Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Publication Year
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 28 of 28
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Real World Clinical Experience Using Daily Intelligence-Assisted Online Adaptive Radiotherapy For Head And Neck Cancer, Philip Blumenfeld, Eduard Arbit, Robert Den, Ayman Salhab, Tal Falick Michaeli, Marc Wygoda, Yair Hillman, Raphael Pfeffer, Marcel Fang, Yael Misrati, Noam Weizman, Jon Feldman, Aron Popovtzer
Real World Clinical Experience Using Daily Intelligence-Assisted Online Adaptive Radiotherapy For Head And Neck Cancer, Philip Blumenfeld, Eduard Arbit, Robert Den, Ayman Salhab, Tal Falick Michaeli, Marc Wygoda, Yair Hillman, Raphael Pfeffer, Marcel Fang, Yael Misrati, Noam Weizman, Jon Feldman, Aron Popovtzer
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
No abstract provided.
Stereotactic Mr-Guided On-Table Adaptive Radiation Therapy (Smart) For Borderline Resectable And Locally Advanced Pancreatic Cancer: A Multi-Center, Open-Label Phase 2 Study, Michael Chuong, Percy Lee, Daniel Low, Joshua Kim, Kathryn Mittauer, Michael Bassetti, Carri Glide-Hurst, Ann Raldow, Yingli Yang, Lorraine Portelance, Kyle Padgett, Bassem Zaki, Rongxiao Zhang, Hyun Kim, Lauren Henke, Alex Price, Joseph Mancias, Christopher Williams, John Ng, Ryan Pennell, M Raphael Pfeffer, Daphne Levin, Adam Mueller, Karen Mooney, Patrick Kelly, Amish Shah, Luca Boldrini, Lorenzo Placidi, Martin Fuss, Parag Jitendra Parikh
Stereotactic Mr-Guided On-Table Adaptive Radiation Therapy (Smart) For Borderline Resectable And Locally Advanced Pancreatic Cancer: A Multi-Center, Open-Label Phase 2 Study, Michael Chuong, Percy Lee, Daniel Low, Joshua Kim, Kathryn Mittauer, Michael Bassetti, Carri Glide-Hurst, Ann Raldow, Yingli Yang, Lorraine Portelance, Kyle Padgett, Bassem Zaki, Rongxiao Zhang, Hyun Kim, Lauren Henke, Alex Price, Joseph Mancias, Christopher Williams, John Ng, Ryan Pennell, M Raphael Pfeffer, Daphne Levin, Adam Mueller, Karen Mooney, Patrick Kelly, Amish Shah, Luca Boldrini, Lorenzo Placidi, Martin Fuss, Parag Jitendra Parikh
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Radiation dose escalation may improve local control (LC) and overall survival (OS) in select pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) patients. We prospectively evaluated the safety and efficacy of ablative stereotactic magnetic resonance (MR)-guided adaptive radiation therapy (SMART) for borderline resectable (BRPC) and locally advanced pancreas cancer (LAPC). The primary endpoint of acute grade ≥ 3 gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity definitely related to SMART was previously published with median follow-up (FU) 8.8 months from SMART. We now present more mature outcomes including OS and late toxicity.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This prospective, multi-center, single-arm open-label phase 2 trial (NCT03621644) enrolled 136 …
Efficacy Of Scalp-Sparing Volumetric-Modulated Arc Therapy Approach In Reducing Scalp Radiation Dose For Patients With Glioblastoma: A Cross-Sectional Study, Muneeb Khan Niazi, Olga Russial, Louis Cappelli, Ryan Miller, Yingxuan Chen, Yelena Vakhnenko, Haisong Lui, Wenyin Shi
Efficacy Of Scalp-Sparing Volumetric-Modulated Arc Therapy Approach In Reducing Scalp Radiation Dose For Patients With Glioblastoma: A Cross-Sectional Study, Muneeb Khan Niazi, Olga Russial, Louis Cappelli, Ryan Miller, Yingxuan Chen, Yelena Vakhnenko, Haisong Lui, Wenyin Shi
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
BACKGROUND: Radiation is integral to the treatment of glioblastoma (GBM). However, radiation-induced scalp toxicity can negatively impact patients' quality of life. Volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) optimizes the dose to organs at risk (OARs). We hypothesize that a scalp-sparing VMAT (SSV) approach can significantly reduce undesirable doses to the scalp without compromising the target dose.
