44 results on '"Marcus, Karen"'
Search Results
2. The potential role of MR-guided adaptive radiotherapy in pediatric oncology: Results from a SIOPE-COG survey
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Seravalli, Enrica, Kroon, Petra S., Buatti, John M., Hall, Matthew D., Mandeville, Henry C., Marcus, Karen J., Onal, Cem, Ozyar, Enis, Paulino, Arnold C., Paulsen, Frank, Saunders, Daniel, Tsang, Derek S., Wolden, Suzanne L., and Janssens, Geert O.
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- 2021
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3. Mucoepidermoid carcinoma of the head and neck in children
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Dombrowski, Natasha D., Wolter, Nikolaus E., Irace, Alexandria L., Cunningham, Michael J., Mack, Jennifer W., Marcus, Karen J., Vargas, Sara O., Perez-Atayde, Antonio R., Robson, Caroline D., and Rahbar, Reza
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- 2019
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4. Paediatric radiation oncology in the care of childhood cancer: A position paper by the International Paediatric Radiation Oncology Society (PROS)
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Kortmann, Rolf-Dieter, Freeman, Carolyn, Marcus, Karen, Claude, Line, Dieckmann, Karin, Halperin, Edward, Esiashvili, Natia, Paulino, Arnold, Mahajan, Anita, Seiersen, Klaus, Ahern, Verity, Ricardi, Umberto, and Carrie, Christian
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- 2016
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5. Early detection of myocardial dysfunction in children with mitochondrial disease: An ultrasound and two-dimensional strain echocardiography study
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Marcus, Karen A., Barends, Marlieke, Morava-Kozicz, Eva, Feuth, Ton, de Korte, Chris L., and Kapusta, Livia
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CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *JUVENILE diseases , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *TWO-dimensional echocardiography , *MITOCHONDRIAL pathology , *DEATH rate - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Myocardial dysfunction in children diagnosed with mitochondrial disease is an ominous sign and has been associated with substantial increased mortality rates. Early detection of cardiac involvement would therefore be desirable. Two dimensional strain echocardiography (2DSTE) has proven to be more sensitive than conventional echocardiography for the detection of early myocardial dysfunction in various (cardiac) conditions. Aims: To determine left ventricular systolic function in children with mitochondrial disorders by means of physical examination, electrocardiography (ECG), conventional echocardiography and 2DSTE. Methods: A total of 27 children with established mitochondrial disease and 54 age-matched control subjects underwent cardiac evaluation. Longitudinal, circumferential and radial peak systolic strain (S) values were determined as well as peak systolic strain rate (Sr) and the time to peak global systolic strain (T2P). One Way analysis of Variance was performed to assess the influence of the presence of mitochondrial disease on conventional echocardiographic and 2DSTE outcomes. Results: Conventional echocardiographic findings did not indicate systolic left ventricular dysfunction. Global peak S, Sr and T2P measurements in all three directions were significantly lower in children with mitochondrial disease (P <0.001) when compared to controls. Conclusion: 2DSTE detects alterations in myocardial systolic function in children diagnosed with mitochondrial disease, whose conventional echocardiographic findings did not indicate ventricular systolic dysfunction. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2011
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6. ACR Appropriateness Criteria® : Single Brain Metastasis.
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Suh, John H., Videtic, Gregory M. M., Aref, Amr M., Germano, Isabelle, Goldsmith, Brian J., Imperato, Joseph P., Marcus, Karen J., McDermott, Michael W., McDonald, Mark W., Patchell, Roy A., Robins, H. Ian, Rogers, C. Leland, Wolfson, Aaron H., Wippold II, Franz J., and Gaspar, Laurie E.
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METASTASIS ,CANCER genetics ,BRAIN cancer ,RADIOSURGERY ,CANCER invasiveness - Abstract
Single brain metastasis represents a common neurologic complication of cancer. Given the number of treatment options that are available for patients with brain metastasis and the strong opinions that are associated with each option, appropriate treatment for these patients has become controversial. Prognostic factors such as recursive partitioning analysis and graded prognostic assessment can help guide treatment decisions. Surgery, whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT), stereotactic radiosurgery or combination of these treatments con be considered based an a number of factors. Despite Class I evidence suggestive of best therapy, the treatment recommendation is quite varied among physicians as demonstrated by the American College of Radiolagy's Appropriateness Panel an single brain metastasis. Given the potential concerns of the neurocognitive effects of WBRT, the use of SRS alone or SRS to a resection cavity has gained support. Since aggressive local therapy is beneficial for survival, local control and quality of life, the use of these various treatment modalities needs to be carefully investigated given the growing number of long-term survivors. Enrollment of patients onto clinical trials is important to advance our understanding of brain metastasis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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7. Head and Neck Carcinomas Across the Age Spectrum: Epidemiology, Therapy, and Late Effects.
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Marcus, Karen J. and Tishler, Roy B.
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Carcinomas of the head and neck occur in both children and adults, but notable differences exist in their relative frequency, pathologic subtypes, etiologies, presenting symptoms, and late effects. In contrast, treatment strategies are similar depending on the disease type and distribution at the time of diagnosis. Thus, in adult patients, squamous cell carcinomas or one of its variants are the most common malignancies in the head and neck. However, in children, cancers of the head/neck are most commonly rhabdomyosarcomas, lymphomas, including Hodgkin''s lymphoma, lymphoblastic lymphomas, and Burkitt''s lymphoma or neuroblastoma. Epithelial cancers are unusual in the pediatric population, with the exception of nasopharyngeal carcinoma. Although nasopharyngeal carcinoma is a rare disease in children, representing less than 1% of childhood cancers, it does constitute 20%-50% of pediatric malignancies of the nasopharynx. This is one of the few malignant tumors in children that arise from the epithelium. Despite the differences between the diseases in children from that in adults, the management strategy has been based largely on the experience in adults. This review will describe the epidemiology, etiology, management, and late effects in children and adults, and offer explanations for both the similarities and differences. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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8. Hepatoblastoma presenting with focal nodular hyperplasia after treatment of neuroblastoma.
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Gutweiler, Jordan R., Yu, David C., Kim, Heung B., Kozakewich, Harry P., Marcus, Karen J., Shamberger, Robert C., and Weldon, Christopher B.
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NEUROBLASTOMA ,HYPERPLASIA ,LIVER tumors ,NEEDLE biopsy ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,TUMORS in children ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Abstract: Focal nodular hyperplasia (FNH) is a benign, poorly understood hepatic tumor that is rare in children. Although there is no evidence for malignant degeneration, FNH can occur adjacent to a malignancy. Here, the case of a 4-year-old boy with a hepatic mass and history of stage IV neuroblastoma is presented. Initial imaging and core-needle biopsy were consistent with FNH. However, after left lateral segmentectomy, pathologic examination revealed a malignant tumor most consistent with small cell undifferentiated hepatoblastoma as well as 3 foci of FNH in the surrounding parenchyma. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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9. Changes in Cerebral Cortex of Children Treated for Medulloblastoma
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Liu, Arthur K., Marcus, Karen J., Fischl, Bruce, Grant, P. Ellen, Young Poussaint, Tina, Rivkin, Michael J., Davis, Peter, Tarbell, Nancy J., and Yock, Torunn I.
