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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Managing Toxicities Associated With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors: Consensus Recommendations From The Society For Immunotherapy Of Cancer (Sitc) Toxicity Management Working Group., I. Puzanov, A. Diab, K. Abdallah, C. O. Bingham, C. Brogdon, R. Dadu, L. Hamad, S. Kim, M. E. Lacouture, N. R. Leboeuf, D. Lenihan, C. Onofrei, V. Shannon, R. Sharma, A. W. Silk, D. Skondra, M. E. Suarez-Almazor, Y. Wang, K. Wiley, H. L. Kaufman, M. S. Ernstoff, J. Anderson, K. Lehman, D. Reshef, A. Saylors, M. Turner, I. Waxman, D. Arrindell, S. Andrews, J. Ballesteros, J. Boyer, I. Cotarla, M. Dawson, T. Goswami, V. Hayreh, W. Holmes, Z. Rasheed, M. Sarkeshik, J. Schreiber, K. Shafer-Weaver, D. Chen, S. Ley-Acosta, D. Chonzi, W. Go, R. Cunha, J. L. Gulley, L. Wood, M. Davies, Adam Dicker, L. Eifler, N. Gregory, A. Ferguson, C. Ferlini, S. Frankel, C. Gochett, J. Goldberg, K. Patel, D. Wariabharaj, P. Goncalves, N. Helie, J. Y. Hsu, R. Ibrahim, C. Larocca, O. Lambotte, J. Luke, J. Mcclure, E. Michelon, M. Nakamura, B. Piperdi, J. Riemer, C. Robert, W. Sharfman, E. Sharon, R. Sherry, C. Simonson, C. Thomas, E. Trehu, J. A. Thompson, D. Tresnan, L. Zhang, P. Zheng Nov 2017

Managing Toxicities Associated With Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors: Consensus Recommendations From The Society For Immunotherapy Of Cancer (Sitc) Toxicity Management Working Group., I. Puzanov, A. Diab, K. Abdallah, C. O. Bingham, C. Brogdon, R. Dadu, L. Hamad, S. Kim, M. E. Lacouture, N. R. Leboeuf, D. Lenihan, C. Onofrei, V. Shannon, R. Sharma, A. W. Silk, D. Skondra, M. E. Suarez-Almazor, Y. Wang, K. Wiley, H. L. Kaufman, M. S. Ernstoff, J. Anderson, K. Lehman, D. Reshef, A. Saylors, M. Turner, I. Waxman, D. Arrindell, S. Andrews, J. Ballesteros, J. Boyer, I. Cotarla, M. Dawson, T. Goswami, V. Hayreh, W. Holmes, Z. Rasheed, M. Sarkeshik, J. Schreiber, K. Shafer-Weaver, D. Chen, S. Ley-Acosta, D. Chonzi, W. Go, R. Cunha, J. L. Gulley, L. Wood, M. Davies, Adam Dicker, L. Eifler, N. Gregory, A. Ferguson, C. Ferlini, S. Frankel, C. Gochett, J. Goldberg, K. Patel, D. Wariabharaj, P. Goncalves, N. Helie, J. Y. Hsu, R. Ibrahim, C. Larocca, O. Lambotte, J. Luke, J. Mcclure, E. Michelon, M. Nakamura, B. Piperdi, J. Riemer, C. Robert, W. Sharfman, E. Sharon, R. Sherry, C. Simonson, C. Thomas, E. Trehu, J. A. Thompson, D. Tresnan, L. Zhang, P. Zheng

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

Cancer immunotherapy has transformed the treatment of cancer. However, increasing use of immune-based therapies, including the widely used class of agents known as immune checkpoint inhibitors, has exposed a discrete group of immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Many of these are driven by the same immunologic mechanisms responsible for the drugs' therapeutic effects, namely blockade of inhibitory mechanisms that suppress the immune system and protect body tissues from an unconstrained acute or chronic immune response. Skin, gut, endocrine, lung and musculoskeletal irAEs are relatively common, whereas cardiovascular, hematologic, renal, neurologic and ophthalmologic irAEs occur much less frequently. The majority of irAEs …


