As ARCHERY passes 6 months open to recruitment here is our first recruitment update! We have consented 161 participants with 5 withdrawals, reaching a total of 156 enrolled participants. This means we have reached 15.75% of our goal of 990. See below for a breakdown of our progress so far by site. For more regular updates on recruitment figures see our Current Recruitment Fi ...
News and presentations
NEWS | Publications discussing ARCHERY in 2024
The first half of 2024 has seen ARCHERY discussed or referenced in several publications! Find out more about these papers and links to where you can read them below. All publications related to ARCHERY are listed on our Publications page. January 2024: Clinical research for global needs of radiation oncology - Journal of the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology "Res ...
NEWS | The ARCHERY study recruits its first participant
The ARCHERY study recruited its first participant on 27 December 2023. The participant was recruited into the cervical cancer cohort at the University Malaya Medical Centre in Malaysia, the first site to be open to recruitment into the study. ARCHERY is a prospective observational study using artificial intelligence (AI) to improve radiotherapy planning to treat cancer. The ...
NEWS | The ARCHERY Study Opens It's First Site!
The University Malaya Medical Centre in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia becomes the first recruiting site to be opened in the ARCHERY study. Congratulations and thank you to Dr Malik and her team! Visit our “Recruiting sites” page to find out more about the ARCHERY study sites. To find out more about the sites that are currently open to recruitment, visit our “Open Sites” page. ...
PAPER | ARCHERY: a prospective observational study of artificial intelligence-based radiotherapy treatment planning for cervical, head and neck and prostate cancer – study protocol
Read the study protocol for the ARCHERY study in the BMJ Open Journal. "Fifty per cent of patients with cancer require radiotherapy during their disease course, however, only 10%–40% of patients in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) have access to it. A shortfall in specialised workforce has been identified as the most significant barrier to expanding radiotherap ...