Radiation Oncology
Expert insights on radiation treatment planning, techniques, toxicity management, and multimodal cancer care.
Recent Discussions
Are there any volumetric constraints associated with toxicity in the dose range that is moderately above prescription (i.e. 30-35 Gy range), when planning hippocampal-sparing whole brain radiation?
This is an important question worth some discussion. As the question mentions, clinical trials of HA-WBRT have permitted a hot spot of 133% of the prescription dose of 30 Gy (or 40 Gy) to D2% of the whole-brain parenchyma as an acceptable protocol variation. Importantly, none of these trials have de...
How will your management of head and neck cancers change with the COVID-19 pandemic?
Short answer: Most head and neck cancer radiation is as necessary as it gets. At this point, my management won't change very much. That may change as the pandemic evolves. Use all the appropriate precautions to stop the spread of COVID-19 and other viruses (we are using masks for every staff member,...
How should radiation oncology departments prepare for significant resource depletion and/or staff shortages with the COVID-19 outbreak?
Resource depletion to the extreme would be analogous to having a non-operational clinic as some experienced during the Hurricane María disaster. I would suggest reading the paper:Lessons Learned From Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico: Practical Measures to Mitigate the Impact of a Catastrophic Natural ...
Would you perform unilateral or bilateral hippocampal avoidant whole brain RT in a patient with a prior SRS to a small hippocampal metastasis?
I would recommend bilateral HA-WBRT and memantine in this situation. The role for HA-WBRT is shrinking over time with a diminishing patient population between the expanding role of SRS for multiple brain mets and no role for cranial RT for poor prognosis patients with no/limited systemic therapy op...
How do you sequence radiation and capecitabine in breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant capecitabine for residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy?
According to personal communication with Dr. Masakazu Toi (June 13, 2017), the corresponding author of the CREATE-X NEJM publication, radiotherapy was administered prior to capecitabine in the majority of cases on this study. It is worth noting that in CALGB 49907, a randomized trial comparing capec...
What is your treatment paradigm for rectal cancer in the setting of COVID-19?
We haven't changed our standard recommendation: short course radiation -> 3-4 months of FOLFOX. In a very timely manner, the RAPIDO ASCO abstract was released here in May. It showed that the patients who received short course radiation -> FOLFOX had improved pCR, less disease related treatment failu...
How do you decide between systemic vs. arterially directed therapies in the first line setting for unresectable HCC?
In IMbrave150, 63% of patients treated with atezolizumab/bevacizumab had extrahepatic spread of disease, and my recommendation for patients with extrahepatic involvement is for first line systemic therapy. For patients with unresectable disease without extrahepatic spread, we take a multi-disciplina...
Should we delay adjuvant breast radiotherapy for early stage breast cancers as the COVID-19 situation evolves?
This is a very tough question given the unprecedented nature of this pandemic and the fact that its duration is unknown. Recommendations will likely vary based on the density of cases in a specific geographic location and will undoubtedly change frequently given the rapidly evolving nature of this s...
Do you use either memantine or hippocampal sparing technique to preserve cognitive function when giving whole brain radiotherapy?
Dr. @Dr. First Last and I put together the response below:We use memantine and hippocampal sparing technique for all brain metastasis patients who are planning to receive WBRT. This is based off the recently published phase III trial NRG CC001 that found hippocampal avoidance WBRT plus memantine res...
How should you manage a coronavirus infected/suspected patient who is receiving radiotherapy and cannot interrupt or delay their cancer treatment?
Hi Everyone, I agree with all the comments—this is certainly a fluid situation. We have not had a confirmed COVID-19 case, but we have developed a plan. If it is deemed a known COVID-19 patient, and it is elected to continue treatment by the treating physician, the treatment will happen at the end o...