METHODS: This is a retrospective cross-sectional study of GBM patients who originally received radiation with non-SSV. We contoured the scalp as a 5 mm rind-like structure beneath the skin above the level of the foramen magnum. We replanned our patients using SSV techniques. We compared …
Editorial: Targeting Dna Damage Response To Enhance Antitumor Innate Immunity In Radiotherapy, Victoria Valvo, Emanuele Vitale, Marco Tigano, Rachel Evans, Meredith A. Morgan, Qiang Zhang
Editorial: Targeting Dna Damage Response To Enhance Antitumor Innate Immunity In Radiotherapy, Victoria Valvo, Emanuele Vitale, Marco Tigano, Rachel Evans, Meredith A. Morgan, Qiang Zhang
Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers
No abstract provided.
Improved Tumor Control Following Radiosensitization With Ultrasound-Sensitive Oxygen Microbubbles And Tumor Mitochondrial Respiration Inhibitors In A Preclinical Model Of Head And Neck Cancer, Quezia Lacerda, Hebah Falatah, Ji-Bin Liu, Corinne Wessner, Brian Oeffinger, Ankit K. Rochani, Dennis B. Leeper, Flemming Forsberg, Joseph M. Curry, Gagan Kaushal, Scott W Keith, Patrick O'Kane, Margaret A Wheatley, John R. Eisenbrey
Improved Tumor Control Following Radiosensitization With Ultrasound-Sensitive Oxygen Microbubbles And Tumor Mitochondrial Respiration Inhibitors In A Preclinical Model Of Head And Neck Cancer, Quezia Lacerda, Hebah Falatah, Ji-Bin Liu, Corinne Wessner, Brian Oeffinger, Ankit K. Rochani, Dennis B. Leeper, Flemming Forsberg, Joseph M. Curry, Gagan Kaushal, Scott W Keith, Patrick O'Kane, Margaret A Wheatley, John R. Eisenbrey
Department of Radiology Faculty Papers
Tumor hypoxia (oxygen deficiency) is a major contributor to radiotherapy resistance. Ultrasound-sensitive microbubbles containing oxygen have been explored as a mechanism for overcoming tumor hypoxia locally prior to radiotherapy. Previously, our group demonstrated the ability to encapsulate and deliver a pharmacological inhibitor of tumor mitochondrial respiration (lonidamine (LND)), which resulted in ultrasound-sensitive microbubbles loaded with O2 and LND providing prolonged oxygenation relative to oxygenated microbubbles alone. This follow-up study aimed to evaluate the therapeutic response to radiation following the administration of oxygen microbubbles combined with tumor mitochondrial respiration inhibitors in a head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) tumor model. …
High Local Control And Low Ocular Toxicity Using Ultra-Low-Dose “Boom-Boom” Radiotherapy For Indolent Orbital Lymphoma, Sanjna Shelukar, Christian Fernandez, Zeynep Bas, Lydia Komarnicky, Sara E. Lally, Carol L Shields, Adam Binder, Pierluigi Porcu, Onder Alpdogan, Ubaldo Martinez-Outschoorn, Wenyin Shi
High Local Control And Low Ocular Toxicity Using Ultra-Low-Dose “Boom-Boom” Radiotherapy For Indolent Orbital Lymphoma, Sanjna Shelukar, Christian Fernandez, Zeynep Bas, Lydia Komarnicky, Sara E. Lally, Carol L Shields, Adam Binder, Pierluigi Porcu, Onder Alpdogan, Ubaldo Martinez-Outschoorn, Wenyin Shi
Department of Medical Oncology Faculty Papers
Background: The first line definitive treatment for early-stage indolent B-cell lymphoma is radiation therapy (RT). Due to the sensitivity of orbital structures to radiation, ultra-low-dose RT (4 Gy in 2 fractions, "boom-boom") has and been utilized as an attractive option for orbital lymphoma. In this retrospective study, we evaluated the outcome and toxicity of "boom-boom" RT for indolent orbital lymphoma with an emphasis on ophthalmologic toxicity.
Methods: This is a retrospective case series with 17 patients with orbital lymphoma who received boom-boom RT at a single tertiary referral center between January 2017 and June 2022. Medical records, imaging and radiation …
Development Of A Financial Toxicity Screening Tool For Radiation Oncology: A Secondary Analysis Of A Pilot Prospective Patient-Reported Outcomes Study, Rahul N Prasad, Tejash Patel, Scott W Keith, Harriet Eldredge-Hindy, Scot A Fisher, Joshua D Palmer
Development Of A Financial Toxicity Screening Tool For Radiation Oncology: A Secondary Analysis Of A Pilot Prospective Patient-Reported Outcomes Study, Rahul N Prasad, Tejash Patel, Scott W Keith, Harriet Eldredge-Hindy, Scot A Fisher, Joshua D Palmer
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
Purpose: Financial toxicity is highly prevalent in oncology. Early identification of at-risk patients is essential because financial toxicity is associated with inferior outcomes. Validated general oncology screening tools are cumbersome and not specific to challenges related to radiation therapy, such as daily treatments. In the population of radiation oncology patients, no standardized, validated, rapid screening tool exists. We sought to develop a rapid, no-cost, and reliable financial-toxicity screening tool for clinical radiation oncology.
