(Health & Fitness PROFILE Dr. Forman — a radiation oncologist Cancer Fighter TomoTherapy Hi-Art provider explains safety behind this advanced technology. Ilene Wolff Special to the Jewish News A lthough Dr. Jeffrey Forman makes his living treating prostate cancer, his personal mission is to help men understand that research has shown an effective way to prevent it. He cites a National Cancer Institute- sponsored study of 19,000 men that overwhelmingly found almost one-third of the participants were cancer-free after taking the drug finasteride. Forman will hold a series of seminars on the topic in 2010. "As a doctor, it's important to me to try to keep people healthy:' said the radiation oncologist. "But if the diagnosis is cancer, there are new treatments available to precisely target tumors without hurting healthy tissue." 32 March 4 • 2010 One advanced tool is TomoTherapy Hi-Art, a treatment so precise that medical teams can treat a lung's lining and not the lung itself. Forman, direc- tor of the Michigan Region for 21st Century Oncology, is the only provider of TomoTherapy in Oakland County, at loca- tions in Pontiac and Clarkston. TomoTherapy, he says, is not only sophisticated technology that provides effective doses of radiation, it is also safer. That's because medical profession- als know exactly where a tumor is from a daily CT scan before treatment. As an added feature, 21st Century now uses GPS to track the tumor's location, the latest technology to make radiation treat- ment safer. "While radiation is an effective cancer treatment, it sometimes carries with it undesirable side effects:' Forman said. "TomoTherapy helps to reduce or elimi- nate those side effects by restricting the radiation to the tumor and avoiding nearby tissue and vital organs. So our patients get good cancer control and can carry on with their lives as quickly as possible:' Cancers that can be treated with TomoTherapy include lung, breast, pros- tate, pancreas and head and neck tumors. Tumors that were treated with external- beam radiation can also be treated with TomoTherapy. Forman was director of the Karmanos Cancer Institute's Lawrence and Idell Weisberg Cancer Center in Farmington Hills before moving to 21st Century Oncology in 2007. He has addressed audiences at medical conferences world- wide and helped write official guidelines for doctors to follow in treating prostate cancer. Throughout his career, Forman has secured millions of dollars in fund- ing for cancer research. He's leading the effort to establish a cancer center and program at the HaEmek Medical Center in Afula, Israel after a recent visit while on vacation. Forman feels a special affinity for the hospital because one of his best friends was born there and a friend's daughter underwent an emergency appendectomy there while on vacation. This New York native came to Michigan in 1988 after completing his intern- ship, residency and fellowship at Johns Hopkins Hospital. He previously chaired the Department of Radiation Oncology at Wayne State University and remains on its faculty. He's also been on the faculty of the University of Michigan, Memorial Sloan- Kettering Cancer Center (New York, N.Y.) and Cornell University Medical College (Ithaca, N.Y.) Forman has received the Jewish National Foundation Tree of Life Award and the Israeli Cancer Association Award. He and his wife, Miriam, live in Bloomfield Hills. The Formans have three children: Tara, who is in graduate school pursuing a social work degree at Columbia University; Adam, a Wayne State University School of Medicine student who graduates this year and intends to be a radiation oncologist like his father; and Joshua, who attends Duke University, majoring in political science. ❑ Call (248) 338-0300 to learn more about Dr. Forman's upcoming seminars on pros- tate cancer. Ilene Wolff writes for Tschetter & Associates, a Clarkston-based public relations firm. Name: Jeffrey Forman, M.D., FACR Residence: Bloomfield Hills Family: Wife, Miriam; three children: Adam, 26, Tara, 23 and Joshua, 20 Synagogue: Temple Israel, West Bloomfield Community Involvement: Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, AIPAC Education: New York University School of Medicine Postgraduate: Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore Next Vacation: Cambodia and Vietnam