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Do you use the re-radiation schedule 39Gy in 26 fx BID for a rectal patient who initially received 25 Gy in 5 fractions and then has pelvic recurrence?

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Radiation Oncology · Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

We have retreated rectal cancer patients with pelvic reRT (using protons) with doses as high as 39-45 Gy BID after both conventional fractionation and 25 Gy/5fx. In patients with prolonged interval since the original RT, no other sites of disease, good ECOG, and no good systemic/surgical options, th...

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Radiation Oncology · Emeritus Professor

Would not use the hyper fractionation approach for re-irradiation but would use standard fraction chemo radiation with IMRT to deliver 20-40 Gy preoperatively (higher dose only if small bowel could be avoided after 20Gy). Would then restage to rule out extra pelvic disease and proceed to resection a...

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Radiation Oncology · Michigan Healthcare Professionals, PC

If one believes the linear quadratic equation, the BED to a/b=3 tissue with 50.4/28 fx would be ~80, while 25/5 it would be ~67. If accounting for team, it seems to be quite close.

There are several series showing efficacy/safety with BID reirradiation to doses of 30-39 Gy, so it would not be unreas...

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Radiation Oncology · University of Florida

You could. It won’t be controlled and the patient will likely die a miserable death. Don’t stent the ureters.

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