29 results on '"Dabaja, Bouthaina S."'
Search Results
2. Decreased heart dose with deep inspiration breath hold for the treatment of gastric lymphoma with IMRT
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Christopherson, Kaitlin M., Gunther, Jillian R., Fang, Penny, Peterson, Stacy L., Roach, Karen E., Wong, Pei-Fong, Mirkovic, Dragan, Lim, Tze Yee, Wang, He, Wang, Xin A, Wang, Congjun, Garcia, John, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Pinnix, Chelsea C.
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- 2020
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3. Multi-institutional Investigation: Circulating CD4:CD8 ratio is a prognosticator of response to total skin electron beam radiation in mycosis fungoides
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An, Yi, Jiang, Wen, Andraos, Therese Y., Reddy, Jay P., Yehia, Zeinab Abou, Lloyd, Shane, Duvic, Madeleine, D'Souza, Neil M., Milgrom, Sarah A., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Oki, Yasuhiro, Smith, Grace L., Wilson, Lynn D., and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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- 2019
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4. Cardiac atlas development and validation for automatic segmentation of cardiac substructures
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Zhou, Rongrong, Liao, Zhongxing, Pan, Tinsu, Milgrom, Sarah A., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Shi, Anhui, Tang, Linglong, Yang, Ju, Liu, Ying, Gomez, Daniel, Nguyen, Quynh-Nhu, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Court, Laurence, and Yang, Jinzhong
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- 2017
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5. Imaging Surveillance of Limited-stage Classic Hodgkin Lymphoma Patients After PET-CT-documented First Remission.
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Glober, Gordon, Gunther, Jillian, Fang, Penny, Milgrom, Sarah, Korivi, Brinda Rao, Jensen, Corey T., Wagner-Bartak, Nicolaus A., Ahmed, Sairah, Lee, Hun Ju, Nair, Ranjit, Steiner, Raphael, Parmar, Simrit, Iyer, Swaminathan, Westin, Jason, Fayad, Luis, Rodriguez, M. Alma, Neelapu, Sattva, Nastoupil, Loretta, Flowers, Christopher R., and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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- 2020
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6. Postoperative Radiotherapy for Multiple Myeloma of Long Bones: Should the Entire Rod Be Treated?
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Elhammali, Adnan, Milgrom, Sarah A., Amini, Behrang, Gunther, Jillian R., Yoder, Alison, Ludmir, Ethan B., Moon, Bryan, Weber, Donna M., Thomas, Sheeba K., Garg, Naveen, Manasanch, Elisabet E., Patel, Krina K., Orlowski, Robert Z., Lee, Hans C., Bird, Justin E., Satcher, Robert, Lin, Patrick, Pinnix, Chelsea C., and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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- 2019
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7. Rainbow IMRT and Volumetric Imaging for Anterior Mesenteric Targets.
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Yoder, Alison K., Gunther, Jillian R., Milgrom, Sarah A., Pham, Mary, Hancock, Donald, McSpadden, Kelli, Garcia, John, Mirkovic, Dragan, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Pinnix, Chelsea C.
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- 2019
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8. Emerging Treatment Strategies for Primary Breast Extranodal Marginal Zone Lymphoma of Mucosa-associated Lymphoid Tissue.
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Ludmir, Ethan B., Milgrom, Sarah A., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Gunther, Jillian R., Westin, Jason, Fayad, Luis E., Khoury, Joseph D., Medeiros, L. Jeffrey, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Nastoupil, Loretta J.
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- 2019
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9. Retrospective Analysis of Prognostic Factors in 187 Cases of Transformed Mycosis Fungoides.
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Talpur, Rakhshandra, Sui, Dawen, Gangar, Pamela, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Duvic, Madeleine
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- 2016
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10. Clinical features, tumor biology, and prognosis associated with MYC rearrangement and Myc overexpression in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma patients treated with rituximab-CHOP.
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Xu-Monette, Zijun Y, Dabaja, Bouthaina S, Wang, Xiaoxiao, Tu, Meifeng, Manyam, Ganiraju C, Tzankov, Alexander, Xia, Yi, Zhang, Li, Sun, Ruifang, Visco, Carlo, Dybkaer, Karen, Yin, Lihui, Chiu, April, Orazi, Attilio, Zu, Youli, Bhagat, Govind, Richards, Kristy L, Hsi, Eric D, Choi, William WL, and van Krieken, J Han
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- 2015
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11. Radiation Therapy Planning for Early-Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma: Experience of the International Lymphoma Radiation Oncology Group.