Methods and materials: We retrospectively analyzed data from a prospective survey study conducted at a large referral center with a heterogeneous population. Before treatment, a 25-item modified …
Targeting Accuracy Considerations For Simultaneous Tumor Treating Fields Antimitotic Therapy During Robotic Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy., Sharmi Biswas, Irina Kapitanova, Sabrina Divekar, Jimm Grimm, Ian J Butterwick, Daniel Garren, Lawrence R Kleinberg, Kristin J Redmond, Michel Lacroix, Anand Mahadevan, Kenneth M Forster
Targeting Accuracy Considerations For Simultaneous Tumor Treating Fields Antimitotic Therapy During Robotic Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy., Sharmi Biswas, Irina Kapitanova, Sabrina Divekar, Jimm Grimm, Ian J Butterwick, Daniel Garren, Lawrence R Kleinberg, Kristin J Redmond, Michel Lacroix, Anand Mahadevan, Kenneth M Forster
College of Health Professions Faculty Papers
Purpose: Tumor treating fields (TTFields) is a novel antimitotic treatment that was first proven effective for glioblastoma multiforme, now with trials for several extracranial indications underway. Several studies focused on concurrent TTFields therapy with radiation in the same time period, but were not given simultaneously. This study evaluates the targeting accuracy of simultaneous radiation therapy while TTFields arrays are in place and powered on, ensuring that radiation does not interfere with TTFields and TTFields does not interfere with radiation. This is one of several options to enable TTFields to begin several weeks sooner, and opens potential for synergistic effects of …
Target Treatment With Stereotactic Radiation For Recurrent Gliomas, Ayesha Ali, Victor E. Chen, Claire Zurlo, James M Taylor, Christian Fernandez, Wenyin Shi
Target Treatment With Stereotactic Radiation For Recurrent Gliomas, Ayesha Ali, Victor E. Chen, Claire Zurlo, James M Taylor, Christian Fernandez, Wenyin Shi
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
High grade gliomas (HGG) have a propensity to recur locally and have poor outcomes. As such, safe and effective treatment is paramount. Target treatment with stereotactic radiation allows safe re-irradiation through minimizing normal brain tissue radiation due to its high precision. In this review, we evaluated the clinical experiences using SRS and FSRT for re-irradiation in HGG. We report the radiobiological advantages and disadvantages of both modalities as well as the safety and efficacy published in current literature.
A Systematic Review Of Home-Based Dietary Interventions During Radiation Therapy For Cancer., Taylor H Allenby, Megan L Crenshaw, Katlynn Mathis, Colin E Champ, Nicole L Simone, Kathryn H Schmitz, Leila T Tchelebi, Nicholas G Zaorsky
A Systematic Review Of Home-Based Dietary Interventions During Radiation Therapy For Cancer., Taylor H Allenby, Megan L Crenshaw, Katlynn Mathis, Colin E Champ, Nicole L Simone, Kathryn H Schmitz, Leila T Tchelebi, Nicholas G Zaorsky
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
Purpose: Our objectives are to assess (1) the acceptability and feasibility of dietary interventions for patients undergoing radiation therapy (RT), and (2) the impact of dietary interventions on patient reported outcomes, toxicities, and survival.
Methods: A PICOS/PRISMA/MOOSE selection protocol was used to include articles that evaluate adding dietary interventions to patients receiving RT. Acceptability was defined as (# accepting/# approached); feasibility was (# completing/# approached). Patient-reported outcomes were reported based on questionnaires used in each study and survival was measured from the date of diagnosis until death in each study. Level of evidence was assessed with Center for Evidence-Based Medicine …
Spatially Fractionated Radiation Therapy: History, Present And The Future, Weisi Yan, Mohammad K. Khan, Xiaodong Wu, Charles B. Simone Ii, Jiajin Fan, Eric Gressen, Xin Zhang, Charles L. Limoli, Houda Bahig, Slavisa Tubin, Waleed F. Mourad
Spatially Fractionated Radiation Therapy: History, Present And The Future, Weisi Yan, Mohammad K. Khan, Xiaodong Wu, Charles B. Simone Ii, Jiajin Fan, Eric Gressen, Xin Zhang, Charles L. Limoli, Houda Bahig, Slavisa Tubin, Waleed F. Mourad
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
No abstract provided.
