17 research outputs found

    Solitary Fibrous Tumors of Chest: Another Look with the Oncologic Perspective

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    Solitary fibrous tumors are mesenchymal lesions that arise at a variety of sites, most commonly the pleura. Most patients are asymptomatic at diagnosis, with lesions being detected incidentally. Nevertheless, some patients present due to symptoms from local tumor compression (eg. of the airways and pulmonary parenchyma). Furthermore, radiological methods are not always conclusive in making a diagnosis, and thus, pathological analysis is often required. In the past three decades, immunohistochemical techniques have provided a gold standard in solitary fibrous tumor diagnosis. The signature marker of solitary fibrous tumor is the presence of the NAB2-STAT6 fusion that can be reliably detected with a STAT6 antibody. While solitary fibrous tumors are most often benign, they can be malignant in 10-20% of the cases. Unfortunately, histological parameters are not always predictive of benign vs malignant solitary fibrous tumors. As solitary fibrous tumors are generally regarded as relatively chemoresistant tumors; treatment is often limited to localized treatment modalities. The optimal treatment of solitary fibrous tumors appears to be complete surgical resection for both primary and local recurrent disease. However, in cases of suboptimal resection, large disease burden, or advanced recurrence, a multidisciplinary approach may be preferable. Specifically, radiotherapy for inoperable local disease can provide palliation/shrinkage. Given their sometimes -unpredictable and often- protracted clinical course, long-term follow-up post-resection is recommended

    Timing of Local and Distant Failure in Resected Lung Cancer: Implications for Reported Rates of Local Failure

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    INTRODUCTION: Most adjuvant lung cancer trials only report first sites of failure. The relative timing of local (i.e., local/regional) versus distant recurrence after surgery could potentially affect reported rates of local failure. We assessed this phenomenon in a large group of patients undergoing surgery for early-stage lung cancer. METHODS: This institutional review board-approved retrospective study identified all patients who underwent surgery at Duke University Medical Center for pathologic stages I to II non-small cell lung cancer between 1995 and 2005. Medical records and pertinent radiographs were reviewed to assess for local and distant sites of recurrence. Both first and subsequent failures were examined. The time interval between surgery and date of local and/or distant failure was compared using the Mann-Whitney U test. RESULTS: Of 975 patients undergoing surgery, 250 patients developed recurrent disease (43 local only, 110 distant only, and 97 both). The median time from surgery to local failure was 13.9 months (range, 1-79). The median time to distant failure was 12.5 months (range, 1-79 months). These were not significantly different (p = 0.34). Among 97 patients who experienced both local and distant failure, 72 (74%) failed at both sites simultaneously, 19 (20%) failed at local sites first, and 6 (6%) failed at distant sites first. CONCLUSIONS: The time interval from surgery to either local or distant failure is not significantly different. Patterns of failure analyses in which only first sites of failure are scored will underestimate the frequency of local recurrence. Nevertheless, the magnitude of this error is expected to be small

    Analysis of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms and Radiation Sensitivity of the Lung Assessed With an Objective Radiologic Endpoin

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    To explore the possibility that underlying genetic susceptibility influences radiation-induced lung injury, we studied pulmonary damage after radiation therapy for lung cancer and single nucleotide polymorphisms implicated in radiation sensitivity. An objective radiologic method (perfusion single photon emission computed tomography) was used to assess radiation sensitivity. An association between single nucleotide polymorphisms in XRCC1 and BRCA1 and radiation sensitivity of the lungs was noted

    Association Between RT-Induced Changes in Lung Tissue Density and Global Lung Function

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    To assess the association between RT-induced changes in computed tomography (CT)-defined lung tissue density and pulmonary function tests (PFTs)

    Radiation Dose–Volume Effects in the Lung

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    The three dimensional dose/volume/outcome data for lung are reviewed in detail. The rate of symptomatic pneumonitis is related to many dosimetric parameters, and there are no evident threshold “tolerance dose/volume” levels. There are strong volume and fractionation effects

    Patterns of postpartum contraceptive use among Somali immigrant women living in Minnesota