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Maraldo, Maja V., Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Filippi, Andrea R., Illidge, Tim, Tsang, Richard, Ricardi, Umberto, Petersen, Peter M., Schut, Deborah A., Garcia, John, Headley, Jayne, Parent, Amy, Guibord, Benoit, Ragona, Riccardo, and Specht, Lena
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HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *RADIOTHERAPY , *COMPUTED tomography , *PARAMETER estimation , *ONCOLOGY - Abstract
Purpose Early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) is a rare disease, and the location of lymphoma varies considerably between patients. Here, we evaluate the variability of radiation therapy (RT) plans among 5 International Lymphoma Radiation Oncology Group (ILROG) centers with regard to beam arrangements, planning parameters, and estimated doses to the critical organs at risk (OARs). Methods Ten patients with stage I-II classic HL with masses of different sizes and locations were selected. On the basis of the clinical information, 5 ILROG centers were asked to create RT plans to a prescribed dose of 30.6 Gy. A postchemotherapy computed tomography scan with precontoured clinical target volume (CTV) and OARs was provided for each patient. The treatment technique and planning methods were chosen according to each center's best practice in 2013. Results Seven patients had mediastinal disease, 2 had axillary disease, and 1 had disease in the neck only. The median age at diagnosis was 34 years (range, 21-74 years), and 5 patients were male. Of the resulting 50 treatment plans, 15 were planned with volumetric modulated arc therapy (1-4 arcs), 16 with intensity modulated RT (3-9 fields), and 19 with 3-dimensional conformal RT (2-4 fields). The variations in CTV-to-planning target volume margins (5-15 mm), maximum tolerated dose (31.4-40 Gy), and plan conformity (conformity index 0-3.6) were significant. However, estimated doses to OARs were comparable between centers for each patient. Conclusions RT planning for HL is challenging because of the heterogeneity in size and location of disease and, additionally, to the variation in choice of treatment techniques and field arrangements. Adopting ILROG guidelines and implementing universal dose objectives could further standardize treatment techniques and contribute to lowering the dose to the surrounding OARs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography Findings During Therapy Predict Outcome in Patients With Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma Treated With Chemotherapy Alone but Not in Those Who Receive Consolidation Radiation.
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Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Hess, Kenneth, Shihadeh, Ferial, Podoloff, Donald A., Medeiros, L. Jeffrey, Mawlawi, Osama, Arzu, Isidora, Oki, Yasuhiro, Hagemeister, Fredrick B., Fayad, Luis E., Reed, Valerie K., Kedir, Aziza, Wogan, Christine F., and Rodriguez, Alma
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POSITRON emission tomography , *COMPUTED tomography , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *B cell lymphoma , *CANCER chemotherapy , *CANCER radiotherapy , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose: To assess the value of mid-therapy positron emission tomography (PET) findings for predicting survival and disease progression in patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, considering type of therapy (chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy). Methods and Materials: We retrospectively evaluated 294 patients with histologically confirmed diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with respect to age, sex, disease stage, International Prognostic Index score, mid-therapy PET findings (positive or negative), and disease status after therapy and at last follow-up. Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were compared according to mid-therapy PET findings. Results: Of the 294 patients, 163 (55%) were male, 144 (49%) were age >61 years, 110 (37%) had stage I or II disease, 219 (74%) had International Prognostic Index score ≤2, 216 (73%) received ≥6 cycles of rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone, and 88 (30%) received consolidation radiation therapy. Five-year PFS and OS rates were associated with mid-therapy PET status: PFS was 78% for those with PET-negative (PET−) disease versus 63% for PET-positive (PET+) disease (P=.024), and OS was 82% for PET− versus 62% for PET+ (P<.002). These associations held true for patients who received chemotherapy only (PFS 71% for PET− vs 52% PET+ [P=.012], OS 78% for PET− and 51% for PET+ [P=.0055]) but not for those who received consolidation radiation therapy (PFS 84% PET− vs 81% PET+ [P=.88]; OS 90% PET− vs 81% PET+ [P=.39]). Conclusion: Mid-therapy PET can predict patient outcome, but the use of consolidation radiation therapy may negate the significance of mid-therapy findings. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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13. Radiation for Hodgkin's Lymphoma in Young Female Patients: A New Technique to Avoid the Breasts and Decrease the Dose to the Heart
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Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Rebueno, Neal C.S., Mazloom, Ali, Thorne, Scott, Perrin, Kelly J., Tolani, Naresh, Das, Pragnan, Delclos, Marc E., Iyengar, Puneeth, Reed, Valerie K., Horace, Patrecia, and Salehpour, Mohammad R.
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HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *CANCER radiotherapy , *CANCER in women , *MEDICAL technology , *THERAPEUTICS , *HEART diseases , *POSTURE , *RADIOTHERAPY , *CANCER treatment - Abstract
Purpose: To demonstrate how, in young female patients with Hodgkin''s lymphoma, using an inclined board technique can further decrease the volume of breasts and heart in the treatment field. Methods and Materials: An inclined board was constructed with the ability to mount an Aquaplast face mask, a Vacu-Lock, and a hip stopper. Eight female patients with early-stage Hodgkin''s lymphoma were planned and compared using the conventional flat position and the inclined board position. All patients on the inclined board were planned with 90° degree table position and 15° gantry angle rotation to compensate for the beam divergence resulting from the patient''s position on the inclined board. Dose–volume histograms were generated, as well as the mean V30 and V5 of both breasts and heart using both treatment positions. Results: The mean value of V30 of the right breast, left breast, and heart decreased from 3%, 3%, and 13%, respectively, using the flat position to 0, 0.4%, and 5%, respectively, using the inclined board. The mean value of V5 of the right breast, left breast, and heart decreased from 6%, 13%, and 36%, respectively, using the flat position to 2%, 8%, and 29%, respectively, using the inclined board. Conclusions: Compared with conventional flat positioning, this simple device and technique allows better sparing of the breasts and the heart while maintaining comparable target coverage and total lung dose. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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14. In the Battle Between Protons and Photons for Hematologic Malignancies, the Patient Must Win.
