: Brain


CyberKnife: Liver-Pancreas

CyberKnife: Lung


CyberKnife: Prostate

CyberKnife: Spine

CyberKnife Animations

CyberKnife Animations Play these digital animations to see the CyberKnife radiation treatment device in (virtual) action.

CyberKnife FAQs

What is a CyberKnife, and what are its advantages over other cancer treatments? Read our FAQ.

CyberKnife Glossary