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CEREBRAL cortex , *MEDULLOBLASTOMA , *SURGERY , *DRUG therapy - Abstract
Purpose: Children with medulloblastoma undergo surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy. After treatment, these children have numerous structural abnormalities. Using high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging, we measured the thickness of the cerebral cortex in a group of medulloblastoma patients and a group of normally developing children. Methods and Materials: We obtained magnetic resonance imaging scans and measured the cortical thickness in 9 children after treatment of medulloblastoma. The measurements from these children were compared with the measurements from age- and gender-matched normally developing children previously scanned. For additional comparison, the pattern of thickness change was compared with the cortical thickness maps from a larger group of 65 normally developing children. Results: In the left hemisphere, relatively thinner cortex was found in the perirolandic region and the parieto-occipital lobe. In the right hemisphere, relatively thinner cortex was found in the parietal lobe, posterior superior temporal gyrus, and lateral temporal lobe. These regions of cortical thinning overlapped with the regions of cortex that undergo normal age-related thinning. Conclusion: The spatial distribution of cortical thinning suggested that the areas of cortex that are undergoing development are more sensitive to the effects of treatment of medulloblastoma. Such quantitative methods may improve our understanding of the biologic effects that treatment has on the cerebral development and their neuropsychological implications. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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10. Transverse Myelitis After Therapy For Primitive Neuroectodermal Tumors
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Ullrich, Nicole J., Marcus, Karen, Pomeroy, Scott L., Turner, Christopher D., Zimmerman, MaryAnn, Lehmann, Leslie E., Scott, R. Michael, Goumnerova, Liliana, Gillan, Eileen, Kieran, Mark W., and Chi, Susan N.
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DRUG therapy , *STEM cells , *NERVOUS system , *TUMORS in children - Abstract
Traditional therapy for malignant primitive neuroectodermal tumors in children includes surgery, multi-agent chemotherapy, and radiation. Given the poor prognosis with conventional therapy alone, newer treatment approaches have incorporated high-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell rescue. Treatment with chemotherapy and radiation is not without unanticipated and unwanted side effects. Specifically, radiation-induced damage to the central nervous system can occur, though the frequency is thought to be acceptably low. This report describes two cases of treatment-related transverse myelitis in patients who received induction chemotherapy and craniospinal irradiation followed by high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell rescue. Other patients treated with a similar strategy but different sequence and timing of treatment did not experience symptoms of myelitis, suggesting that the specific timing of radiation in relationship to the chemotherapy may be of critical importance. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2006
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11. Aggressive surgical therapy and radiotherapy for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma treated with rapid sequence tandem transplant.
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von Allmen, Daniel, Grupp, Stephan, Diller, Lisa, Marcus, Karen, Ecklund, Kirsten, Meyer, James, and Shamberger, Robert C.
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SURGICAL excision ,NERVOUS system tumors ,NEUROBLASTOMA ,TUMORS in children - Abstract
Abstract: Background/Purpose: The treatment approach for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma has been one of dose intensification chemotherapy and aggressive treatment of the primary tumor. Local tumor control is examined in high-risk patients treated with tandem stem cell transplant, aggressive surgery, and selected radiation therapy (XRT). Methods: Seventy-six patients with high-risk stage III/IV neuroblastoma were treated on a standard protocol incorporating aggressive surgical resection with or without local XRT followed by tandem high-dose chemotherapy and stem cell rescue. Patients were evaluated for degree of surgical resection, site of progression, and outcome. Results: Overall event-free survival for the series is 56%. Forty-eight had gross total resection, 12 had greater than 90% resection, 10 had 50% to 90% resection, and 6 had biopsy only or no surgery. Surgical complications occurred in 29% with no deaths. There were no isolated local failures. Two patients had local recurrence after gross total resection. Surgeon assessment of completeness of resection agreed with postoperative radiological findings 66% of the time. Conclusion: Aggressive surgical treatment with local XRT and myeloablative chemotherapy with stem cell rescue provides excellent local control in high-risk neuroblastoma, although distant failures, particularly osseous, remain a problem. Poor correlation exists between the surgeon''s perception of completeness of resection and findings on postoperative imaging studies. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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12. Stereotactic radiotherapy for localized low-grade gliomas in children: Final results of a prospective trial
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Marcus, Karen J., Goumnerova, Liliana, Billett, Amy L., Lavally, Beverly, Scott, R. Michael, Bishop, Karyn, Xu, Rhongi, Young Poussaint, Tina, Kieran, Mark, Kooy, Hanne, Pomeroy, Scott L., and Tarbell, Nancy J.
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BRAIN tumors , *GLIOMAS , *JUVENILE diseases , *RADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the efficacy of stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT) for small, localized, pediatric brain tumors and to determine the patterns of failure. Methods and materials: A total of 81 patients were enrolled in an institutional review board–approved prospective Dana-Farber Cancer Institute protocol between 1992 and 1998. Of the 81 patients, 50 had low-grade astrocytoma, 23 had residual or recurrent craniopharyngioma, 4 had posterior fossa ependymoma, and 4 had other histologic types. All patients underwent biopsy for diagnosis, with the exception of patients with neurofibromatosis and radiographic evidence of an optic system tumor. The neurocognitive outcome for all patients was also an endpoint of the study and will be reported separately. This report focused on the patients with low-grade gliomas only. Of the 50 patients, 26 were males and 24 females; the median age was 9 years (range, 2–26 years). The indications for treatment of patients with low-grade gliomas were progression during or after chemotherapy or progression after surgery alone. SRT was delivered using a dedicated 6-MV linear accelerator. Immobilization was accomplished with a removable head-frame. CT and MRI fusion was used for treatment planning. The target volume generally included the preoperative tumor plus a 2-mm margin for the planning target volume. The median collimator size was 47.25 mm (range, 30–60 mm). Three to nine arcs were used to deliver a mean total dose of 52.2 Gy in 1.8-Gy daily fractions. Results: With a median follow-up of 6.9 years (range, 0.9–10.2 years), the progression-free survival rate was 82.5% at 5 years and 65% at 8 years. The overall survival was 97.8% at 5 years and 82% at 8 years. Six patients had local progression. Two of the patients with local progression had pathologic progression to anaplastic astrocytoma 3 and 7 years after initial SRT. Five patients, all with optic system/hypothalamic primary tumors, developed central nervous system dissemination 1.0–7.4 years after SRT. One patient developed a presumed radiation-induced primitive neuroectodermal tumor 6 years after initial treatment. Six patients died, three of dissemination, two of progression to higher grade tumors, and one of a secondary radiation-induced tumor. All 6 cases of local progression were within the primary tumor bed at the time of progression and had received the full prescription dose. No marginal failures occurred. Conclusion: Stereotactic radiotherapy provides excellent local control for children with small, localized low-grade glial tumors. Marginal failures have not been observed, supporting the use of limited margins to minimize late sequelae using stereotactic immobilization and planning techniques. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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13. A phase I trial of etanidazole and hyperfractionated radiotherapy in children with diffuse brainstem glioma
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Marcus, Karen J., Dutton, Sharon C., Barnes, Patrick, Coleman, C.Norman, Pomeroy, Scott L., Goumnerova, Liliana, Billett, Amy L., Kieran, Mark, and Tarbell, Nancy J.
