CancerFax

Non-invasive treatment of sarcoma

Sai SreeWritten by Sai SreeMedically ReviewedUpdated April 28, 20204 min read
Non-invasive treatment of sarcoma
In this article
  1. Understanding Sarcoma and the Need for Precise Radiotherapy
  2. Varian EDGE Radiosurgery System: High-Precision, Non-Invasive Tumor Ablation
  3. How CancerFax Helps

Understanding Sarcoma and the Need for Precise Radiotherapy

Precise radiotherapy is the most important method of cancer treatment. Precise radiotherapy techniques represented by rapid front knife, proton knife, heavy ion, etc., can perform radical surgery and auxiliary treatment for cancer patients. To understand the progress of radiotherapy, sarcoma is more common in young people, is a malignant tumor derived from mesenchymal tissue (including connective tissue and muscle). Sarcomas are highly malignant and develop rapidly! Common sarcomas include osteosarcoma, leiomyoma, lymphosarcoma, synovial sarcoma, etc.

The preferred method of sarcoma is surgery. In order to seek a radical cure, domestic doctors usually require patients to have their limbs amputated. , Most patients are difficult to treat. Sarcoma is not sensitive to chemotherapy. Ordinary radiotherapy is also difficult to kill tumors, and leiomyoma, lymphosarcoma, and synovial sarcoma are prone to metastasis through the blood. Therefore, the treatment of sarcoma must be as soon as possible and as soon as possible.

Varian EDGE Radiosurgery System: High-Precision, Non-Invasive Tumor Ablation

The EDGE Radiosurgery system (EDGE radiosurgery tumor treatment system) was developed by the American Varian company and was approved by the US FDA on January 23, 2013. The EDGE blade is by far the most effective non-invasive tumor removal technology, using the unique FDA’s Calypso® GPS for the Body® system and surface beam monitoring system approved on July 21, 2014 with high-frequency real-time dynamics of up to 10 ms Monitor and lock the tumor “escape” during the treatment process, combined with the new generation IGRT and other image guidance technology, using the unique high-intensity HD-MLC collimator up to 2400MU / min to remove tumor tissue with sub-millimeter accuracy with almost no residue .

The unique characteristics of EDGE speed knife, high-intensity radiation of up to 2400MU / min, can quickly break the DNA of tumor cells, and eventually cause the tumor cells to die, and the tumor is absorbed or scarred. The accuracy of the EDGE knife is as high as 0.1mm.

How CancerFax Helps

CancerFax is a specialist cancer access and patient-navigation platform. We help patients and families understand their options, organise medical records, coordinate hospital communication, and support cross-border treatment planning where appropriate.

description
Medical Record Review

We help collect and organise reports, scans, pathology, biomarker results, and treatment history for structured case review.

verified_user
Eligibility Coordination

We communicate with hospitals or trial teams to assess whether a case may be suitable for further screening.

hub
Hospital Communication

We support appointment coordination, document submission, translation, and direct communication with international departments.

flight
Travel & Admission Support

For international patients, we help with practical coordination — travel planning, hospital admission guidance, and local support.

explore
Treatment & Trial Navigation

If this option is not suitable, we help explore other relevant treatments, clinical trials, or advanced care pathways.

support_agent
End-to-end Coordination

From inquiry through to follow-up, our coordinators provide a single point of contact for the family.

CancerFax does not guarantee treatment access, eligibility, or clinical outcome. Our role is to help patients access accurate information, structured review, and appropriate specialist pathways.

Sai Sree

About Sai Sree

✓ Reviewed for medical accuracy by the CancerFax review panel.

Medical Disclaimer

This article is for educational purposes only and should not replace medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a qualified oncology specialist. Every patient's case is different. Treatment decisions should always be made after a review of complete medical records by the treating medical team.

Treatment availability, eligibility, timelines, and access can change. Any clinical trial participation depends on detailed review and approval by the trial hospital or investigator.