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Dabaja, Bouthaina S. and Mikhaeel, N. George
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CANCER radiotherapy , *HEMATOLOGIC malignancies , *PROTON therapy , *ONCOLOGY , *PATIENTS , *THERAPEUTICS - Published
- 2016
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15. MALT lymphoma of the tongue: An unusual site that may present a diagnostic challenge.
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Lyapichev, Kirill A., Medeiros, L. Jeffrey, Ivashkevich, Yana, Thakral, Beenu, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Lin, Pei, Iqbal, Fatima, and Konoplev, Sergej
- Abstract
Extranodal marginal zone lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT lymphoma) is a low-grade B cell lymphoma that can affect any organ, usually preceded by acquisition of MALT in response to antigenic stimulus provided by infections or autoimmune diseases. Most often, MALT lymphoma involves the stomach (about 35% of cases), followed by the ocular adnexal region, skin, lungs, and salivary glands, but virtually any extranodal site can be involved. MALT lymphomas are less common at sites of normal MALT tissue, such as Waldeyer ring and the ileocecal region of the gastrointestinal tract. Lymphomas involving the tongue are extremely rare and represent approximately 3% of all lymphomas involving the head and neck region. In this study, we discuss potentially challenging diagnostic aspects of MALT lymphoma involving the tongue and review and summarize the available literature about this topic. • MALT lymphoma of the tongue as a sole site of involvement is exceedingly rare. • MALT lymphoma of the tongue most commonly affects elderly women. • There is no reported association between infectious and/or autoimmune processes and MALT lymphoma of the tongue. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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16. Management and Outcomes of Patients with Refractory Solitary Plasmacytoma after Treatment with Definitive Radiation Therapy.
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Fang, Penny, Pinnix, Chelsea C., Wu, Susan Y., Lee, Hans C., Patel, Krina K., Saini, Neeraj, Becnel, Melody R., Kaufman, Gregory, Thomas, Sheeba K., Orlowski, Robert Z., Amini, Behrang, Lin, Pei, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Gunther, Jillian R.
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RADIOTHERAPY , *PLASMACYTOMA , *POSITRON emission tomography , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *MULTIPLE myeloma , *SURGICAL excision - Abstract
Radiation therapy (RT) is the standard treatment for solitary plasmacytoma (SP); however, the optimal management of RT-refractory SPs is unknown. We examined outcomes after early systemic therapy, surgical resection, or observation for patients with RT-refractory disease and assessed the potential impact of treatment selection on disease outcomes. We retrospectively reviewed patients with SP treated with definitive radiation and evaluated at a single institution with persistent disease on imaging or biopsy. Descriptive statistics were used to characterize patient and disease characteristics and treatment outcomes. Of 102 total SP patients, 17 (17%) were RT-refractory. The median RT dose was 45 Gy, and median follow-up was 71 months from end of RT. Fifteen patients had additional treatment for refractory disease at a median time of 9.5 months after RT, with the following subsequent interventions: surgical resection (n = 4), additional RT (n = 2), systemic therapy without evidence of multiple myeloma (MM; n = 4), systemic therapy for progression to MM (n = 5), and observation (n = 2). Of 4 patients treated with surgical resection, 3 progressed to MM 22 to 43 months after diagnosis. Of 2 patients treated with additional RT, neither responded, and both had pathologic confirmation of residual disease after the second course. Four patients treated with systemic therapy without MM all had complete responses on positron emission tomography and no subsequent MM progression. Eight patients were initially observed after RT for ≥12 months (n = 8) or ≥24 months (n = 6). Of the 2 patients in continued observation, both had stable/unchanged avidity after radiation treatment for 12 and 22 months and ultimately had a slow decrease of disease avidity over multiple years. Patients with RT-refractory SPs can achieve good local control with alternative therapies, such as surgery or systemic therapy, if needed. Additional RT does not seem to be effective. Given the known high rates of progression from SP to MM, close observation of asymptomatic persistent disease until disease progression is likely sufficient in most cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Craniospinal irradiation prior to stem cell transplant for hematologic malignancies with CNS involvement: Effectiveness and toxicity after photon or proton treatment.
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Gunther, Jillian R., Rahman, Ahmad R., Dong, Wenli, Yehia, Zeinab Abou, Kebriaei, Partow, Rondon, Gabriela, Pinnix, Chelsea C., Milgrom, Sarah A., Allen, Pamela K., Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Smith, Grace L.