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RADIOTHERAPY , *BRAIN stem , *GLIOMAS - Abstract
: PurposeTo determine the toxicity and maximum tolerated dose of etanidazole administered concurrently with hyperfractionated radiation therapy (HRT) for children with brainstem glioma.: Methods and materialsEighteen patients with brainstem glioma were treated with etanidazole and HRT on a dose escalation protocol (Phase I trial) between 1990 and 1996. All patients had MRI confirmation of diffuse pontine glioma and signs/symptoms of cranial nerve deficit, ataxia, or long tract signs of <6 months’ duration. Cervicomedullary tumors were excluded. Patients (median age: 8.5 years; 11 males, 7 females) received HRT to the tumor volume plus a 2-cm margin with parallel-opposed 6–15-MV photons. The total dose was 66 Gy in 44 fractions (1.5 Gy b.i.d., with at least 6 h between fractions) for the first 3 patients and 63 Gy in 42 fractions for the subsequent 15 patients. Etanidazole was administered as a rapid i.v. infusion 30 min before the morning fraction of HRT. Planned doses of etanidazole were 1.8 g/m2 × 17 doses (30.6 g/m2) at Step 1 to a maximum of 2.4 g/m2 × 21 doses (50.4 g/m2) at Step 8. Dose escalation was planned with 3 patients at each of the 8 levels.: ResultsThree patients were treated at each dose level except Level 2, on which only 1 patient was treated. The highest dose level achieved was Level 7, which delivered a total etanidazole dose of 46.2 g/m2. Two patients were treated at this level, and both patients experienced Grade 3 toxicity in the form of a diffuse cutaneous rash. Three patients received a lower dose of 42 g/m2 (dose Level 6) without significant toxicity, and this represents the maximum tolerated dose (MTD). There were 23 cases of Grade 1 toxicity (10 vomiting, 5 peripheral neuropathy, 2 rash, 2 constipation, 1 weight loss, 3 others), 11 cases of Grade 2 toxicity (4 vomiting, 2 skin erythema, 2 constipation, 1 arthralgia, 1 urinary retention, 1 hematologic), and 4 Grade 3 toxicities (2 rash, 1 vomiting, 1 skin desquamation). Grade 2 or 3 peripheral neuropathy was not seen at any dose level. The median survival from the start of treatment was 8.5 months (range: 3–58 months).: ConclusionThe MTD of etanidazole in children receiving HRT for brainstem glioma is 42 g/m2, with cutaneous rash as the dose-limiting toxicity. This is in contrast to the adult experience, which demonstrates a 24% lower MTD of 34 g/m2 limited by peripheral neuropathy. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2003
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14. Fibrolamellar carcinoma: An entity all its own.
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O'Neill, Allison F., Church, Alanna J., Perez-Atayde, Antonio R., Shaikh, Raja, Marcus, Karen J., and Vakili, Khashayar
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YOUNG adults ,CHIMERIC proteins ,CARCINOMA ,DIAGNOSIS ,BIOLOGICALS - Abstract
Fibrolamellar carcinoma (FLC) is a rare malignant entity arising from the liver and primarily affecting patients in late adolescence and young adulthood. FLC tumors are characterized by their unique histologic features and an only recently discovered genomic alteration: a chimeric fusion protein found in nearly all tumors. The rarity of these tumors coupled with the only recent acknowledgement of this genomic abnormality has likely led to disease under-recognition and de-prioritization of collaborative efforts aimed at establishing an evidence-guided standard of care. Surgical resection undoubtedly remains a mainstay of therapy and a necessity for cure but given the incidence of metastatic disease at diagnosis and high rates of distant relapse, systemic therapies remain a key component of disease control. There are few systemic therapies that have demonstrated proven benefit. Recent efforts have galvanized around single-institute or small consortia-based studies specifically focused on the enrollment of patients with FLC or use of agents with biologic rationale. This review will outline the current state of FLC epidemiology, histology, biology and trialed therapies derived from available published literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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15. A User's Guide and Summary of Pediatric Normal Tissue Effects in the Clinic (PENTEC): Radiation Dose-Volume Response for Adverse Effects After Childhood Cancer Therapy and Future Directions.
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Constine, Louis S., Marks, Lawrence B., Milano, Michael T., Ronckers, Cécile M., Jackson, Andrew, Hudson, Melissa M., Marcus, Karen J., Hodgson, David C., Hua, Chia-Ho, Howell, Rebecca M., Marples, Brian, Yorke, Ellen, Olch, Arthur, and Bentzen, Soren M.
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CHILDHOOD cancer , *CANCER treatment , *POISONS , *RADIATION , *MEDICAL physics - Abstract
Pediatric Normal Tissue Effects in the Clinic (PENTEC) is an international multidisciplinary effort that aims to summarize normal-tissue toxicity risks based on published dose-volume data from studies of children and adolescents treated with radiation therapy (RT) for cancer. With recognition that children are uniquely vulnerable to treatment-related toxic effects, our mission and challenge was to assemble our group of physicians (radiation and pediatric oncologists, subspecialists), physicists with clinical and modeling expertise, epidemiologists, and other scientists to develop evidence-based radiation dosimetric guidelines, as affected by developmental status and other factors (eg, other cancer therapies and host factors). These quantitative toxicity risk estimates could serve to inform RT planning and thereby improve outcomes. Tandem goals included the description of relevant medical physics issues specific to pediatric RT and the proposal of dose-volume outcome reporting standards to inform future studies. We created 19 organ-specific task forces and methodology to unravel the wealth of data from heterogeneous published studies. This report provides a high-level summary of PENTEC's genesis, methods, key findings, and associated concepts that affected our work and an explanation of how our findings may be interpreted and applied in the clinic. We acknowledge our predecessors in these efforts, and we pay homage to the children whose lives informed us and to future generations who we hope will benefit from this additional step in our path forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Biodevelopmental Considerations in Pediatric Patients With Cancer and Childhood Cancer Survivors: A PENTEC Introductory Review.
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Bates, James E., Marples, Brian, Hudson, Melissa M., Williams, AnnaLynn M., Marcus, Karen, Howell, Rebecca, Paulino, Arnold, and Constine, Louis S.
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CHILDHOOD cancer , *CHILD patients , *CANCER patients , *CANCER survivors - Published
- 2024
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17. Breast Hypoplasia and Decreased Lactation From Radiation Therapy in Survivors of Pediatric Malignancy: A PENTEC Comprehensive Review.
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Lo, Andrea C., Ronckers, Cecile, Aznar, Marianne C., Avanzo, Michele, van Dijk, Irma, Kremer, Leontien C.M., Gagliardi, Giovanna, Howell, Rebecca M., Rancati, Tiziana, Constine, Louis S., and Marcus, Karen J.
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PEDIATRIC therapy , *LACTATION , *RADIOTHERAPY , *YOUNG adults , *MEDICAL dosimetry - Abstract
Breast hypoplasia and impaired lactation are poorly studied sequelae of chest radiation therapy (RT) in children. The Pediatric Normal Tissue Effects in the Clinic female breast task force aimed to quantitate the radiation dose-volume effects on these endpoints. A literature search was conducted of peer-reviewed manuscripts evaluating breast hypoplasia and lactation after chest RT in children, yielding 789 abstracts. Only 2 studies on children irradiated at <4 years of age for angioma of the breast provided dosimetric data correlated with breast hypoplasia. For patients who received brachytherapy, the dose was converted to external beam RT in equivalent 2 Gy fractions (D EBRT), although the limitations of this type of mathematical conversion need to be recognized. We calculated relative risks (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) based on these data. Only 1 study was relevant to the lactation endpoint, in which patients were given RT for Hodgkin lymphoma at age 14 to 40 years. The 3 studies involved 206 patients in total. In patients <4 years old at the time of RT, the prevalence of patient-perceived breast hypoplasia was 38% (RR 2.5; 95% CI, 1.3-4.6) after D EBRT of <0.34 Gy, 61% (RR 4.0; 95% CI, 2.1-7.4) after D EBRT 0.34-0.97 Gy, and 97% (RR 6.3; 95% CI, 3.6-10.8) after D EBRT ≥0.97 Gy to the breast anlage. A simple linear regression model (r = 0.72; P <.001) showed that the treated breast was smaller than the untreated breast by 13% at D EBRT = 0.5 Gy, 20% at D EBRT = 1 Gy, 32% at D EBRT = 2 Gy, 51% at D EBRT = 4 Gy, 66% at D EBRT = 6 Gy, 79% at D EBRT = 8 Gy, and 90% at D EBRT = 10 Gy. The risk of unsuccessful breastfeeding was 39% after a median mediastinal dose of 41 Gy, compared with 21% in a sibling control group (P =.04). RT dose of ≥42 Gy was not associated with less breastfeeding success compared with <42 Gy, and data on lower doses were unavailable. Based on extremely limited data, young adults exposed to thoracic RT as children seem to be at significant risk of breast hypoplasia and impaired lactation. Doses as low as 0.3 Gy to immature breasts can cause breast hypoplasia. Additional studies are needed to quantify dose and technique effects with modern RT indications. Prospective collection of clinical outcomes and dosimetric factors would enhance our understanding of RT-induced breast hypoplasia and impaired lactation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Pediatric Normal Tissue Effects in the Clinic (PENTEC): An International Collaboration to Assess Normal Tissue Radiation Dose-Volume-Response Relationships for Children With Cancer.