Top2a And Ezh2 Provide Early Detection Of An Aggressive Prostate Cancer Subgroup., David P. Labbé, Christopher J. Sweeney, Myles Brown, Phillip Galbo, Spencer Rosario, Kristine M. Wadosky, Sheng-Yu Ku, Martin Sjöström, Mohammed Alshalalfa, Nicholas Erho, Elai Davicioni, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Edward M. Schaeffer, Robert B. Jenkins, Robert B. Den, Ashley E. Ross, Michaela Bowden, Ying Huang, Kathryn P. Gray, Felix Y. Feng, Daniel E. Spratt, David W. Goodrich, Kevin H. Eng, Leigh Ellis Nov 2017

Top2a And Ezh2 Provide Early Detection Of An Aggressive Prostate Cancer Subgroup., David P. Labbé, Christopher J. Sweeney, Myles Brown, Phillip Galbo, Spencer Rosario, Kristine M. Wadosky, Sheng-Yu Ku, Martin Sjöström, Mohammed Alshalalfa, Nicholas Erho, Elai Davicioni, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Edward M. Schaeffer, Robert B. Jenkins, Robert B. Den, Ashley E. Ross, Michaela Bowden, Ying Huang, Kathryn P. Gray, Felix Y. Feng, Daniel E. Spratt, David W. Goodrich, Kevin H. Eng, Leigh Ellis

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

Purpose: Current clinical parameters do not stratify indolent from aggressive prostate cancer. Aggressive prostate cancer, defined by the progression from localized disease to metastasis, is responsible for the majority of prostate cancer–associated mortality. Recent gene expression profiling has proven successful in predicting the outcome of prostate cancer patients; however, they have yet to provide targeted therapy approaches that could inhibit a patient's progression to metastatic disease. Experimental Design: We have interrogated a total of seven primary prostate cancer cohorts (n = 1,900), two metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer datasets (n = 293), and one prospective cohort (n = 1,385) to assess …


Outlier Identification In Radiation Therapy Knowledge-Based Planning: A Study Of Pelvic Cases., Yang Sheng, Yaorong Ge, Lulin Yuan, Taoran Li, Fang-Fang Yin, Qingrong Jackie Wu Nov 2017

Outlier Identification In Radiation Therapy Knowledge-Based Planning: A Study Of Pelvic Cases., Yang Sheng, Yaorong Ge, Lulin Yuan, Taoran Li, Fang-Fang Yin, Qingrong Jackie Wu

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to apply statistical metrics to identify outliers and to investigate the impact of outliers on knowledge-based planning in radiation therapy of pelvic cases. We also aimed to develop a systematic workflow for identifying and analyzing geometric and dosimetric outliers.

METHODS: Four groups (G1-G4) of pelvic plans were sampled in this study. These include the following three groups of clinical IMRT cases: G1 (37 prostate cases), G2 (37 prostate plus lymph node cases) and G3 (37 prostate bed cases). Cases in G4 were planned in accordance with dynamic-arc radiation therapy procedure and include 10 …


Acute And Late Toxicities Of Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy For Locally-Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer., Vivek Verma, Charles B 2nd Simone, Maria Werner-Wasik Sep 2017

Acute And Late Toxicities Of Concurrent Chemoradiotherapy For Locally-Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer., Vivek Verma, Charles B 2nd Simone, Maria Werner-Wasik

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

For patients with unresectable locally-advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC), concurrent chemoradiotherapy improves overall survival as compared to sequential chemotherapy and radiation therapy, but is associated with higher rates of toxicities. Acute, clinically significant esophagitis or pneumonitis can occur in one in five patients. The risks of esophagitis and pneumonitis can impact the decision to deliver concurrent therapy and limit the total dose of radiation therapy that is delivered. Hematologic toxicities and emesis are common toxicities from systemic therapies for LA-NSCLC and can result in delaying chemotherapy dosing or chemotherapy dose reductions. Late treatment morbidities, including pulmonary fibrosis and cardiac …