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Purpose/Objective(s) Craniospinal irradiation (CSI) improves local control of leukemia/lymphoma with central nervous system (CNS) involvement; however, for adult patients anticipating stem cell transplant (SCT), cumulative treatment toxicity is a major concern. We evaluated toxicities and outcomes for patients receiving proton or photon CSI before SCT. Methods and materials We identified 37 consecutive leukemia/lymphoma patients with CNS involvement who received CSI before SCT at our institution. Photon versus proton toxicities during CSI, transplant, and through 100 days posttransplant were compared using Fisher exact and Wilcoxon rank sum tests. Long-term neurotoxicity, disease response, and overall survival were analyzed. Results Thirty-seven patients (23 photon, 14 proton) underwent CSI for CNS involvement of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (49%), acute myeloblastic leukemia (22%), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (3%), chronic myelocytic leukemia (14%), lymphoma (11%), and myeloma (3%). CSI was used for consolidation (30 patients, 81%) and gross disease treatment (7 patients, 19%). Median radiation dose (interquartile range) was 24 Gy (23.4-24) for photons and 21.8 Gy (21.3-23.6) for protons ( P = .03). Proton CSI was associated with lower rates of Radiation Therapy Oncology Group grade 1-3 mucositis during CSI (7% vs 44%, P = .03): 1 grade 3 with protons versus 5 grade 1, 3 grade 2, and 2 grade 3 with photons. During CSI, other toxicities (infection, gastrointestinal symptoms) did not differ. Allogeneic stem cell transplant (SCT) was used in 95% of patients, with 53% of patients in remission before SCT. Myeloablative conditioning was used for 76%. During SCT admission and 100 days post-SCT, toxicities did not differ by CSI technique. Successful engraftment occurred in 95% of patients ( P = .67). Progression or death occurred for 47% of patients, with only 1 CNS relapse. Conclusion In our cohort, CSI offered excellent local control for CNS-involved hematologic malignancies in the pre-SCT setting. Acute mucositis occurred less frequently with proton CSI with comparable peritransplant/long-term toxicity profile, suggesting the need to further explore the benefit/toxicity profile of this technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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18. Daily CT guidance improves target coverage during definitive radiation therapy for gastric MALT lymphoma.
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Wang, He, Milgrom, Sarah A., Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Smith, Grace L., Martel, Mary, and Pinnix, Chelsea C.
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Purpose Radiation therapy (RT) for gastric mucosa–associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma is challenging because of variation in the stomach’s position, size, and shape. We investigated the interfractional changes in stomach location, consequent dosimetric effects, and impact of daily computed tomography image guidance RT (CT-IGRT). Methods and materials Twelve patients treated for gastric MALT lymphoma with intensity modulated radiation therapy, using a breath-hold technique and restriction of oral intake, were studied retrospectively. The planning target volume (PTV) comprised a 0.5 to 1.0 cm expansion of the stomach. The prescription dose was 30 Gy in 15 to 20 fractions. CT-IGRT was performed daily using CT-on-Rails. Dosimetry was calculated on 229 daily CT images after bony versus CT-based soft tissue alignment, and doses delivered to the target and adjacent structures were compared with the treatment plan. Target coverage was expressed as the percent of the clinical target volume (CTV) and PTV receiving ≥95% of the prescribed dose (V 95% ). Results The average change in stomach volume was –12.4% (range, –47.6% to 38.6%). The average shift required for target coverage was 1.0 cm (maximum, 2.2 cm). With CT-based alignment to the stomach, the average V 95% was 98.5% for CTV and 94.9% for PTV; with bony alignment, these values were 94.5% and 90.4%, respectively ( P < .01 for CTV and PTV). With bony alignment, the PTV V 95% was ≤90% in 4 patients (33%) over the course of treatment and was as low as 72.5% for 1 fraction. The kidney position varied with respect to the stomach and bony anatomy. Consequently, the dose to the left kidney was higher based on daily CT scans than on planning scans. Dose to other organs at risk did not vary significantly. Conclusions Substantial interfractional variation in stomach volume was observed, despite treatment with breath-hold and restriction of oral intake. Daily CT-IGRT improved target coverage, enabling excellent coverage despite the use of small PTV margins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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19. Outcomes After Chemotherapy Followed by Radiation for Stage IIB Hodgkin Lymphoma With Bulky Disease.
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Reddy, Jay P., Akhtari, Mani, Smith, Grace L., Pinnix, Chelsea, Osborne, Eleanor M., Gunther, Jillian R., Allen, Pamela K., Yehia, Zeinab Abou, Fanale, Michelle, Rodriguez, M. Alma, Fowler, Nathan, Milgrom, Sarah A., Wogan, Christine F., and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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- 2015
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20. ACR Appropriateness Criteria Follow-up of Hodgkin Lymphoma.
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Ha, Chul S., Hodgson, David C., Advani, Ranjana, Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Dhakal, Sughosh, Flowers, Christopher R., Hoppe, Bradford S., Mendenhall, Nancy P., Metzger, Monika L., Plastaras, John P., Roberts, Kenneth B., Shapiro, Ronald, Smith, Sonali, Terezakis, Stephanie A., Winkfield, Karen M., Younes, Anas, and Constine, Louis S.
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The main objectives of follow-up studies after completion of treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma are detection of recurrence for salvage therapy and monitoring for sequelae of treatment. The focus of the follow-up shifts, with time after treatment, from detection of recurrence to long-term sequelae. A majority of recurrence is detected by history and physical examination. The yield for routine imaging studies and blood tests is low. Although routine surveillance CT scan can detect recurrence not detected by history and physical examination, its benefit in ultimate survival and cost-effectiveness is not well defined. Although PET scan is a useful tool in assessing response to treatment, its routine use for follow-up is not recommended. Long-term sequelae of treatment include secondary malignancy, cardiovascular disease, pneumonitis, reproductive dysfunction, and hypothyroidism. Follow-up strategies for these sequelae need to be individualized, as their risks in general depend on the dose and volume of radiation to these organs, chemotherapy, age at treatment, and predisposing factors for each sequela. The ACR Appropriateness Criteria are evidence-based guidelines for specific clinical conditions that are reviewed every 3 years by a multidisciplinary expert panel. The guideline development and review include an extensive analysis of current medical literature from peer-reviewed journals and the application of a well-established consensus methodology (modified Delphi) to rate the appropriateness of imaging and treatment procedures by the panel. In those instances in which evidence is either lacking or not definitive, expert opinion may be used to recommend imaging or treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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21. Primary Mediastinal B Cell Lymphoma in the Positron-Emission Tomography Era Executive Summary of the American Radium Society Appropriate Use Criteria.