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Constine, Louis S., Olch, Arthur J., Jackson, Andrew, Hua, Chia-Ho, Ronckers, Cecile M., Milano, Michael T., Marcus, Karen J., Yorke, Ellen, Hodgson, David C., Howell, Rebecca M., Hudson, Melissa M., Williams, Jacqueline P., Marples, Brian, C.M. Kremer, Leontien, Marks, Lawrence B., and Bentzen, Søren M.
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CHILDHOOD cancer , *TISSUES , *RADIATION - Published
- 2024
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19. Multi-institutional Characterization of Outcomes for Pediatric and Young Adult Patients With High-Risk Myxopapillary Ependymoma After Radiation Therapy.
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Liu, Kevin X., Indelicato, Daniel J., Paulino, Arnold C., Looi, Wen S., Catalano, Paul J., Chintagumpala, Murali M., Gallotto, Sara L., Marcus, Karen J., Haas-Kogan, Daphne A., Tarbell, Nancy J., MacDonald, Shannon M., Mahajan, Anita, and Yock, Torunn I.
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YOUNG adults , *EPENDYMOMA , *PROPORTIONAL hazards models , *RADIOTHERAPY - Abstract
Myxopapillary ependymoma (MPE) is a rare, typically slow-growing subtype of spinal ependymomas. There are no standard guidelines for radiotherapy and long-term outcomes after radiation, particularly patterns of relapse, for pediatric and young adult (YA) patients with MPE remain under-characterized. This is an Institutional Review Board-approved multi-institutional retrospective cohort study of 60 pediatric and YA patients diagnosed with MPE and received radiotherapy between 2000-2020. Clinical and treatment characteristics, and long-term outcomes were recorded. Site(s) of progression was compared to radiation fields. Survival outcomes were analyzed using Kaplan-Meier method. Cumulative incidence of local in-field progression (CILP) after initial radiotherapy was analyzed using Gray's method with out-of-field-only progression as a competing risk. Univariate analyses were performed using Cox proportional hazard's model. The median age at radiation was 14.8 years (range: 7.1-26.5). At time of radiotherapy, 45 (75.0%) and 35 (58.3%) patients had gross residual and multifocal disease, respectively. Forty-eight (80.0%), seven (11.7%) and five (8.3%) patients received involved field radiotherapy, craniospinal irradiation, and whole spine radiation, respectively. Median follow-up from end of radiotherapy was 6.2 years (range: 0.6-21.0). Five-year overall survival, progression-free survival, and CILP were 100%, 60.8% and 4.1%, respectively. Both local recurrences were at sites of gross residual disease. Of the eighteen out-of-field first recurrences after radiotherapy, all were superior to the initial treatment field and nine had intracranial relapse. On univariate analyses, distant-only recurrence before radiation (HR: 4.00, 95% CI: 1.54-10.43, p = 0.005) was significantly associated with shorter time to progression. While the risk of recurrence within the radiation field is low, pediatric and YA patients with high-risk MPE remain at risk for recurrences in the spine above the radiation field and intracranially after radiotherapy. Future prospective studies are needed to investigate the appropriate radiation field and dose based on the extent of metastases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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20. Feasibility of the Audio-Visual Assisted Therapeutic Ambience in Radiotherapy (AVATAR) System for Anesthesia Avoidance in Pediatric Patients: A Multicenter Trial.
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Gutkin, Paulina M., Skinner, Lawrie, Jiang, Alice, Donaldson, Sarah S., Loo, Billy W., Oh, Justin, Wang, Yi Peng, von Eyben, Rie, Snyder, John, Bredfeldt, Jeremy S., Breneman, John C., Constine, Louis S., Faught, Austin M., Haas-Kogan, Daphne, Holmes, Jordan A., Krasin, Matthew, Larkin, Charlene, Marcus, Karen J., Maxim, Peter G., and McClelland III, Shearwood
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CHILD patients , *PEDIATRIC anesthesia , *AVATARS (Virtual reality) , *RADIOTHERAPY , *QUALITY of life , *GENERAL anesthesia , *LIFE course approach - Abstract
The Audio-Visual Assisted Therapeutic Ambience in Radiotherapy (AVATAR) system was the first published radiation therapy (RT)–compatible system to reduce the need for pediatric anesthesia through video-based distraction. We evaluated the feasibility of AVATAR implementation and effects on anesthesia use, quality of life, and anxiety in a multicenter pediatric trial. Pediatric patients 3 to 10 years of age preparing to undergo RT at 10 institutions were prospectively enrolled. Children able to undergo at least 1 fraction of RT using AVATAR without anesthesia were considered successful (S). Patients requiring anesthesia for their entire treatment course were nonsuccessful (NS). The PedsQL3.0 Cancer Module (PedsQL) survey assessed quality of life and was administered to the patient and guardian at RT simulation, midway through RT, and at final treatment. The modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale (mYPAS) assessed anxiety and was performed at the same 3 time points. Success was evaluated using the χ2 test. PedsQL and mYPAS scores were assessed using mixed effects models with time points evaluated as fixed effects and a random intercept on the subject. Eighty-one children were included; median age was 7 years. AVATAR was successful at all 10 institutions and with photon and proton RT. There were 63 (78%) S patients; anesthesia was avoided for a median of 20 fractions per patient. Success differed by age (P =.04) and private versus public insurance (P <.001). Both patient (P =.008) and parent (P =.006) PedsQL scores significantly improved over the course of RT for patients aged 5 to 7. Anxiety in the treatment room decreased for both S and NS patients over RT course (P <.001), by age (P <.001), and by S versus NS patients (P <.001). In this 10-center prospective trial, anesthesia avoidance with AVATAR was 78% in children aged 3 to 10 years, higher than among age-matched historical controls (49%; P <.001). AVATAR implementation is feasible across multiple institutions and should be further studied and made available to patients who may benefit from video-based distraction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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21. Analysis of local control outcomes and clinical prognostic factors in localized pelvic Ewing sarcoma patients treated with radiation therapy: A Report from the Children's Oncology Group.
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Ahmed, Safia K., Witten, Brent G., Harmsen, William S., Rose, Peter S., Krailo, Mark, Marcus, Karen J., Randall, R. Lor, DuBois, Steven G., Janeway, Katherine A, Womer, Richard B., Grier, Holcombe E., Gorlick, Richard G., and Laack, Nadia N.I.