Hematologic Toxicity Of Concurrent Administration Of Radium-223 And Next-Generation Antiandrogen Therapies., Tu Dan, Harriet B. Eldredge-Hindy, Jean Hoffman-Censits, Jianqing Lin, William K. Kelly, Leonard G. Gomella, Costas D. Lallas, Edouard J. Trabulsi, Mark D. Hurwitz, Adam P. Dicker, Robert B. Den Aug 2017

Hematologic Toxicity Of Concurrent Administration Of Radium-223 And Next-Generation Antiandrogen Therapies., Tu Dan, Harriet B. Eldredge-Hindy, Jean Hoffman-Censits, Jianqing Lin, William K. Kelly, Leonard G. Gomella, Costas D. Lallas, Edouard J. Trabulsi, Mark D. Hurwitz, Adam P. Dicker, Robert B. Den

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: Radium-223 is a first-in-class radiopharmaceutical recently approved for the treatment of castration-resistant prostate cancer in patients with symptomatic bone metastases. Initial studies investigating Radium-223 primarily used nonsteroidal first-generation antiandrogens. Since that time, newer antiandrogen therapies have demonstrated improved survival in patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer. It has been suggested that the rational combination of these newly approved agents with Radium-223 may lead to improved response rates and clinical outcomes. Currently, there is lack of information regarding the safety of concurrent administration of these agents with radiopharmaceuticals. Here, we report on hematologic toxicity findings from our institution in patients receiving …


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 Aug 2017

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 …


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 Jul 2017

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 …


A Phase Ii Randomized Trial Of Observation Versus Stereotactic Ablative Radiation For Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer (Oriole)., Noura Radwan, Ryan Phillips, Ashley Ross, Steven P. Rowe, Michael A. Gorin, Emmanuel S. Antonarakis, Curtiland Deville, Stephen Greco, Samuel Denmeade, Channing Paller, Daniel Y. Song, Maximilian Diehn, Hao Wang, Michael Carducci, Kenneth J. Pienta, Martin G. Pomper, Theodore L. Deweese, Adam Dicker, Mario Eisenberger, Phuoc T. Tran Jun 2017

A Phase Ii Randomized Trial Of Observation Versus Stereotactic Ablative Radiation For Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer (Oriole)., Noura Radwan, Ryan Phillips, Ashley Ross, Steven P. Rowe, Michael A. Gorin, Emmanuel S. Antonarakis, Curtiland Deville, Stephen Greco, Samuel Denmeade, Channing Paller, Daniel Y. Song, Maximilian Diehn, Hao Wang, Michael Carducci, Kenneth J. Pienta, Martin G. Pomper, Theodore L. Deweese, Adam Dicker, Mario Eisenberger, Phuoc T. Tran

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

BACKGROUND: We describe a randomized, non-blinded Phase II interventional study to assess the safety and efficacy of stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) for hormone-sensitive oligometastatic prostate adenocarcinoma, and to describe the biology of the oligometastatic state using immunologic, cellular, molecular, and functional imaging correlates. 54 men with oligometastatic prostate adenocarcinoma will be accrued. The primary clinical endpoint will be progression at 6 months from randomization with the hypothesis that SABR to all metastases will forestall progression by disrupting the metastatic process. Secondary clinical endpoints will include local control at 6 months post-SABR, toxicity and quality of life, and androgen deprivation therapy …