Combined Modality Therapies For High-Risk Prostate Cancer: Narrative Review Of Current Understanding And New Directions., Benjamin A. Greenberger, Victor E. Chen, Robert B. Den
Combined Modality Therapies For High-Risk Prostate Cancer: Narrative Review Of Current Understanding And New Directions., Benjamin A. Greenberger, Victor E. Chen, Robert B. Den
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
Despite the many prospective randomized trials that have been available in the past decade regarding the optimization of radiation, hormonal, and surgical therapies for high-risk prostate cancer (PCa), many questions remain. There is currently a lack of level I evidence regarding the relative efficacy of radical prostatectomy (RP) followed by adjuvant radiation compared to radiation therapy (RT) combined with androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) for high-risk PCa. Current retrospective series have also described an improvement in biochemical outcomes and PCa-specific mortality through the use of augmented radiation strategies incorporating brachytherapy. The relative efficacy of modern augmented RT compared to RP is …
Clinical Outcome Assessments Toolbox For Radiopharmaceuticals., Charles A Kunos, Jacek Capala, Adam P Dicker, Benjamin Movsas, Susan Percy Ivy, Lori M Minasian
Clinical Outcome Assessments Toolbox For Radiopharmaceuticals., Charles A Kunos, Jacek Capala, Adam P Dicker, Benjamin Movsas, Susan Percy Ivy, Lori M Minasian
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
For nearly 40 years, the U.S. National Cancer Institute (NCI) has funded health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL) and symptom management in oncology clinical trials as a method for including a cancer patient's experience during and after treatment. The NCI's planned scope for HRQOL, symptom and patient-reported outcomes management research is explained as it pertains to radiopharmaceutical clinical development. An effort already underway to support protocol authoring via an NCI Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program (CTEP) Centralized Protocol Writing Service (CPWS) is described as this service aids incorporation of HRQOL, symptom and patient-reported outcomes management research into sponsored protocols.
Comparative Effectiveness Of Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy To 3-Dimensional Conformal Radiation In Locally Advanced Lung Cancer: Pathological And Clinical Outcomes., Sarit Appel, Jair Bar, Alon Ben-Nun, Marina Perelman, Dror Alezra, Damien Urban, Maoz Ben-Ayun, Nir Honig, Efrat Ofek, Tamar Katzman, Amir Onn, Sumit Chatterji, Sergey Dubinski, Lev Tsvang, Shira Felder, Judith Kraitman, Ory Haisraely, Tatiana Rabin Alezra, Sivan Lieberman, Edith M. Marom, Nir Golan, David Simansky, Zvi Symon, Yaacov Richard Lawrence
Comparative Effectiveness Of Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy To 3-Dimensional Conformal Radiation In Locally Advanced Lung Cancer: Pathological And Clinical Outcomes., Sarit Appel, Jair Bar, Alon Ben-Nun, Marina Perelman, Dror Alezra, Damien Urban, Maoz Ben-Ayun, Nir Honig, Efrat Ofek, Tamar Katzman, Amir Onn, Sumit Chatterji, Sergey Dubinski, Lev Tsvang, Shira Felder, Judith Kraitman, Ory Haisraely, Tatiana Rabin Alezra, Sivan Lieberman, Edith M. Marom, Nir Golan, David Simansky, Zvi Symon, Yaacov Richard Lawrence
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
OBJECTIVE: Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) has better normal-tissue sparing compared with 3-dimensional conformal radiation (3DCRT). We sought to assess the impact of radiation technique on pathological and clinical outcomes in locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LANSCLC) treated with a trimodality strategy.
METHODS: Retrospective review of LANSCLC patients treated from August 2012 to August 2018 at Sheba Medical Center, Israel. The trimodality strategy consisted of concomitant chemoradiation to 60 Gray (Gy) followed by completion surgery. The planning target volume (PTV) was defined by co-registered PET/CT. Here we compare the pathological regression, surgical margin status, local control rates (LC), disease free (DFS) …
Evaluation Of Hybrid Arc And Volumetric-Modulated Arc Therapy Treatment Plans For Fractionated Stereotactic Intracranial Radiotherapy., Jun Li, David To, Vickie Gunn, Wenyin Shi, Yan Yu, Haisong Lui
Evaluation Of Hybrid Arc And Volumetric-Modulated Arc Therapy Treatment Plans For Fractionated Stereotactic Intracranial Radiotherapy., Jun Li, David To, Vickie Gunn, Wenyin Shi, Yan Yu, Haisong Lui
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
PURPOSE: The study was aimed to compare hybrid arc and volumetric-modulated arc therapy treatment plans for fractionated stereotactic radiotherapy of brain tumors.
