Farsighted Exploration
Critical Illness
All-In-One Technology Benefits Cancer Patients
All-In-One Technology Benefits Cancer Patients
Based on the integration and innovation with clinical clients, United Imaging Healthcare has created the industry's first one-stop radiotherapy technology.
Dec 22, 2021
Dec 22, 2021
Doctor's Benevolence
Doctor's Benevolence
Professor Zhang Zhen , the director of Fudan University Cancer Hospital Radiotherapy Center,has been a doctor for more than 20 years and has handled the treatment of tens of thousands of cancer patients. But there is always an unfulfilled wish in her heart.
Spending time with patients, Prof. Zhang Zhen found that the survival rate of patients has increased year by year with the development of precision radiotherapy. However, at the same time, the anxiety of patients waiting before treatment has increased over the years. Especially new radiotherapy patients are extremely prone to anxiety because their first treatment takes several days, not to mention that they are also running around in multiple unfamiliar sites. "It is not easy for tumor patients to fight with the disease, and it is hard for me to see them physically and mentally exhausted, so I have always made up my mind that I must bring changes to patients' medical experience." Professor Zhang Zhen said.
On the one hand, it is imperative to reduce the waiting time and optimize the patient's medical experience. On the other hand, Professor Zhang Zhenfaces many technical bottlenecks in radiotherapy. Radiotherapy is recognized as one of the best treatments for tumors in the world. It can precisely kill cancer cells by avoiding normal tissues, which requires tailor-made treatment for each patient, as well as close coordination of multi-site, multi-medical staff and multi-modal equipment. It also involves six processes: body fixation, simulated positioning, target area outlining, radiotherapy plan creation, plan quality control, image guidance and radiotherapy implementation, and each loop has to be extremely rigorous, which is bound to take a long time. "Is there a way to fundamentally optimize the process so that efficiency and precision can be achieved at the same time?" Professor Zhang Zhen has been seeking a solution over the years.
Industry-Medical Integration
"This is an encouraging start, and our next step will be to explore the limits of the technology and continue to optimize it with a goal of 15 minutes for the first full radiotherapy process, while expanding the application for more diseases." Director Zhang Zhen said, "The value of this technology is not only to shorten the time in the physical sense, it can truly make patients get a more relaxed radiotherapy experience and make them feel more cared for and respected through the close cooperation of doctors, physicists and technicians."