Individual Patient-Level Meta-Analysis Of The Performance Of The Decipher Genomic Classifier In High-Risk Men After Prostatectomy To Predict Development Of Metastatic Disease., Daniel E. Spratt, Kasra Yousefi, Samineh Deheshi, Ashley E. Ross, Robert B. Den, Edward M. Schaeffer, Bruce J. Trock, Jingbin Zhang, Andrew G. Glass, Adam P. Dicker, Firas Abdollah, Shuang G Zhao, Lucia L.C. Lam, Marguerite Du Plessis, Voleak Choeurng, Zaid Haddad, Christine Buerki, Elai Davicioni, Sheila Weinmann, Stephen J. Freedland, Eric A. Klein, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Felix Y. Feng Jun 2017

Individual Patient-Level Meta-Analysis Of The Performance Of The Decipher Genomic Classifier In High-Risk Men After Prostatectomy To Predict Development Of Metastatic Disease., Daniel E. Spratt, Kasra Yousefi, Samineh Deheshi, Ashley E. Ross, Robert B. Den, Edward M. Schaeffer, Bruce J. Trock, Jingbin Zhang, Andrew G. Glass, Adam P. Dicker, Firas Abdollah, Shuang G Zhao, Lucia L.C. Lam, Marguerite Du Plessis, Voleak Choeurng, Zaid Haddad, Christine Buerki, Elai Davicioni, Sheila Weinmann, Stephen J. Freedland, Eric A. Klein, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Felix Y. Feng

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

Purpose To perform the first meta-analysis of the performance of the genomic classifier test, Decipher, in men with prostate cancer postprostatectomy. Methods MEDLINE, EMBASE, and the Decipher genomic resource information database were searched for published reports between 2011 and 2016 of men treated by prostatectomy that assessed the benefit of the Decipher test. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards models fit to individual patient data were performed; meta-analyses were conducted by pooling the study-specific hazard ratios (HRs) using random-effects modeling. Extent of heterogeneity between studies was determined with the I(2) test. Results Five studies (975 total patients, and 855 patients with individual …


Genomic Classifier Augments The Role Of Pathological Features In Identifying Optimal Candidates For Adjuvant Radiation Therapy In Patients With Prostate Cancer: Development And Internal Validation Of A Multivariable Prognostic Model., Deepansh Dalela, María Santiago-Jiménez, Kasra Yousefi, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Ashley E. Ross, Robert B. Den, Stephen J. Freedland, Edward M. Schaeffer, Adam P. Dicker, Mani Menon, Alberto Briganti, Elai Davicioni, Firas Abdollah Jun 2017

Genomic Classifier Augments The Role Of Pathological Features In Identifying Optimal Candidates For Adjuvant Radiation Therapy In Patients With Prostate Cancer: Development And Internal Validation Of A Multivariable Prognostic Model., Deepansh Dalela, María Santiago-Jiménez, Kasra Yousefi, R. Jeffrey Karnes, Ashley E. Ross, Robert B. Den, Stephen J. Freedland, Edward M. Schaeffer, Adam P. Dicker, Mani Menon, Alberto Briganti, Elai Davicioni, Firas Abdollah

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

Purpose Despite documented oncologic benefit, use of postoperative adjuvant radiotherapy (aRT) in patients with prostate cancer is still limited in the United States. We aimed to develop and internally validate a risk-stratification tool incorporating the Decipher score, along with routinely available clinicopathologic features, to identify patients who would benefit the most from aRT. Patient and Methods Our cohort included 512 patients with prostate cancer treated with radical prostatectomy at one of four US academic centers between 1990 and 2010. All patients had ≥ pT3a disease, positive surgical margins, and/or pathologic lymph node invasion. Multivariable Cox regression analysis tested the relationship …


Comparison Of Online 6 Degree-Of-Freedom Image Registration Of Varian Truebeam Cone-Beam Ct And Brainlab Exactrac X-Ray For Intracranial Radiosurgery., Jun Li, Wenyin Shi, David W. Andrews, Maria Werner-Wasik, Bo Lu, Yan Yu, Adam Dicker Md, Phd, Haisong Lui Jun 2017