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EWING'S sarcoma , *PROGNOSIS , *RADIOTHERAPY , *TREATMENT effectiveness ,PELVIC tumors - Abstract
Purpose: To identify potential clinical prognostic factors associated with a higher risk of local recurrence in localized pelvic Ewing sarcoma (ES) patients treated with radiation therapy.Methods: Data for 101 patients treated with definitive radiotherapy (RT) or both surgery and radiation (S+RT) to primary pelvic tumors on INT-0091, INT-0154, and AEWS0031 were analyzed. Imaging data for patients who did not receive radiation were not available for central review, so surgery alone patients were not included. Cumulative incidence rates for local failure at 5-years from time of local control were calculated accounting for competing risks.Results: The most common pelvic subsite was sacrum (44.6%). RT was utilized in 68% of patients and S+RT in 32%. The local failure rate was 25.0% for RT and 6.3% for S+RT (p=0.046). There was no statistically significant difference in local control modality by tumor characteristics. Tumors originating in the ischiopubic-acetabulum region were associated with the highest local failure incidence, 37.5% (p=0.02, vs. sacrum and iliac/buttock tumors), particularly those treated with RT (50.0%, p=0.06). A higher incidence of local failure was seen with each additional 100 mL of tumor at diagnosis (p=0.04). Multivariable analysis demonstrated RT alone (HR 5.1, p=0.04), tumor subsite (particularly ischiopubic-acetabulum tumors, HR 4.6, p=0.02), and increasing volume per 100 mL (HR 1.2, p=0.01) were associated with a higher incidence of local recurrence.Conclusions: Combination surgery and RT is associated with improved local control in patients with pelvic ES compared to definitive RT. Tumors involving the ischiopubic-acetabulum region and increasing tumor volume at diagnosis are associated with inferior local control. Tumor characteristics did not correlate with choice of local therapy modality suggesting an opportunity to develop best local therapy practices guidelines for future studies based on tumor features. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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22. Myocardial Strain and Strain Rate in Monitoring Subclinical Heart Failure in Asymptomatic Long-Term Survivors of Childhood Cancer
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Mavinkurve-Groothuis, Annelies M.C., Groot-Loonen, Jacqueline, Marcus, Karen A., Bellersen, Louise, Feuth, Ton, Bökkerink, Jos P.M., Hoogerbrugge, Peter M., de Korte, Chris, Kapusta, Livia, and Bökkerink, Jos P M
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HEART failure , *MYOCARDIUM , *PHYSIOLOGIC strain , *CANCER patients , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *PATIENT monitoring , *ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY , *ANTHRACYCLINES , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *COMPUTERS in medicine , *REGRESSION analysis , *RESEARCH , *TUMORS , *EVALUATION research , *CASE-control method - Abstract
Abstract: We studied the role of global myocardial strain and strain rate in monitoring subclinical heart failure in a large group of asymptomatic long-term survivors of childhood cancer. Global strain (rate) parameters of survivors were compared with those in healthy controls and were related to conventional echocardiographic parameters, N-terminal-pro-natriuretic peptide (NT-pro-BNP) levels and clinical parameters. Two-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography was performed in 111 survivors and 107 healthy controls. Blood samples were taken from survivors to determine NT-pro-BNP levels. We showed that global myocardial strain, strain rate and time to peak systolic strain in asymptomatic survivors of childhood cancer were significantly lower compared with healthy controls (p values <0.0001) and were significantly related to several systolic and diastolic left ventricular parameters. Whether myocardial strain and strain rate are superior to conventional echocardiography in the early detection of subclinical heart failure needs to be explored in further longitudinal prospective studies. (E-mail: A.Mavinkurve@cukz.umcn.nl) [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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23. Practice Patterns of Pediatric Total Body Irradiation Techniques: A Children's Oncology Group Survey.
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Rassiah, Prema, Esiashvili, Natia, Olch, Arthur J., Hua, Chia-Ho, Ulin, Ken, Molineu, Andrea, Marcus, Karen, Gopalakrishnan, Mahesh, Pillai, Susha, Kovalchuk, Nataliya, Liu, An, Niyazov, Greg, Peñagarícano, Jose, Cheung, Fred, Olson, Adam C., Wu, Cheng-Chia, Malhotra, Harish K., MacEwan, Iain J., Faught, Jacqueline, and Breneman, John C.
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TOTAL body irradiation , *VOLUMETRIC-modulated arc therapy , *PHYSICIANS , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *LUNGS - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study was to examine current practice patterns in pediatric total body irradiation (TBI) techniques among COG member institutions.Methods and Materials: Between November 2019 and February 2020, a questionnaire containing 52 questions related to the technical aspects of TBI was sent to medical physicists at 152 COG institutions. The questions were designed to obtain technical information on commonly used TBI treatment techniques. Another set of 9 questions related to the clinical management of patients undergoing TBI was sent to 152 COG member radiation oncologists at the same institutions.Results: Twelve institutions were excluded because TBI was not performed in their institutions. A total of 88 physicists from 88 institutions (63% response rate) and 96 radiation oncologists from 96 institutions (69% response rate) responded. The anterior-posterior/posterior-anterior (AP/PA) technique was the most common technique reported (49 institutions [56%]); 44 institutions (50%) used the lateral technique, and 14 (16%) used volumetric modulated arc therapy or tomotherapy. Midplane dose rates of 6 to 15 cGy/min were most commonly used. The most common specification for lung dose was the midlung dose for both AP/PA techniques (71%) and lateral techniques (63%). Almost all physician responders agreed with the need to refine current TBI techniques, and 79% supported the investigation of new TBI techniques to further lower the lung dose.Conclusions: There was no consistency in the practice patterns, methods for dose measurement, and reporting of TBI doses among COG institutions. The lack of standardization precludes meaningful correlation between TBI doses and clinical outcomes including disease control and normal tissue toxicity. The COG radiation oncology discipline is currently undertaking several steps to standardize the practice and dose reporting of pediatric TBI using detailed questionnaires and phantom-based credentialing for all COG centers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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24. A Multi-institutional Comparative Analysis of Proton and Photon Therapy-Induced Hematologic Toxicity in Patients With Medulloblastoma.
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Liu, Kevin X., Ioakeim-Ioannidou, Myrsini, Susko, Matthew S., Rao, Avani D., Yeap, Beow Y., Snijders, Antoine M., Ladra, Matthew M., Vogel, Jennifer, Zaslowe-Dude, Cierra, Marcus, Karen J., Yock, Torunn I., Grassberger, Clemens, Braunstein, Steve E., Haas-Kogan, Daphne A., Terezakis, Stephanie A., and MacDonald, Shannon M.
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LYMPHOPENIA , *LEUKOCYTE count , *MEDULLOBLASTOMA , *PHOTONS , *PROTONS , *CHILD patients - Abstract
Purpose: This multi-institutional retrospective study sought to examine the hematologic effects of craniospinal irradiation (CSI) in pediatric patients with medulloblastoma using proton or photon therapy.Methods and Materials: Clinical and treatment characteristics were recorded for 97 pediatric patients with medulloblastoma who received CSI without concurrent chemotherapy or with concurrent single-agent vincristine from 2000 to 2017. Groups of 60 and 37 patients underwent treatment with proton-based and photon-based therapy, respectively. Overall survival was determined by Kaplan-Meier curves with log-rank test. Comparisons of blood counts at each timepoint were conducted using multiple t tests with Bonferroni corrections. Univariate and multivariate analyses of time to grade ≥3 hematologic toxicity were performed with Cox regression analyses.Results: Median age of patients receiving proton and photon CSI was 7.5 years (range, 3.5-22.7 years) and 9.9 years (range, 3.6-19.5 years), respectively. Most patients had a diagnosis of standard risk medulloblastoma, with 86.7% and 89.2% for the proton and photon cohorts, respectively. Median total dose to involved field or whole posterior fossa was 54.0 Gy/Gy relative biological effectiveness (RBE) and median CSI dose was 23.4 Gy/Gy(RBE) (range, 18-36 Gy/Gy[RBE]) for both cohorts. Counts were significantly higher in the proton cohort compared with the photon cohort in weeks 3 to 6 of radiation therapy (RT). Although white blood cell counts did not differ between the 2 cohorts, patients receiving proton RT had significantly higher lymphocyte counts throughout the RT course. Similar results were observed when excluding patients who received vertebral body sparing proton RT or limiting to those receiving 23.4 Gy. Only photon therapy was associated with decreased time to grade ≥3 hematologic toxicity on univariate and multivariable analyses. No difference in overall survival was observed, and lymphopenia did not predict survival.Conclusions: Patients who receive CSI using proton therapy experience significantly decreased hematologic toxicity compared with those receiving photon therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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25. Brainstem Injury in Pediatric Patients Receiving Posterior Fossa Photon Radiation.