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Hoppe, Bradford S., Advani, Ranjana, Milgrom, Sarah A., Bakst, Richard L., Ballas, Leslie K., Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Flowers, Christopher R., Ha, Chul S., Mansur, David B., Metzger, Monika L., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Plastaras, John P., Roberts, Kenneth B., Smith, Sonali M., Terezakis, Stephanie A., Kirwan, Jessica M., and Constine, Louis S.
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B cell lymphoma , *POSITRON emission tomography , *NON-Hodgkin's lymphoma , *TOMOGRAPHY , *TEENAGERS - Abstract
Purpose: Primary mediastinal B cell lymphoma (PMBCL) is a highly curable subtype of non-Hodgkin lymphoma that is diagnosed predominantly in adolescents and young adults. Consequently, long-term treatment-related morbidity is critical to consider when devising treatment strategies that include different chemoimmunotherapy strategies with or without radiation therapy. Furthermore, adaptive approaches using the end-of-chemotherapy (EOC) positron emission tomography (PET)/computed tomography (CT) scanning may help to determine which patients may benefit from additional therapies. We aimed to develop evidence-based guidelines for treating these patients.Methods and Materials: We conducted a systematic review in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guideline using the PubMed database. The ARS expert committee, composed of radiation oncologists, hematologists, and pediatric oncologists, developed consensus guidelines using the modified Delphi framework.Results: Nine studies met the full criteria for inclusion based on reporting outcomes on patients with primary mediastinal B cell lymphoma with EOC PET/CT response scored with the 5-point Deauville scale. These studies formed the evidence for these guidelines in managing patients with PMBCL according to the EOC PET response, including after a 5-point Deauville scale of 1 to 3, 4, or 5, and for patients with relapsed and refractory disease. The expert group also developed guidance on radiation simulation, treatment planning, and plan evaluation based on expert opinion.Conclusions: Various treatment approaches exist in the management of PMBCL, including different chemoimmunotherapy regimens, the use of consolidative radiation therapy, and adaptive approaches based on EOC PET/CT response. These guidelines can be used by practitioners to provide appropriate treatment according to different disease scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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22. A Prospective Trial of Radiation Therapy Efficacy and Toxicity for Localized Mucosa-associated Lymphoid Tissue (MALT) Lymphoma.
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Fang, Penny, Gunther, Jillian R., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Dong, Wenli, Strati, Paolo, Nastoupil, Loretta J., Steiner, Raphael E., Ahmed, Sairah, Damron, Ethan P., Fowler, Nathan, Nair, Ranjit, Westin, Jason R., Neelapu, Sattva, Ha, Chul S., and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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LYMPHOID tissue , *DRUG efficacy , *RADIOTHERAPY , *MALT , *MUCOSA-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma , *LYMPHOMAS , *HELICOBACTER pylori infections - Abstract
Purpose: We report the long-term results of a prospective trial conducted to determine the efficacy and safety of radiation therapy (RT) alone in treating localized mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma.Methods and Materials: Patients with localized MALT lymphoma were eligible and treated with involved field RT to doses of 24 to 39.6 Gy. Relapse-free survival (RFS) was the primary endpoint. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to estimate RFS, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS) defined from time of study entry. Preplanned subgroup analyses were performed based on site of involvement.Results: From 2000 to 2012, 75 patients were accrued; 73 received protocol-specified RT. Median follow-up was 9.8 years. Thirty-four patients had gastric MALT, 17 orbital, 13 head and neck nonorbit, 4 skin, and 5 disease of other sites. Thirteen of 34 patients with gastric MALT were Helicobacter pylori positive at the time of initial diagnosis and underwent 1 to 3 courses of triple antibiotic therapy. All gastric MALT patients had documented persistent MALT without H. pylori on endoscopy before enrollment in the study. All patients achieved a complete response with a median time of 3 months. Eleven patients (15%) had disease relapse, 9 of which were at sites outside the RT field with median time to progression of 38.3 months. Median PFS was 17.5 years, and median RFS and OS were not reached. The 10-year relapse-free rate was 83% (95% confidence interval [CI], 74%-93%). The 10-year PFS rate was 71% (95% CI, 60%-84%). The 10-year OS rate was 86% (95% CI, 77%-96%). RFS, PFS, and OS did not differ by disease site (P = .17, .43, and .50, respectively). All relapses were successfully salvaged. One patient developed metastatic gastric adenocarcinoma and was found to also have recurrent MALT on biopsy. Otherwise, all relapsed patients were alive without evidence of disease at last follow-up, and no patient died of MALT lymphoma. Sixty-seven patients (92%) experienced acute toxicity during radiation, all of which were grade 1 and 2, with only 1 grade 3 toxicity. Twenty-two patients (30%) experienced late toxicity, with only 1 grade 3 toxicity.Conclusions: This prospective study confirms that RT for MALT lymphoma provides excellent long-term RFS with acceptable rates of toxicity. Current efforts are focused on RT de-escalation in an effort to further avoid treatment-related morbidity. CLINICALTRIALS.GOV: NCT04465162. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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23. Daily computed tomography image guidance: Dosimetric advantages outweigh low-dose radiation exposure for treatment of mediastinal lymphoma.