Comparison Of Online 6 Degree-Of-Freedom Image Registration Of Varian Truebeam Cone-Beam Ct And Brainlab Exactrac X-Ray For Intracranial Radiosurgery., Jun Li, Wenyin Shi, David W. Andrews, Maria Werner-Wasik, Bo Lu, Yan Yu, Adam Dicker Md, Phd, Haisong Lui

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE: The study was aimed to compare online 6 degree-of-freedom image registrations of TrueBeam cone-beam computed tomography and BrainLab ExacTrac X-ray imaging systems for intracranial radiosurgery.

METHODS: Phantom and patient studies were performed on a Varian TrueBeam STx linear accelerator (version 2.5), which is integrated with a BrainLab ExacTrac imaging system (version 6.1.1). The phantom study was based on a Rando head phantom and was designed to evaluate isocenter location dependence of the image registrations. Ten isocenters at various locations representing clinical treatment sites were selected in the phantom. Cone-beam computed tomography and ExacTrac X-ray images were taken when the …


Quality Assurance Guidelines For Superficial Hyperthermia Clinical Trials : Ii. Technical Requirements For Heating Devices., Hana Dobšíček Trefná, Johannes Crezee, Manfred Schmidt, Dietmar Marder, Ulf Lamprecht, Michael Ehmann, Jacek Nadobny, Josefin Hartmann, Nicolleta Lomax, Sultan Abdel-Rahman, Sergio Curto, Akke Bakker, Mark D. Hurwitz, Chris J. Diederich, Paul R. Stauffer, Gerard C. Van Rhoon May 2017

Quality Assurance Guidelines For Superficial Hyperthermia Clinical Trials : Ii. Technical Requirements For Heating Devices., Hana Dobšíček Trefná, Johannes Crezee, Manfred Schmidt, Dietmar Marder, Ulf Lamprecht, Michael Ehmann, Jacek Nadobny, Josefin Hartmann, Nicolleta Lomax, Sultan Abdel-Rahman, Sergio Curto, Akke Bakker, Mark D. Hurwitz, Chris J. Diederich, Paul R. Stauffer, Gerard C. Van Rhoon

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

Quality assurance (QA) guidelines are essential to provide uniform execution of clinical trials with uniform quality hyperthermia treatments. This document outlines the requirements for appropriate QA of all current superficial heating equipment including electromagnetic (radiative and capacitive), ultrasound, and infrared heating techniques. Detailed instructions are provided how to characterize and document the performance of these hyperthermia applicators in order to apply reproducible hyperthermia treatments of uniform high quality. Earlier documents used specific absorption rate (SAR) to define and characterize applicator performance. In these QA guidelines, temperature rise is the leading parameter for characterization of applicator performance. The intention of this …


Using A Conformal Water Bolus To Adjust Heating Patterns Of Microwave Waveguide Applicators, Paul R. Stauffer, Dario B. Rodrigues, Randolph Sinahon, Lyndsey Sbarro, Valeria Beckhoff, Mark Hurwitz Feb 2017

Using A Conformal Water Bolus To Adjust Heating Patterns Of Microwave Waveguide Applicators, Paul R. Stauffer, Dario B. Rodrigues, Randolph Sinahon, Lyndsey Sbarro, Valeria Beckhoff, Mark Hurwitz

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

Background: Hyperthermia, i.e., raising tissue temperature to 40-45°C for 60 min, has been demonstrated to increase the effectiveness of radiation and chemotherapy for cancer. Although multi-element conformal heat applicators are under development to provide more adjustable heating of contoured anatomy, to date the most often used applicator to heat superficial disease is the simple microwave waveguide. With only a single power input, the operator must be resourceful to adjust heat treatment to accommodate variable size and shape tumors spreading across contoured anatomy. Methods: We used multiphysics simulation software that couples electromagnetic, thermal and fluid dynamics physics to simulate heating patterns …