METHODS: Treatment plans of 22 patients were studied. Hybrid arc and volumetric-modulated arc therapy plans were generated using Brainlab iPlanDose and Varian Eclipse treatment planning systems, respectively, with 6 MV photon beams on a Varian TrueBeam STx linear accelerator (Palo Alto, CA). Prescription dose was 54 Gy. The fractionation was 1.8 Gy per fraction and 30 fractions in total, or 2 Gy per fraction and 27 fractions in total. Planning target volume ranged from 2.4 to 28.6 cm …
Development And Validation Of A 28-Gene Hypoxia-Related Prognostic Signature For Localized Prostate Cancer., Lingjian Yang, Darren Roberts, Mandeep Takhar, Nicholas Erho, Becky A.S. Bibby, Niluja Thiruthaneeswaran, Vinayak Bhandari, Wei-Chen Cheng, Syed Haider, Amy M.B. Mccorry, Darragh Mcart, Suneil Jain, Mohammed Alshalalfa, Ashley Ross, Edward Schaffer, Robert Den, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Eric Klein, Peter J. Hoskin, Stephen J. Freedland, Alastair D. Lamb, David E. Neal, Francesca M. Buffa, Robert G. Bristow, Paul C. Boutros, Elai Davicioni, Ananya Choudhury, Catharine M.L. West
Development And Validation Of A 28-Gene Hypoxia-Related Prognostic Signature For Localized Prostate Cancer., Lingjian Yang, Darren Roberts, Mandeep Takhar, Nicholas Erho, Becky A.S. Bibby, Niluja Thiruthaneeswaran, Vinayak Bhandari, Wei-Chen Cheng, Syed Haider, Amy M.B. Mccorry, Darragh Mcart, Suneil Jain, Mohammed Alshalalfa, Ashley Ross, Edward Schaffer, Robert Den, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Eric Klein, Peter J. Hoskin, Stephen J. Freedland, Alastair D. Lamb, David E. Neal, Francesca M. Buffa, Robert G. Bristow, Paul C. Boutros, Elai Davicioni, Ananya Choudhury, Catharine M.L. West
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
BACKGROUND: Hypoxia is associated with a poor prognosis in prostate cancer. This work aimed to derive and validate a hypoxia-related mRNA signature for localized prostate cancer.
METHOD: Hypoxia genes were identified in vitro via RNA-sequencing and combined with in vivo gene co-expression analysis to generate a signature. The signature was independently validated in eleven prostate cancer cohorts and a bladder cancer phase III randomized trial of radiotherapy alone or with carbogen and nicotinamide (CON).
RESULTS: A 28-gene signature was derived. Patients with high signature scores had poorer biochemical recurrence free survivals in six of eight independent cohorts of prostatectomy-treated patients …
Analysis Of Clinical Data To Determine The Minimum Number Of Sensors Required For Adequate Skin Temperature Monitoring Of Superficial Hyperthermia Treatments., Akke Bakker, Rebecca Holman, Dario B. Rodrigues, Hana Dobšíček Trefná, Paul R. Stauffer, Geertjan Van Tienhoven, Coen R.N. Rasch, Hans Crezee
Analysis Of Clinical Data To Determine The Minimum Number Of Sensors Required For Adequate Skin Temperature Monitoring Of Superficial Hyperthermia Treatments., Akke Bakker, Rebecca Holman, Dario B. Rodrigues, Hana Dobšíček Trefná, Paul R. Stauffer, Geertjan Van Tienhoven, Coen R.N. Rasch, Hans Crezee
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
PURPOSE: Tumor response and treatment toxicity are related to minimum and maximum tissue temperatures during hyperthermia, respectively. Using a large set of clinical data, we analyzed the number of sensors required to adequately monitor skin temperature during superficial hyperthermia treatment of breast cancer patients.
METHODS: Hyperthermia treatments monitored with >60 stationary temperature sensors were selected from a database of patients with recurrent breast cancer treated with re-irradiation (23 × 2 Gy) and hyperthermia using single 434 MHz applicators (effective field size 351-396 cm2). Reduced temperature monitoring schemes involved randomly selected subsets of stationary skin sensors, and another subset …
Nrg Oncology-Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Study 1014: 1-Year Toxicity Report From A Phase 2 Study Of Repeat Breast-Preserving Surgery And 3-Dimensional Conformal Partial-Breast Reirradiation For In-Breast Recurrence., Douglas W. Arthur, Kathryn A. Winter, Henry M. Kuerer, Bruce G. Haffty, Laurie W. Cuttino, Dorin A. Todor, Nicole L. Simone, Shelly B. Hayes, Wendy A. Woodward, Beryl Mccormick, Randi J. Cohen, Walter M. Sahijdak, Daniel J. Canaday, Doris R. Brown, Adam D. Currey, Christine M. Fisher, Reshma Jagsi, Julia White
Nrg Oncology-Radiation Therapy Oncology Group Study 1014: 1-Year Toxicity Report From A Phase 2 Study Of Repeat Breast-Preserving Surgery And 3-Dimensional Conformal Partial-Breast Reirradiation For In-Breast Recurrence., Douglas W. Arthur, Kathryn A. Winter, Henry M. Kuerer, Bruce G. Haffty, Laurie W. Cuttino, Dorin A. Todor, Nicole L. Simone, Shelly B. Hayes, Wendy A. Woodward, Beryl Mccormick, Randi J. Cohen, Walter M. Sahijdak, Daniel J. Canaday, Doris R. Brown, Adam D. Currey, Christine M. Fisher, Reshma Jagsi, Julia White
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
PURPOSE: To determine the associated toxicity, tolerance, and safety of partial-breast reirradiation.
