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If an asymptomatic patient requires a delay up to a week before starting chemotherapy for Stage III lung cancer, do you also push back the radiation start date?

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Radiation Oncology · University of North Carolina

Typically, the reason for B12 and folate prior to chemotherapy is related to the drug that will be used, pemetrexed. Giving the premedication reduces hematologic and gastrointestinal toxicity to tolerable levels.

One week typically will not make a difference and I would usually wait to start. Howeve...

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Radiation Oncology · Yale School of Medicine

I would first ask the medical oncologist why they are planning on giving Vitamin B and folate and why that has to delay chemotherapy initiation by a full week. If there is a good reason for this, if the patient is asymptomatic, and if the kinetics of disease growth is relatively slow, then a 1-week ...

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Radiation Oncology · Cleveland Clinic

I agree with my colleagues. My presumption in this case is that this is a definitive treatment for stage III. Stage III patients requiring urgent symptomatic relief by RT are not patients I would have been entertaining concurrent therapy to begin with. Since one of the (presumed) benefits of the add...

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Medical Oncology · Georgetown University Hospital

While I do not see tremendous harm in delaying therapy for a week, I do not really feel the delay is necessary and would avoid it.

B12 and folate are given to minimize toxicity of pemetrexed. While I do not typically use this regimen for stage III NSCLC, it is certainly a reasonable one. Vitamin supp...

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