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What proton dose regimen would you use for locally recurrent esophageal cancer previously treated with chemoRT?

4 Answers
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Radiation Oncology · Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Like @Dr. First Last, I would also somewhat challenge the premise of the question. Typically, the dose-limiting structure for re-irradiating esophageal cancer is the esophagus itself, so protons do not offer an inherent advantage in this case. Protons may still be reasonable to reduce lung or heart ...

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Radiation Oncology · Kaiser Permanente - Colorado Permanente Medical Group

There are several varying clinical scenarios that this question can represent, including:

1) A recurrence after trimodality therapy, with gross disease present a significant distance from the surgical anastomosis, in tissue that was previously unirradiated.

2) A recurrence after trimodality therapy wi...

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Radiation Oncology · University of Florida

Palliatively. Not a good use of protons.

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Radiation Oncology · Karmanos Cancer Institute - McLaren Proton Therapy Center

For patients who are not operative candidates, who relapse after chemo-RT, at our center, we have re-treated with 45 Gy chemo-RT using pencil-beam scanning proton therapy and CBCT guidance. The margins are pretty narrow, no elective nodal coverage, and typically follows a prior dose of 50.4 Gy with ...

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