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    Abstract Background The postpartum period is a crucial time to provide family planning counseling and can decrease incidence of adverse reproductive outcomes. The purpose of this study was to characterize patterns of postpartum contraception and to investigate long acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) use among Somali women living in a metropolitan area of Minnesota in an effort to provide better family planning and reproductive health counseling in this growing immigrant population. Methods A retrospective chart review was conducted of Somali women who delivered between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2014. Information was collected regarding family planning counseling provided and contraceptive methods chosen at the postpartum clinic visit. Results Of the 747 Somali women who delivered during this time period, 56.4% had no postpartum follow up visit. At the postpartum visit, 88.3% of women received family planning counseling and 80.8% chose a contraceptive method with the remainder declining. The intrauterine device (IUD) was the most popular contraceptive method, chosen by 39.7% of women. Other than parity, no statistically significant differences were observed between women who chose LARC versus other contraceptive methods. Of the women that chose a LARC, 39.4% had it placed at the time of their postpartum visit; immediate placement was statistically significantly more likely with more recent delivery, lower BMI and obstetrician as the provider type. Conclusions The IUD was the most popular method of postpartum contraception. There was a trend toward increase in LARC use with increasing parity. Same-day LARC placement was uncommon, but should be encouraged in this population given high loss to follow up rate

    Assessment of the residual error in soft tissue setup in patients undergoing partial breast irradiation: results of a prospective study using cone-beam computed tomography.

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    PURPOSE: On-board cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) provides soft tissue information that may improve setup accuracy in patients undergoing accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI). We used CBCT to assess the residual error in soft tissue after two-dimensional kV/MV alignment based on bony anatomy. We also assessed the dosimetric impact of this error. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Ten patients undergoing APBI were studied as part of an institutional review board-approved prospective trial. Patients were aligned based on skin/cradle marks plus orthogonal kV/MV images registered based on bony landmarks to digitally reconstructed radiographs from the planning CT. A subsequent CBCT was registered to the planning CT using soft tissue information. This residual error and its dosimetric impact was measured. RESULTS: The root-mean-square of the residual error was 3, 4, and 4 mm, in the right-left, anterior-posterior, and superior-inferior directions, respectively. The average vector sum was 6+/-2 mm. Average reductions in mean dose to the lumpectomy cavity, clinical target volume (CTV), and planning target volume were 0.1%, 0.4%, and 1%, respectively. The mean difference in the clinical target and planning target volumes that received 95% of the prescribed dose (V95) were 1% and 4%. CONCLUSIONS: In this initial study with a modest number of patients, the residual error in soft tissue was typically \u3c5 \u3emm, and with the field margins used, the resultant dosimetric consequences were modest. In patients immobilized in a customized cradle, setup using orthogonal kV images thus appears accurate and reproducible. The CBCT technique may have particular utility in patients with larger breast volumes or breast deformations. Further studies involving larger numbers of patients are needed to further assess the utility of CBCT

    A COMPARISON OF CLINICAL AND DOSIMETRIC OUTCOMES IN PATIENTS RECEIVING PARTIAL BREAST IRRADIATION WITH PHOTON-ONLY VERSUS MIXED PHOTON/ELECTRON TREATMENT PLANS

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    WOS: 000297487800015PubMed ID: 21440433Several series evaluating external-beam partial breast irradiation (PBI) have linked negative cosmetic outcomes to large normal tissue treatment volumes. We compared patients treated with PBI whose treatment plans included only photons to those whose plans incorporated electrons. Twenty-seven patients were identified: median age 67 years, pT1 82%, pN0 56%, margin negative 100%. All received 38.5 Gy using 3-5 noncoplanar photon beams (6-15X). Electrons (9-20 MeV) were included in 59%. Median follow-up was 22 months. Ninety percent experienced good/excellent cosmetic outcomes. Two patients had fair cosmesis, and both were treated with a mixed photon/electron approach. Median conformity index for photon-only treatment plans was 1.7 (range, 0.9-2.0) and for photon/electron plans, 1.0 (0.3-1.4). Median percent ipsilateral breast volume receiving 100% and 50% of prescription dose was 19 and 50 for photon-only plans vs. 10 and 38 for photon/electron plans (p < 0.05). Median percent target volume receiving 100% and 95% of prescription dose was 93 and 98 for photon-only plans vs. 75 and 94 for photon/electron plans (p < 0.05). A mixed photon/electron, noncoplanar technique decreases the volume of treated normal breast tissue at the cost of slightly decreased tumor bed coverage. Further study is needed to determine whether this results in a more favorable therapeutic ratio than photon-only approaches. (C) 2011 American Association of Medical Dosimetrists
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