METHODS AND MATERIALS: Eligibility criteria included in-breast recurrence occurring >1 year after whole-breast irradiation, <3 >cm, unifocal, and resected with negative margins. Partial-breast reirradiation was targeted to the surgical cavity plus 1.5 cm; a prescription dose of 45 Gy in 1.5 Gy twice daily for 30 treatments was used. The primary objective was to evaluate the rate of grade ≥3 treatment-related skin, fibrosis, and/or breast pain adverse events (AEs), occurring ≤1 year from re-treatment completion. A rate of ≥13% for these AEs in a cohort of 55 patients was …3>
Adjuvant Radiation Therapy, Androgen Deprivation, And Docetaxel For High-Risk Prostate Cancer Postprostatectomy: Results Of Nrg Oncology/Rtog Study 0621., Mark D. Hurwitz, Jonathan Harris, Oliver Sartor, Ying Xiao, Bobby Shayegan, Paul W. Sperduto, Kasra R. Badiozamani, Colleen A.F. Lawton, Eric M. Horwitz, Jeff M. Michalski, Kevin Roof, David C. Beyer, Qiang Zhang, Howard M. Sandler
Adjuvant Radiation Therapy, Androgen Deprivation, And Docetaxel For High-Risk Prostate Cancer Postprostatectomy: Results Of Nrg Oncology/Rtog Study 0621., Mark D. Hurwitz, Jonathan Harris, Oliver Sartor, Ying Xiao, Bobby Shayegan, Paul W. Sperduto, Kasra R. Badiozamani, Colleen A.F. Lawton, Eric M. Horwitz, Jeff M. Michalski, Kevin Roof, David C. Beyer, Qiang Zhang, Howard M. Sandler
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
BACKGROUND: Phase 3 trials have demonstrated a benefit from adjuvant radiation therapy (ART) for men who have adverse factors at radical prostatectomy (RP). However, some patients have a high risk of progression despite ART. The role of systemic therapy with ART in this high-risk group remains to be defined.
METHODS: Patients who had either a post-RP prostate-specific antigen (PSA) nadir > 0.2 ng/mL and a Gleason score ≥7 or a PSA nadir ≤0.2 ng/mL, a Gleason score ≥8, and a pathologic tumor (pT) classification ≥ pT3 received 6 months of androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) plus radiotherapy and 6 cycles of docetaxel. The …
Vegf Trap In Combination With Radiotherapy Improves Tumor Control In U87 Glioblastoma, Phyllis Wachsberger, Phd, Randy Burd, Phd, Chris Cardi, Ms, Mathew L. Thakur, Constantine Daskalakis, Jocelyn Holash, Phd, George D. Yancopoulos, Phd, Adam Dicker Md, Phd
Vegf Trap In Combination With Radiotherapy Improves Tumor Control In U87 Glioblastoma, Phyllis Wachsberger, Phd, Randy Burd, Phd, Chris Cardi, Ms, Mathew L. Thakur, Constantine Daskalakis, Jocelyn Holash, Phd, George D. Yancopoulos, Phd, Adam Dicker Md, Phd
Bodine Journal
Purpose
To determine the effect of vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF Trap (Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, NY), a humanized soluble vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor protein, and radiation (RT) on tumor growth in U87 glioblastoma xenografts in nude mice.
Methods and Materials
U87 cell suspensions were implanted subcutaneously into hind limbs of nude mice. VEGF Trap (2.5–25 mg/kg) was administered every 3 days for 3 weeks alone or in combination with a single dose of 10 Gy or fractionated RT (3 x 5 Gy). In addition, three scheduling protocols for VEGF Trap plus fractionated RT were examined.