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Zhu, Lin L., Martin, Rachael M., Gunther, Jillian R., Wong, Pei-Fong, Hancock, Donald, Moreno, Amy C., Dabaja, Bouthaina S., and Pinnix, Chelsea C.
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RADIATION exposure , *INTENSITY modulated radiotherapy , *IMAGE , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
CT-guided treatment delivery can improve target localization in mediastinal lymphoma patients treated with "butterfly" intensity-modulated radiotherapy and deep-inspiration breath hold. Although daily CT imaging adds additional radiation exposure, its use may be justified given the greater normal tissue sparing enabled by PTV margin reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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24. Mitigating the impact of COVID-19 on oncology: Clinical and operational lessons from a prospective radiation oncology cohort tested for COVID-19.
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Ning, Matthew S., McAleer, Mary Frances, Jeter, Melenda D., Minsky, Bruce D., Ghafar, Robert A., Robinson, Ivy J., Nitsch, Paige L., Zaebst, Denise J., Todd, Sarah E., Nguyen, Jennifer, Lin, Steven H., Liao, Zhongxing, Lee, Percy, Gunn, G. Brandon, Klopp, Ann H., Dabaja, Bouthaina S., Nguyen, Quynh-Nhu, Chronowski, Gregory M., Bloom, Elizabeth S., and Koong, Albert C.
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COVID-19 , *ADULT respiratory distress syndrome , *COVID-19 pandemic , *SARS-CoV-2 , *TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
• Prospective cohort of 121 cancer patients tested for SARS-CoV-2 over 35 days. • Of 7 positive cases, 6 were admitted with 4 warranting intensive care, and 2 died. • RT was delayed in one-third of patients while awaiting RT-PCR test results. • With a dual PPE policy, newly quarantined employees decreased 6-fold per day. • Each patient was an exposure risk to 5 employees, most commonly RTTs (38%) The COVID-19 pandemic warrants operational initiatives to minimize transmission, particularly among cancer patients who are thought to be at high-risk. Within our department, a multidisciplinary tracer team prospectively monitored all patients under investigation, tracking their test status, treatment delays, clinical outcomes, employee exposures, and quarantines. Prospective cohort tested for SARS-COV-2 infection over 35 consecutive days of the early pandemic (03/19/2020–04/22/2020). A total of 121 Radiation Oncology patients underwent RT-PCR testing during this timeframe. Of the 7 (6%) confirmed-positive cases, 6 patients were admitted (4 warranting intensive care), and 2 died from acute respiratory distress syndrome. Radiotherapy was deferred or interrupted for 40 patients awaiting testing. As the median turnaround time for RT-PCR testing decreased from 1.5 (IQR: 1–4) to ≤1-day (P < 0.001), the median treatment delay also decreased from 3.5 (IQR: 1.75–5) to 1 business day (IQR: 1–2) P < 0.001]. Each patient was an exposure risk to a median of 5 employees (IQR: 3–6.5) through prolonged close contact. During this timeframe, 39 care-team members were quarantined for a median of 3 days (IQR: 2–11), with a peak of 17 employees simultaneously quarantined. Following implementation of a "dual PPE policy," newly quarantined employees decreased from 2.9 to 0.5 per day. The severe adverse events noted among these confirmed-positive cases support the notion that cancer patients are vulnerable to COVID-19. Active tracking, rapid diagnosis, and aggressive source control can mitigate the adverse effects on treatment delays, workforce incapacitation, and ideally outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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25. Deep-Inspiration Breath-Hold Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy to the Mediastinum for Lymphoma Patients: Setup Uncertainties and Margins.
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Aristophanous, Michalis, Chi, Pai-Chun M., Kao, Jeremy, Williamson, Ryan, Tung, Sam, Andraos, Therese, Milgrom, Sarah A., Pinnix, Chelsea C., and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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RADIOTHERAPY , *BREATH holding , *PATIENT positioning , *ALGORITHMS , *ABDOMINAL tumors , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *AXILLA , *COMPUTED tomography , *HEART , *LYMPHOMAS , *MEDIASTINUM , *COMPUTERS in medicine , *RESPIRATION , *TIME , *UNCERTAINTY ,MEDIASTINAL tumors - Abstract
Purpose: Patient setup for treating large target volumes can be challenging. In the present study, we measured the local uncertainties in the treatment of mediastinal lymphoma and investigated the need for region-specific planning target volume (PTV) margins.Methods and Materials: The data from 30 patients who had undergone radiation therapy for mediastinal lymphoma were retrospectively analyzed. A computed tomography (CT)-on-rails (CTOR) system in the treatment room was used for daily image guidance. The total PTV was split into 6 regions: neck, supraclavicular fossa, axilla, mediastinum, upper heart, and lower heart. The total PTV and the 6 local regions were separately aligned to the planning CT scan using automatic rigid registration. The residual local errors using 3 setup strategies were investigated: no image guidance, CTOR setup to total PTV, and simulated cone beam CT setup to the mediastinum. Errors were recorded in the anteroposterior, superoinferior, and right-left directions separately. Using the residual error calculations, the margins required to cover 95% of the clinical target volume for 90% of the patients was estimated.Results: For each patient, 12 to 21 days of daily CTOR data were available for analysis. The residual errors for the total PTV and mediastinum setups were both smaller than those with no image guidance. The lower heart region had more uncertainty with all 3 setup strategies. Margin analysis revealed that the magnitude of the margin is dependent on the imaging strategy, direction, and local region inside the PTV. Margins >7 mm are necessary to account for uncertainty in the neck, lower heart, and axilla regions even under daily CT guidance.Conclusions: Setup uncertainties in the mediastinum are not uniform and are dependent on target location and imaging strategy. However, with the appropriate margin, we can target regions that might not be visualized with the available on-board imager system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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26. Chemotherapy Response Assessment by FDG-PET-CT in Early-stage Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma: Moving Beyond the Five-Point Deauville Score.
