2021
DOI: 10.1088/2057-1976/ac1c52
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High dose rate 192Ir versus high dose rate 60Co brachytherapy: an overview of systematic reviews of clinical responses of gynecological cancers from 1984 to 2020

Abstract: The Purpose. Radioisotope of 192Iradium (192Ir) has a half-life (74 days) and is not easily accessible in developing countries. As a result, by the time source shipment clearance and the customs paperwork are completed, a large proportion of useful activity had already been decayed away. In fact, 60Cobalt (60Co) remote afterloading systems are commercially available by many venders. As a result, it may well become an alternative source to 192Ir and conform many of these challenges. The aim of this study is tha… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…after radiotherapy, and the predicted outcomes of 60Co and 192Ir have the same trend of distribution, so there is no disadvantage of 60Co compared to 192Ir in terms of disease control. In published clinical trials, there are results showing that patients with cervical cancer treated with 60Co HDR ISBT have similar survival and toxicity outcomes to those treated with 192Ir [42][43][44]. However, there is still a lack of large sample sizes and randomized clinical trials using 60Co and 192Ir for IC-ISBT in patients with cervical cancer to establish definitive conclusions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…after radiotherapy, and the predicted outcomes of 60Co and 192Ir have the same trend of distribution, so there is no disadvantage of 60Co compared to 192Ir in terms of disease control. In published clinical trials, there are results showing that patients with cervical cancer treated with 60Co HDR ISBT have similar survival and toxicity outcomes to those treated with 192Ir [42][43][44]. However, there is still a lack of large sample sizes and randomized clinical trials using 60Co and 192Ir for IC-ISBT in patients with cervical cancer to establish definitive conclusions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%