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Devine, Christopher A., Liu, Kevin X., Ioakeim-Ioannidou, Myrsini, Susko, Matthew, Poussaint, Tina Y., Huisman, Thierry A.G.M., Aboian, Mariam, Brown, Douglas, Zaslowe-Dude, Cierra, Rao, Avani D., Orlina, Lawrence T., Rawal, Bhupendra, Mueller, Sabine, Marcus, Karen J., Terezakis, Stephanie A., Braunstein, Steve E., and Haas-Kogan, Daphne A.
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INFRATENTORIAL brain tumors , *PHOTON emission , *BRAIN stem , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *MAGNETOTHERAPY , *THERAPEUTIC complications - Abstract
Purpose: Brainstem necrosis is a rare, but dreaded complication of radiation therapy; however, data on the incidence of brainstem injury for tumors involving the posterior fossa in photon-treated patient cohorts are still needed.Methods and Materials: Clinical characteristics and dosimetric parameters were recorded for 107 pediatric patients who received photon radiation for posterior fossa tumors without brainstem involvement from 2000 to 2016. Patients were excluded if they received a prescription dose <50.4 Gy, a brainstem maximum dose <50.4 Gy, or had fewer than 2 magnetic resonance imaging scans within 18 months after radiation. Post-radiation therapy magnetic resonance imaging findings were recorded, and brainstem toxicity was graded using National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 5.Results: The most common histologies were medulloblastoma (61.7%) and ependymoma (15.9%), and median age at diagnosis was 8.3 years (range, 0.8-20.7). Sixty-seven patients (62.6%) received craniospinal irradiation (median, 23.4 Gy; range, 18.0-39.6) as a component of their radiation therapy, and 39.3% and 40.2% of patients received an additional involved field or whole posterior fossa boost, respectively. Median prescribed dose was 55.8 Gy (range, 50.4-60.0). Median clinical and imaging follow-up were 4.7 years (range, 0.1-17.5) and 4.2 years (range, 0.1-17.3), respectively. No grade ≥2 toxicities were observed. The incidence of grade 1 brainstem necrosis was 1.9% (2 of 107). These patients were by definition asymptomatic and experienced resolution of imaging abnormality after 5.3 months and 2.1 years, respectively.Conclusions: Risk of brainstem necrosis was minimal in this multi-institutional study of pediatric patients treated with photon radiation therapy for tumors involving the posterior fossa with no cases of symptomatic brainstem injury, suggesting that brainstem injury risk is minimal in patients treated with photon therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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26. Cardiac-Sparing Whole Lung IMRT in Patients With Pediatric Tumors and Lung Metastasis: Final Report of a Prospective Multicenter Clinical Trial.
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Kalapurakal, John A., Gopalakrishnan, Mahesh, Walterhouse, David O., Rigsby, Cynthia K., Rademaker, Alfred, Helenowski, Irene, Kessel, Sandy, Morano, Karen, Laurie, Fran, Ulin, Ken, Esiashvili, Natia, Katzenstein, Howard, Marcus, Karen, Followill, David S., Wolden, Suzanne L., Mahajan, Anita, and Fitzgerald, Thomas J.
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RADIOTHERAPY , *TUMORS in children , *RADIATION dosimetry , *MYOCARDIUM , *THYROID gland - Abstract
Purpose: A prospective clinical trial was conducted for patients undergoing cardiac sparing (CS) whole lung irradiation (WLI) using intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). The 3 trial aims were (1) to demonstrate the feasibility of CS IMRT with real-time central quality control; (2) to determine the dosimetric advantages of WLI using IMRT compared with standard anteroposterior (AP) techniques; and (3) to determine acute tolerance and short-term efficacy after a protocol-mandated minimum 2-year follow-up for all patients.Methods and Materials: All patients underwent a 3-dimensional chest computed tomography scan and a contrast-enhanced 4-dimensional (4D) gated chest computed tomography scan using a standard gating device. The clinical target volume was the entire bilateral 3-dimensional lung volume, and the internal target volume was the 4D minimum intensity projection of both lungs. The internal target volume was expanded by 1 cm to get the planning target volume. All target volumes, cardiac contours, and treatment plans were centrally reviewed before treatment. The different cardiac volumes receiving percentages of prescribed radiation therapy (RT) doses on AP and IMRT WLI plans were estimated and compared.Results: The target 20 patients were accrued in 2 years. Median RT dose was 15 Gy. Real-time central quality assurance review and plan preapproval were obtained for all patients. WLI using IMRT was feasible in all patients. Compared with standard AP WLI, CS IMRT resulted in a statistically significant reduction in radiation doses to the whole heart, atria, ventricles, and coronaries. One child developed cardiac dysfunction and pulmonary restrictive disease 5.5 years after CS IMRT (15 Gy) and doxorubicin (375 mg/m2). The 2- and 3-year lung metastasis progression-free survival was 65% and 52%, respectively.Conclusions: We have demonstrated the feasibility of WLI using CS IMRT and confirmed the previously reported advantages of IMRT, including superior cardiac protection and superior dose coverage of 4D lung volumes. Further studies are required to establish the efficacy and safety of this irradiation technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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27. The Children's Oncology Group Radiation Oncology Discipline: 15 Years of Contributions to the Treatment of Childhood Cancer.
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Breneman, John C., Donaldson, Sarah S., Constine, Louis, Merchant, Thomas, Marcus, Karen, Paulino, Arnold C., Followill, David, Mahajan, Anita, Laack, Nadia, Esiashvili, Natia, Haas-Kogan, Daphne, Laurie, Fran, Olch, Arthur, Ulin, Kenneth, Hodgson, David, Yock, Torunn I., Terezakis, Stephanie, Krasin, Matt, Panoff, Joseph, and Chuba, Paul
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CHILDHOOD cancer , *CANCER radiotherapy , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *CANCER-related mortality , *QUALITY of life , *CANCER treatment , *BONE tumors , *HODGKIN'S disease , *INTERNATIONAL relations , *KIDNEY tumors , *LEUKEMIA , *NEUROBLASTOMA , *ONCOLOGY , *OSTEOSARCOMA , *RADIOTHERAPY , *RESEARCH funding , *SARCOMA , *TIME , *TUMORS , *SYMPTOMS , *PROTON therapy ,CENTRAL nervous system tumors - Abstract
Purpose: Our aim was to review the advances in radiation therapy for the management of pediatric cancers made by the Children's Oncology Group (COG) radiation oncology discipline since its inception in 2000.Methods and Materials: The various radiation oncology disease site leaders reviewed the contributions and advances in pediatric oncology made through the work of the COG. They have presented outcomes of relevant studies and summarized current treatment policies developed by consensus from experts in the field.Results: The indications and techniques for pediatric radiation therapy have evolved considerably over the years for virtually all pediatric tumor types, resulting in improved cure rates together with the potential for decreased treatment-related morbidity and mortality.Conclusions: The COG radiation oncology discipline has made significant contributions toward the treatment of childhood cancer. Our discipline is committed to continuing research to refine and modernize the use of radiation therapy in current and future protocols with the goal of further improving the cure rates and quality of life of children with cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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28. Reduced Mortality Risk in the Recent Era in Early-Stage Hodgkin Lymphoma Patients Treated With Radiation Therapy With or Without Chemotherapy.
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Patel, Chirayu G., Michaelson, Evan, Chen, Yu-Hui, Silver, Barbara, Marcus, Karen J., Stevenson, Mary Ann, Mauch, Peter M., and Ng, Andrea K.
