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Medical Oncology

Medical Oncology

Physician insights on cancer treatment protocols, immunotherapy, targeted therapies, and clinical trial updates.

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What, if any, resources exist with recommendations regarding the timing and toxicity of radiation in patients who have received or are currently on immunotherapy?

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Radiation Oncology · University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Concurrent immunotherapy (PD1/PDL1) with chemoradiation is now not advised, given the two negative lung cancer trials (PACIFIC 2, CheckMate 73L). Concurrent immunotherapy with radiation alone is still an interesting area to explore, as the two published studies (SPRINT, Ohri et al., PMID 37988638, a...

What would you use for cytoreduction in a pregnant patient with high risk ET and APLS?

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Hematology · Johns Hopkins University

My first instinct in replying to this question is to understand the basis for the diagnosis of “high-risk ET”. Since the patient is pregnant, the basis for the designation “high-risk” must be a history of a prior thrombotic event, either arterial or venous. However, the purveyors of the various MPN ...

What would you use for cytoreduction in a pregnant patient with high risk ET and APLS?

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Hematology · Johns Hopkins University

My first instinct in replying to this question is to understand the basis for the diagnosis of “high-risk ET”. Since the patient is pregnant, the basis for the designation “high-risk” must be a history of a prior thrombotic event, either arterial or venous. However, the purveyors of the various MPN ...

Would you change therapy for a CML patient in hematologic remission on imatinib found with positive qualitative BCR-ABL1 for the p230 protein?

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Hematology · University of Chicago

It would depend on how long the patient has been on imatinib and the sensitivity of PCR testing. Being able to monitor the p230 transcript at the level of 0.1% or even deeper would be helpful to characterize if the patient has achieved a major molecular response or not. This publication outlines the...

What is your approach for bulky stage I primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma in a patient with a positive post-chemotherapy PET-CT (residual mass and Deauville 5)?

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Medical Oncology · Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

Interpreting end-of-treatment PET in PMBL can be tricky. False positives here are very common! Fake-outs include thymic rebound masquerading as refractory disease; avidity at rim (which is almost always biopsy-neg); or residual avidity throughout residual mass which again can be biopsy negative. I w...

What is your approach for bulky stage I primary mediastinal B-cell lymphoma in a patient with a positive post-chemotherapy PET-CT (residual mass and Deauville 5)?

2
2 Answers

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Medical Oncology · Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

Interpreting end-of-treatment PET in PMBL can be tricky. False positives here are very common! Fake-outs include thymic rebound masquerading as refractory disease; avidity at rim (which is almost always biopsy-neg); or residual avidity throughout residual mass which again can be biopsy negative. I w...

How would you approach therapy for a nasal high grade neuroendocrine tumor with ipsilateral local cervical adenopathy?

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Medical Oncology · Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell

A couple of additional thoughts on work-up: Is the pathologist calling this small cell histology (as opposed to SNUC, esthesioneuroblastoma, etc) or a low grade NEC? I would also request tumor NGS and PD-L1. MRI brain to r/o mets if not done already should be considered. If it is high grade, I wou...

What is the preferred chemotherapy regimen for a patient with bladder adenocarcinoma with signet ring features?

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Medical Oncology · VCU Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center

Signet ring cell variants are considered an aggressive phenotype of urinary bladder adenocarcinoma with poor outcome. Because of the rarity, evidence based treatment approach is unknown. There are anecdotal experience in the literature.For example, a long term survival of 90 months was reported for ...

Does aspirin dose (81 mg vs 325 mg) matter for secondary stroke prevention?

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Neurology · HCA Houston Healthcare

This topic has been debated extensively. There are two camps in this debate: Aspirin with a dose of 81 mg is adequate for platelet inhibition in the general population. Aspirin with a dose of 325 mg may be needed for individuals who weigh more (>70 kg) to achieve appropriate platelet inhibition. T...

Are you including Bortezomib as standard of care in the upfront treatment of T lymphoblastic-lymphoma?

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Pediatric Hematology/Oncology · Emory University

We do use bortezomib in the upfront treatment of T-cell lymphoblastic lymphoma in children and AYA. For those familiar with the topic, the results of two successive large clinical trials in T-LLy done by COG, AALL0434, and AALL1231, were confusing. Due to the rarity of the disease, overlapping trial...