Results
Improved tumor …
Toxicity Of Radiotherapy In Patients With Collagen Vascular Disease, Alexander Lin, Md, Eyad Abu-Isa, Md, Kent A. Griffith, Mph, Ms, Edgar Ben-Josef, Md
Toxicity Of Radiotherapy In Patients With Collagen Vascular Disease, Alexander Lin, Md, Eyad Abu-Isa, Md, Kent A. Griffith, Mph, Ms, Edgar Ben-Josef, Md
Bodine Journal
Background
A diagnosis of collagen vascular disease (CVD) may predispose to radiotherapy (RT) toxicity. The objective of the current study was to identify factors that influence RT toxicity in the setting of CVD.
Methods
A total of 86 RT courses for 73 patients with CVD were delivered between 1985 and 2005. CVD subtypes include rheumatoid arthritis (RA; 33 patients), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE; 13 patients), scleroderma (9 patients), dermatomyositis/polymyositis (5 patients), ankylosing spondylitis (4 patients), polymyalgia rheumatica/temporal arteritis (4 patients), Wegener granulomatosis (3 patients), and mixed connective tissue disorders (MCTD)/other (2 patients). Each patient with CVD was matched to 1 …
Combination Of Vandetanib, Radiotherapy, And Irinotecan In The Lovo Human Colorectal Cancer Xenograft Model, Phyllis Wachsberger, Phd, Randy Burd, Phd, Anderson Ryan, Phd, Constantine Daskalakis, Phd, Adam Dicker Md, Phd
Combination Of Vandetanib, Radiotherapy, And Irinotecan In The Lovo Human Colorectal Cancer Xenograft Model, Phyllis Wachsberger, Phd, Randy Burd, Phd, Anderson Ryan, Phd, Constantine Daskalakis, Phd, Adam Dicker Md, Phd
Bodine Journal
Purpose:
The tumor growth kinetics of the human LoVo colorectal xenograft model was assessed in response to vandetanib, an orally available receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor, radiotherapy (RT), or irinotecan (CPT-11), as single therapies and in combination.
Methods and Materials:
LoVo cells were injected subcutaneously into the right hind limb (5x106 cells in 100μL phosphate-buffered saline) of athymic NCR NUM mice and tumors were grown to a volume of 200–300mm3 before treatment. Vandetanib was administered at 50 mg/kg daily orally for 14 days starting on Day 1. RT was given as three fractions (3x3 Gy) on Days 1, 2, and 3. …
Quantifying Unnecessary Normal Tissue Complication Risks Due To Suboptimal Planning: A Secondary Study Of Rtog 0126., Kevin L. Moore, Rachel Schmidt, Vitali Moiseenko, Lindsey A. Olsen, Jun Tan, Ying Xiao, James Galvin, Stephanie Pugh, Michael J Seider, Adam P. Dicker, Walter Bosch, Jeff Michalski, Sasa Mutic
Quantifying Unnecessary Normal Tissue Complication Risks Due To Suboptimal Planning: A Secondary Study Of Rtog 0126., Kevin L. Moore, Rachel Schmidt, Vitali Moiseenko, Lindsey A. Olsen, Jun Tan, Ying Xiao, James Galvin, Stephanie Pugh, Michael J Seider, Adam P. Dicker, Walter Bosch, Jeff Michalski, Sasa Mutic
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to quantify the frequency and clinical severity of quality deficiencies in intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) planning in the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 0126 protocol.
