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A Method For Predicting Dose Changes For Hn Treatment Using Surface Imaging, Sarah E. Holler
A Method For Predicting Dose Changes For Hn Treatment Using Surface Imaging, Sarah E. Holler
Theses and Dissertations
Head and neck cancer is commonly treated with a six- to seven-week course of radiotherapy, during which a patient’s anatomy may change substantially, due to target reduction or weight loss. Anatomical changes lead to reduction in treatment quality due to decreased setup reproducibility and altered dose deposition compared to the original plan. Few clinics have developed a standard method for triggering resimulation and replan due to anatomic changes. This work investigates a new method for determining when to resimulate and replan HNC patients by utilizing their topographic anatomical changes to predict differences in planned versus delivered dose distributions. The first …
Exosomal Mirnas As Biomarkers For Radiation Toxicity In Breast Cancer Patients, Mina V. Mcginn
Exosomal Mirnas As Biomarkers For Radiation Toxicity In Breast Cancer Patients, Mina V. Mcginn
Theses and Dissertations
Radiotherapy (RT) is a standard treatment for most breast cancer patients (BCPs), but is often accompanied by acute and late toxic effects in normal tissue. Exosomes are nano vesicles about 30-150nm in size that originate from the endosomal network and are found in most body fluids. Exosomes are a fundamental driver of intercellular communication by transferring proteins, lipids and microRNA (miRNA). Exosomal miRNA (Exo-miRNA) signatures may serve as non-invasive prediction biomarkers of post-radiation toxicities of BCPs. Eighty six BCPs treated in the Radiation Oncology Department were enrolled in an IRB approved study. BCPs were evaluated weekly during RT and at …
Radiotherapy In The Management Of Oral Cancer, Ralph M. Scott
Radiotherapy In The Management Of Oral Cancer, Ralph M. Scott
MCV/Q, Medical College of Virginia Quarterly
Radiotherapy and surgery, used singly or in combination, are the only curative approaches to the treatment of mouth cancer. Preoperative irradiation of advanced cancer is now being evaluated, and shows much promise. This may permit operation in previously inoperable cases, make less extensive operative procedures feasible in others, and possibly decrease the incidence of cancer spread during surgery. However, while surgery often can salvage radiation failures, the reverse is seldom true.