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Is it safe to offer SBRT for a secondary NSCLC after breast or chest wall irradiation many years prior?

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Radiation Oncology · University of Pennsylvania Health System

I agree with @Dr. First Last. Surgery is preferred here. However, if surgery is not an option or is high risk, I would offer SBRT. I still offer 10 Gy x 5 in this setting because if I do it, I still want to offer the best chance for tumor control (10 Gy x 5 has a BED10 = 100 Gy, the threshold dose)....

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Radiation Oncology · University of Toronto

Generally speaking, it is safe to offer SBRT for a second primary lung cancer, after initial radical management of a lung or breast cancer that has been treated with primary radiotherapy. In fact, some series have reported repeat lung SBRT in areas of local recurrence, with decent results.

Of course,...

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Radiation Oncology · University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Most of time, it is reasonably safe to deliver SBRT after prior RT to chest wall many years ago. If the lesion is large (>3 cm) and very close to the chest wall (< 5 mm), we would consider 70 Gy in 10 fractions instead of 50 Gy in 4 fractions. With control of the chest wall dose volume constraints (...

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Radiation Oncology · Meadowview Regional Medical Center

It depends. You can use longer fractionations like 5-7 fractions.

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