METHODS AND MATERIALS: A total of 219 IMRT patients from the high-dose arm (79.2 Gy) of RTOG 0126 were analyzed. To quantify plan quality, we used established knowledge-based methods for patient-specific dose-volume histogram (DVH) prediction of organs at risk and a Lyman-Kutcher-Burman (LKB) model for grade ≥2 rectal complications to convert DVHs into normal tissue complication probabilities (NTCPs). The LKB model was validated by fitting dose-response parameters relative …
On Voxel-By-Voxel Accumulated Dose For Prostate Radiation Therapy Using Deformable Image Registration., Jialu Yu, Nicholas Hardcastle, Kyoungkeun Jeong, Edward T. Bender, Mark A. Ritter, Wolfgang A. Tomé
On Voxel-By-Voxel Accumulated Dose For Prostate Radiation Therapy Using Deformable Image Registration., Jialu Yu, Nicholas Hardcastle, Kyoungkeun Jeong, Edward T. Bender, Mark A. Ritter, Wolfgang A. Tomé
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
Since delivered dose is rarely the same with planned, we calculated the delivered total dose to ten prostate radiotherapy patients treated with rectal balloons using deformable dose accumulation (DDA) and compared it with the planned dose. The patients were treated with TomoTherapy using two rectal balloon designs: five patients had the Radiadyne balloon (balloon A), and five patients had the EZ-EM balloon (balloon B). Prostate and rectal wall contours were outlined on each pre-treatment MVCT for all patients. Delivered fractional doses were calculated using the MVCT taken immediately prior to delivery. Dose grids were accumulated to the last MVCT using …
Hyperthermia, Radiation And Chemotherapy: The Role Of Heat In Multidisciplinary Cancer Care., Mark Hurwitz, Md, Paul R. Stauffer
Hyperthermia, Radiation And Chemotherapy: The Role Of Heat In Multidisciplinary Cancer Care., Mark Hurwitz, Md, Paul R. Stauffer
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
The compelling biologic basis for combining hyperthermia with modern cancer therapies including radiation and chemotherapy was first appreciated nearly half a century ago. Hyperthermia complements radiation as conditions contributing to radio-resistance generally enhance sensitivity to heat and sensitizing effects occur through increased perfusion/tumor oxygenation and alteration of cellular death pathways. Chemosensitization with hyperthermia is dependent on the particular mechanism of effect for each agent with synergistic effects noted for several commonly used agents. Clinically, randomized trials have demonstrated benefit including survival with the addition of hyperthermia to radiation or chemotherapy in treatment of a wide range of malignancies. Improvements in …
Early Toxicity Predicts Long-Term Survival In High-Grade Glioma., Y. R. Lawrence, M Wang, Adam Dicker, David W Andrews, Walter J Curran, J M Michalski, L Souhami, W-Ka Yung, M Mehta
Early Toxicity Predicts Long-Term Survival In High-Grade Glioma., Y. R. Lawrence, M Wang, Adam Dicker, David W Andrews, Walter J Curran, J M Michalski, L Souhami, W-Ka Yung, M Mehta
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
BACKGROUND: Patients with high-grade gliomas are treated with surgery followed by chemoradiation. The risk factors and implications of neurological side effects are not known.
METHODS: Acute and late ≥ grade 3 neurological toxicities (NTs) were analysed among 2761 patients from 14 RTOG trials accrued from 1983 to 2003. The association between acute and late toxicity was analysed using a stepwise logistic regression model. The association between the occurrence of acute NT and survival was analysed as an independent variable.
RESULTS: There were 2610 analysable patients (86% glioblastoma, 10% anaplastic astrocytoma). All received a systemic agent during radiation (83% chemotherapy, 17% …
Results Of A Phase I Trial Of Induction Cisplatin, Docetaxel, 5-Fu And Erlotinib Followed By Cisplatin, Bevacizumab And Erlotinib With Radiotherapy For Advanced Head And Neck Cancer, P. H. Ahn, M. Machtay, P. R. Anné, E. Wuthrick, W. M. Keane, D. Cognetti, A. P. Dicker, R. S. Axelrod
Results Of A Phase I Trial Of Induction Cisplatin, Docetaxel, 5-Fu And Erlotinib Followed By Cisplatin, Bevacizumab And Erlotinib With Radiotherapy For Advanced Head And Neck Cancer, P. H. Ahn, M. Machtay, P. R. Anné, E. Wuthrick, W. M. Keane, D. Cognetti, A. P. Dicker, R. S. Axelrod
Bodine Journal
Background: A phase I trial of induction cisplatin, docetaxel, 5-FU and erlotinib (TPF-E) followed by cisplatin, bevacizumab and erlotinib (PA-E) with radiotherapy (XRT) for advanced head and neck cancer (HNC) was conducted.
American Society for Therapeutic Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) 52nd Annual Meeting October 31 - November 4, San Diego, CA
Effect Of Cediranib, Temozolamide And Radiotherapy In U87 Gbm Wtegfr And Egfrviii-Expressing Xenografts, P. Wachsberger, R. Y, Lawrence, Y. Liu, B. Andersen, A. P. Dicker
Effect Of Cediranib, Temozolamide And Radiotherapy In U87 Gbm Wtegfr And Egfrviii-Expressing Xenografts, P. Wachsberger, R. Y, Lawrence, Y. Liu, B. Andersen, A. P. Dicker
Bodine Journal
Introduction: Glioblastomas (GBM) frequently overexpress the epidermal growth factor receptor (wtEGFR) or its mutant, EGFRvIII contributing to radioresistance. New treatment strategies for GBM include blockade of EGFR signaling and angiogenesis. Cediranib (CD) is a highly potent VEGFR-2 RTKI that inhibits all three VEGF receptors. This study investigated the radiosensitizing potential of CD in combination with temozolamide (TMZ) in U87 GBM xenografts expressing wtEGFR or EGFRvIII.
Radiation Research Society (RRS) 8th Annual Meeting September 25-29, Maui, HI