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HODGKIN'S disease , *HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *RADIOTHERAPY , *CANCER chemotherapy , *CANCER treatment , *CAUSES of death , *TUMOR classification , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose: To determine the effect of treatment changes over time on all-cause mortality risk in patients with early-stage Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) after radiation therapy. The long-term survivorship of those with HL necessitates quantification of the late risk of mortality from HL and other causes.Methods and Materials: An institutional review board-approved retrospective study was conducted using a multi-institutional database of 1541 stage I and II HL patients treated from 1968 to 2007 with radiation therapy alone or combined-modality treatment. The analytic methods included cumulative incidence function, Kaplan-Meier estimates and log-rank tests for overall survival (OS) differences, and Cox proportional hazards modeling.Results: The median age at diagnosis was 27 years. At a median follow-up of 15.2 years (35% of patients with >20 years of follow-up), 395 patients had died of all causes, including 85 HL, 168 second malignancy (25 hematologic and 143 nonhematologic), 70 cardiovascular, and 21 pulmonary deaths. The cumulative incidence of non-HL mortality had surpassed HL mortality at 8.3 years. For patients treated from 1968 to 1982, 1983 to 1992, and 1993 to 2007, the 15-year OS rates were 78%, 85%, and 88%, respectively (P=.0016). On Cox proportional hazards analysis, age, B symptoms, and number of disease sites were significantly associated with all-cause mortality in the first decade of follow-up, with a trend toward significance for radiation field extent.Conclusions: The all-cause mortality risk was significantly lower for patients treated in the most recent era during the first decade of follow-up, likely due to improved HL therapy resulting in a higher cure rate and lower treatment-related toxicity from smaller radiation fields. Current efforts toward radiation treatment reduction might further reduce the long-term mortality risk for these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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29. Identification of Patients With Localized Ewing Sarcoma at Higher Risk for Local Failure: A Report From the Children's Oncology Group.
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Ahmed, Safia K., Randall, R. Lor, Dubois, Steven G., Harmsen, William S., Krailo, Mark, Marcus, Karen J., Janeway, Katherine A., Geller, David S., Sorger, Joel I., Womer, Richard B., Granowetter, Linda, Grier, Holcombe E., Gorlick, Richard G., and Laack, Nadia N.i.
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PROGRESSION-free survival , *SARCOMA , *IFOSFAMIDE , *ETOPOSIDE , *RADIOTHERAPY , *PATIENTS , *THERAPEUTICS , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *BONE tumors , *CANCER relapse , *EXTREMITIES (Anatomy) , *OSTEOSARCOMA , *PELVIC bones , *RESEARCH funding , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Purpose: To identify clinical and treatment variables associated with a higher risk of local failure in Ewing sarcoma patients treated on recent Children's Oncology Group protocols.Methods and Materials: Data for 956 patients treated with ifosfamide and etoposide-based chemotherapy on INT-0091, INT-0154, and AEWS0031 were analyzed. Local treatment modalities were defined as surgery, definitive radiation therapy (RT), or surgery plus radiation (S+RT). Five-year cumulative incidence of local failure was determined.Results: The local failure rate for the entire cohort was 7.3%, with a 3.9% rate for surgery, 15.3% for RT (P<.01), and 6.6% for S+RT (P=.12). The local failure incidence was 5.4% for extremity tumors, 13.2% for pelvis tumors (P<.01), 5.3% for axial non-spine tumors (P=.90), 9.1% for extraskeletal tumors (P=.08), and 3.6% for spine tumors (P=.49). The incidence of local failure was 14.8% for extremity tumors and 22.4% for pelvis tumors treated with RT, compared with 3.7% for extremity tumors and 3.9% for pelvis tumors treated with surgery (P≤.01). There was no difference in local failure incidence by local treatment modality for axial non-spine, spine, and extraskeletal tumors. The local failure incidence was 11.9% in patients aged ≥18 years versus 6.7% in patients aged <18 years (P=.02). Age ≥18 years (hazard ratio 1.9, P=.04) and treatment with RT (hazard ratio 2.40, P<.01) remained independent prognostic factors for higher local failure incidence on multivariate analysis. Tumor size (≥ 8 cm) was available in 40% of patients and did not correlate with local failure incidence.Conclusions: Local tumor control is excellent and similar between surgery and RT for axial non-spine, spine, and extraskeletal tumors. Age ≥18 years and use of RT, primarily for pelvis and extremity tumors, are associated with the highest risk of local failure. Further efforts should focus on improving outcomes for these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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30. Patterns of Relapse in High-Risk Neuroblastoma Patients Treated With and Without Total Body Irradiation.
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Li, Richard, Polishchuk, Alexei, DuBois, Steven, Hawkins, Randall, Lee, Stephanie W., Bagatell, Rochelle, Shusterman, Suzanne, Hill-Kayser, Christine, Al-Sayegh, Hasan, Diller, Lisa, Haas-Kogan, Daphne A., Matthay, Katherine K., London, Wendy B., and Marcus, Karen J.
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NEUROBLASTOMA , *CANCER radiotherapy , *CANCER relapse , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DIAGNOSIS , *DISEASE risk factors , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Purpose: External beam radiation therapy to initial sites of disease may influence relapse patterns in high-risk neuroblastoma. However, the effect of systemic irradiation by use of total body irradiation (TBI) on anatomic patterns of relapse has not previously been investigated.Methods and Materials: We retrospectively analyzed patients receiving definitive treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma with subsequent relapse in bony metastatic sites, with a date of relapse between January 1, 1997, and December 31, 2012. Anatomic sites of disease, defined by metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) avidity, were compared at diagnosis and at first relapse. The Fisher exact test was performed to compare relapse in initially involved sites between patients treated with and without TBI.Results: Seventy-four patients with a median age at diagnosis of 3.5 years (range, 0.3-15.3 years) had relapse in 227 sites of MIBG-avid metastatic disease, with a median time to relapse of 1.8 years. Of the 227 sites of first relapse, 154 sites (68%) were involved at diagnosis. When we compared relapse patterns in patients treated with and without TBI, 12 of 23 patients (52%) treated with TBI had relapse in ≥1 previously MIBG-avid site of disease whereas 40 of 51 patients (78%) treated without TBI had relapse in ≥1 previously MIBG-avid site of disease (P=.03).Conclusions: Patients treated with systemic irradiation in the form of TBI were significantly less likely to have relapse in prior sites of disease. These findings support further investigation into the role of radiopharmaceutical therapies in curative multimodality therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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31. A multi-disciplinary team approach to pediatric malignant mandibular tumors.
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Hintze, Justin M., Afshar, Salim, Taghinia, Amir, Labow, Brian, Green, Mark, Robson, Caroline D., Marcus, Karen, Mack, Jennifer, Perez-Atayde, Antonio, and Rahbar, Reza
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MANDIBULAR fractures , *CHILDREN'S hospitals , *CHILD patients , *PLASTIC surgery , *FREE flaps , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Mandibular tumors in the pediatric population are rare. These malignancies are variable in their histology, and combined with their rarity, has made it difficult to describe their clinical course, and treatment guidelines. The aim of this paper is to describe the experience of Boston Children's Hospital, a pediatric tertiary referral center, with treating malignant mandibular malignancies, as well as provide multi-disciplinary team approach in managing this clinical entity. A retrospective search was performed for mandibular malignancies in pediatric patients between 1995 and 2020 via the pathological database at Boston Children's Hospital. Only patients with malignant solid mandibular neoplasms were included, leaving 15 patients for final analysis. The median age at presentation was 10.1 ± 10.3 years. Nine of 15 patients (60%) presented with jaw mass which was the most common clinical presentation. The most commonly identified histological diagnosis was rhabdomayosarcoma and osteosarcoma (n = 4, 26% each). A mandibulectomy was performed in 12 (80%) cases. Reconstruction of the mandible was performed using a fibular free flap in 6 (40%) cases, and a plate in 3 (20%) cases. Mean follow-up was 4.6 ± 4.9 years. Malignant tumors most commonly present with a jaw mass, however asymptomatic and incidental presentations follow closely and pathologies can vary greatly. Surgical resection and reconstruction is often indicated, multidisciplinary tumor board review is required to determine when children are best treated with neo-/adjuvant treatment with chemo- and radiotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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32. Use and Effectiveness of Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Agonists for Prophylactic Menstrual Suppression in Postmenarchal Women Who Undergo Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation.