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Milgrom, Sarah A., Dong, Wenli, Akhtari, Mani, Smith, Grace L., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Mawlawi, Osama, Rohren, Eric, Garg, Naveen, Chuang, Hubert, Yehia, Zeinab Abou, Reddy, Jay P., Gunther, Jillian R., Khoury, Joseph D., Suki, Tina, Osborne, Eleanor M., Oki, Yasuhiro, Fanale, Michelle, and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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HODGKIN'S disease , *HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *CANCER chemotherapy , *CANCER relapse , *CANCER invasiveness , *FLUORODEOXYGLUCOSE F18 , *POSITRON emission tomography , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Purpose: In early-stage classical Hodgkin lymphoma, fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET)-computed tomography (CT) scans are performed routinely after chemotherapy, and the 5-point Deauville score is used to report the disease response. We hypothesized that other PET-CT parameters, considered in combination with Deauville score, would improve risk stratification.Methods and Materials: Patients treated for stage I to II Hodgkin lymphoma from 2003 to 2013, who were aged ≥18 years and had analyzable PET-CT scans performed before and after chemotherapy, were eligible. The soft tissue volume (STV), maximum standardized uptake value, metabolic tumor volume, and total lesion glycolysis were recorded from the PET-CT scans before and after chemotherapy. Reductions were defined as 1 - (final PET-CT value)/(corresponding initial PET-CT value). The primary endpoint was freedom from progression (FFP).Results: For 202 patients treated with chemotherapy with or without radiation therapy, the 5-year FFP was 89% (95% confidence interval 85%-93%). All PET-CT parameters were strongly associated with the Deauville score (P<.001) and FFP (P<.0001) on univariate analysis. The Deauville score was highly predictive of FFP (C-index 0.89) but was less discriminating in the Deauville 1 to 4 subset (C-index 0.67). Therefore, we aimed to identify PET-CT parameters that would improve risk stratification for this subgroup (n=187). STV reduction was predictive of outcome (C-index 0.71) and was dichotomized with an optimal cutoff of 0.65 (65% reduction in STV). A model incorporating the Deauville score and STV reduction predicted FFP more accurately than either measurement alone in the Deauville 1 to 4 subset (C-index 0.83). The improvement in predictive accuracy of this composite measure compared with the Deauville score alone met statistical significance (P=.045).Conclusions: The relative reduction in tumor size is an independent predictor of outcome. Combined with the Deauville score, it might improve risk stratification and contribute to response-adapted individualization of therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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27. Does Bleomycin Lung Toxicity Increase the Risk of Radiation Pneumonitis in Hodgkin Lymphoma?
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Abou Yehia, Zeinab, Mikhaeel, George N., Smith, Grace, Pinnix, Chelsea C., Milgrom, Sarah A., Tang, Chad, Jiang, Wen, Fanale, Michelle A., Oki, Yasuhiro, Shank, JoAnn H., Horace, Trisha, Reddy, Jay, Akhtari, Mani, Gunther, Jillian R., Suki, Tina, Allen, Pamela K., Turner, Shryll, Mawlawi, Osama, and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *RADIATION pneumonitis , *BLEOMYCIN , *TOXICITY testing , *RADIOTHERAPY , *DISEASE risk factors , *THERAPEUTICS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *ANTINEOPLASTIC antibiotics , *COMBINED modality therapy , *DOXORUBICIN , *HODGKIN'S disease , *LUNGS , *REGRESSION analysis , *RISK assessment , *TIME , *VINBLASTINE , *DISEASE incidence , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *SALVAGE therapy , *DACARBAZINE , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Purpose: Bleomycin pulmonary toxicity (BPT) is a well-known complication of treatment in patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL). We undertook the present study to investigate the risk of radiation pneumonitis (RP) in the setting of BPT and to determine the need for delay or omission of radiation therapy (RT) in these patients.Methods and Materials: We identified 123 HL patients treated with ABVD (Adriamycin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine) followed by RT to the chest from January 2009 to December 2014. The medical records were reviewed for clinical, pathologic, and treatment information and toxicities. Our primary outcome was RP of any grade. Univariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess the association of BPT, baseline patient characteristics, and treatment variables with the incidence of RP.Results: A total of 123 patients were included, of whom 99 (80%) received consolidation intensity modulated RT after ABVD treatment. We identified 31 patients (25.2%) with BPT after frontline ABVD. Seventeen patients (13.8%) developed RP a median of 8 weeks (range 1-39) after RT completion. BPT did not correlate with the risk of developing RP (P=.36). We evaluated the RP outcomes with respect to the bleomycin to RT interval (≤6 weeks vs >6 weeks), and we found that this interval did not predict for RP risk (P=.60). Dosimetric parameters such as the volume covered by 5 Gy and the mean lung dose were analyzed. A volume covered by 5 Gy of >55% and mean lung dose >13.5 Gy increased the risk of RP by 1.14-fold (P=.002) and 4.24-fold (P=.007), respectively.Conclusions: The results of our study suggest that BPT does not increase the risk of developing RP. Furthermore, RT initiation does not need to be delayed after chemotherapy, except to allow for the completion of steroid therapy or clinical recovery from BPT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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28. Treatment of Early-Stage Unfavorable Hodgkin Lymphoma: Efficacy and Toxicity of 4 Versus 6 Cycles of ABVD Chemotherapy With Radiation.
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Gunther, Jillian R., Fanale, Michelle A., Reddy, Jay P., Akhtari, Mani, Smith, Grace L., Pinnix, Chelsea C., Milgrom, Sarah A., Yehia, Zeinab Abou, Allen, Pamela K., Osborne, Eleanor M., Mawlawi, Osama, and Dabaja, Bouthaina S.
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HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *CANCER chemotherapy , *CANCER radiotherapy , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of radiation , *CANCER invasiveness , *DOXORUBICIN , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *BLEOMYCIN , *DRUG administration , *HODGKIN'S disease , *PROGNOSIS , *RADIATION injuries , *SURVIVAL , *TUMOR classification , *VINBLASTINE , *COMORBIDITY , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE prevalence , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DACARBAZINE , *PREVENTION ,DISEASE relapse prevention - Abstract
Purpose: The German Hodgkin Study Group HD11 trial validated 4 cycles of doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, dacarbazine (ABVD) chemotherapy followed by involved field radiation therapy (IFRT) for early unfavorable Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients. However, practitioners often recommend 6 cycles followed by RT, especially for bulky disease. We compared patient outcomes after treatment with 4 or 6 cycles of ABVD followed by RT (IFRT and involved site RT [ISRT]).Methods and Materials: We identified 128 patients treated for early unfavorable HL (GHSG criteria) between 2000 and 2013. Clinical outcomes (overall survival [OS] and freedom from relapse [FFR]) were estimated using Kaplan-Meier analysis. Toxicities were evaluated.Results: The median follow-up time was 5.0 years. Patients received 4 (70 patients, 55%) or 6 (58 patients, 45%) cycles of chemotherapy. Bulky disease was present in 22 patients (31%; 0 stage IA, 3 stage IB, 19 stage IIA) of the 4-cycle group and 42 patients (72%; 5 stage IA, 3 stage IB, 34 stage IIA) of the 6-cycle group. For patients receiving 4 and 6 cycles, the 6-year OS was 100% and 97% (P=.35), respectively, and the 6 year FFR was 100% and 98% (P=.28), respectively. More patients received 6 cycles if they were treated before 2010 (HD11 report) (P=.01) and if they had bulky disease (P<.01). Sixty-eight percent of patients received ISRT. The 6-year FFR was 99% and 100% for patients receiving ISRT and IFRT, respectively (P=.58). More patients experienced bleomycin pulmonary toxicity in the 6-cycle group (20% vs 31%, P=.16). For patients with bulky disease, the 4-year FFR was similar with receipt of 4 (100%) or 6 (98%) cycles (P=.48) and IFRT (100%) or ISRT (98%) (P=.52). There were no deaths among patients with bulky disease.Conclusions: Patients with early unfavorable HL have excellent outcomes with 4 cycles of ABVD chemotherapy followed by ISRT. Six cycles of chemotherapy does not appear superior for disease control, even for bulky disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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29. Comprehensive craniospinal radiation for controlling central nervous system leukemia.
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Walker, Gary V, Shihadeh, Ferial, Kantarjian, Hagop, Allen, Pamela, Rondon, Gabriela, Kebriaei, Partow, O'Brien, Susan, Kedir, Aziza, Said, Mustefa, Grant, Jonathan D, Thomas, Deborah A, Gidley, Paul W, Arzu, Isidora, Pinnix, Chelsea, Reed, Valerie, and Dabaja, Bouthaina S
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine the benefit of radiation therapy (RT) in resolution of neurologic symptoms and deficits and whether the type of RT fields influences central nervous system (CNS) control in adults with CNS leukemia.Methods and Materials: A total of 163 adults from 1996 to 2012 were retrospectively analyzed. Potential associations between use of radiation and outcome were investigated by univariate and multivariate analysis.Results: The median survival time was 3.8 months after RT. Common presenting symptoms were headache in 79 patients (49%), cranial nerve VII deficit in 46 (28%), and cranial nerve II deficit in 44 (27%). RT was delivered to the base of skull in 48 patients (29%), to the whole brain (WB) in 67 (41%), and to the craniospinal axis (CS) in 48 (29%). Among 149 patients with a total of 233 deficits, resolution was observed in 34 deficits (15%), improvement in 126 deficits (54%), stability in 34 deficits (15%), and progression in 39 deficits (17%). The 12-month CNS progression-free survival was 77% among those receiving CS/WB and 51% among those receiving base of skull RT (P=.02). On multivariate analysis, patients who did not undergo stem cell transplantation after RT and base of skull RT were associated with worse CNS progression-free survival.Conclusions: Improvement or resolution of symptoms occurred in two thirds of deficits after RT. Comprehensive radiation to the WB or CS seems to offer a better outcome, especially in isolated CNS involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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