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Poorvu, Philip D., Barton, Sara E., Duncan, Christine N., London, Wendy B., Laufer, Marc R., Lehmann, Leslie E., and Marcus, Karen J.
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UTERINE hemorrhage , *HEMATOPOIETIC stem cell transplantation , *GONADOTROPIN releasing hormone , *DRUG efficacy , *MEDICAL practice , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Study Objective To describe the rates of use and effectiveness of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists and other forms of hormonal menstrual suppression in prevention of vaginal bleeding among young women who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HCT). Design Retrospective descriptive study. Setting University-based pediatric HCT practice. Participants Fifty-five postmenarchal women who underwent HCT between 2004 and 2011. Interventions Administration of GnRH agonists or other forms of hormonal menstrual suppression. Main Outcome Measures Rates of use of GnRH agonists and other forms of hormonal menstrual suppression, and rates and descriptions of vaginal bleeding. Results Forty-six of the 55 patients had experienced regular or irregular vaginal bleeding before HCT and were considered to be at risk for thrombocytopenia-associated menorrhagia. Forty of the 46 (87%) received hormonal menstrual suppression. Thirty-three patients were treated with a GnRH agonist, 4 with combined hormonal contraceptive pills, 1 with a combined hormonal contraceptive patch, 1 with depot medroxyprogesterone, and 1 with oral norethindrone. Twenty-nine of the 33 patients (88%) who received a GnRH agonist had complete amenorrhea during HCT and 4 of 33 (12%) experienced some degree of vaginal bleeding. Conclusion GnRH agonists appear effective in prevention of vaginal bleeding complications in most postmenarchal women who underwent HCT. Some patients who might benefit do not receive a GnRH agonist and multiple barriers exist in identification and treatment of them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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33. Long-term toxic effects of proton radiotherapy for paediatric medulloblastoma: a phase 2 single-arm study.
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Yock, Torunn I, Yeap, Beow Y, Ebb, David H, Weyman, Elizabeth, Eaton, Bree R, Sherry, Nicole A, Jones, Robin M, MacDonald, Shannon M, Pulsifer, Margaret B, Lavally, Beverly, Abrams, Annah N, Huang, Mary S, Marcus, Karen J, and Tarbell, Nancy J
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MEDULLOBLASTOMA , *CHILDHOOD cancer , *CANCER radiotherapy , *PROTON therapy , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *THERAPEUTICS , *AGE distribution , *BRAIN tumors , *CANCER invasiveness , *CLINICAL trials , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *GLIOMAS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PROGNOSIS , *RADIATION doses , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *RISK assessment , *SEX distribution , *SURVIVAL analysis (Biometry) , *TIME , *TUMOR classification , *EVALUATION research , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *KAPLAN-Meier estimator , *DIAGNOSIS ,BRAIN tumor diagnosis - Abstract
Background: Compared with traditional photon radiotherapy, proton radiotherapy irradiates less normal tissue and might improve health outcomes associated with photon radiotherapy by reducing toxic effects to normal tissue. We did a trial to assess late complications, acute side-effects, and survival associated with proton radiotherapy in children with medulloblastoma.Methods: In this non-randomised, open-label, single-centre, phase 2 trial, we enrolled patients aged 3-21 years who had medulloblastoma. Patients had craniospinal irradiation of 18-36 Gy radiobiological equivalents (GyRBE) delivered at 1·8 GyRBE per fraction followed by a boost dose. The primary outcome was cumulative incidence of ototoxicity at 3 years, graded with the Pediatric Oncology Group ototoxicity scale (0-4), in the intention-to-treat population. Secondary outcomes were neuroendocrine toxic effects and neurocognitive toxic effects, assessed by intention-to-treat. This study is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00105560.Findings: We enrolled 59 patients from May 20, 2003, to Dec 10, 2009: 39 with standard-risk disease, six with intermediate-risk disease, and 14 with high-risk disease. 59 patients received chemotherapy. Median follow-up of survivors was 7·0 years (IQR 5·2-8·6). All patients received the intended doses of proton radiotherapy. The median craniospinal irradiation dose was 23·4 GyRBE (IQR 23·4-27·0) and median boost dose was 54·0 GyRBE (IQR 54·0-54·0). Four (9%) of 45 evaluable patients had grade 3-4 ototoxicity according to Pediatric Oncology Group ototoxicity scale in both ears at follow-up, and three (7%) of 45 patients developed grade 3-4 ototoxicity in one ear, although one later reverted to grade 2. The cumulative incidence of grade 3-4 hearing loss at 3 years was 12% (95% CI 4-25). At 5 years, it was 16% (95% CI 6-29). Pediatric Oncology Group hearing ototoxicity score at a follow-up of 5·0 years (IQR 2·9-6·4) was the same as at baseline or improved by 1 point in 34 (35%) of 98 ears, worsened by 1 point in 21 (21%), worsened by 2 points in 35 (36%), worsened by 3 points in six (6%), and worsened by 4 points in two (2%). Full Scale Intelligence Quotient decreased by 1·5 points (95% CI 0·9-2·1) per year after median follow-up up of 5·2 years (IQR 2·6-6·4), driven by decrements in processing speed and verbal comprehension index. Perceptual reasoning index and working memory did not change significantly. Cumulative incidence of any neuroendocrine deficit at 5 years was 55% (95% CI 41-67), with growth hormone deficit being most common. We recorded no cardiac, pulmonary, or gastrointestinal late toxic effects. 3-year progression-free survival was 83% (95% CI 71-90) for all patients. In post-hoc analyses, 5-year progression-free survival was 80% (95% CI 67-88) and 5-year overall survival was 83% (95% CI 70-90).Interpretation: Proton radiotherapy resulted in acceptable toxicity and had similar survival outcomes to those noted with conventional radiotherapy, suggesting that the use of the treatment may be an alternative to photon-based treatments.Funding: US National Cancer Institute and Massachusetts General Hospital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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34. Clinical Outcomes and Late Endocrine, Neurocognitive, and Visual Profiles of Proton Radiation for Pediatric Low-Grade Gliomas.
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Greenberger, Benjamin A., Pulsifer, Margaret B., Ebb, David H., MacDonald, Shannon M., Jones, Robin M., Butler, William E., Huang, Mary S., Marcus, Karen J., Oberg, Jennifer A., Tarbell, Nancy J., and Yock, Torunn I.
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ENDOCRINE system , *BRAIN tumors , *JUVENILE diseases , *GLIOMA treatment , *RADIOTHERAPY , *HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Purpose/Objective(s) Primary low-grade gliomas are common brain tumors of childhood, many of which require radiation therapy (RT) as definitive treatment. Increased conformality of RT could decrease the incidence and severity of late effects. We report our experience with 32 pediatric patients treated with proton RT. Methods and Materials Thirty-two pediatric patients with low-grade gliomas of the brain or spinal cord were treated with proton RT from 1995 to 2007. Sixteen patients received at least 1 regimen of chemotherapy before definitive RT. The median radiation dose was 52.2 GyRBE (48.6-54 GyRBE). Results The median age at treatment was 11.0 years (range, 2.7-21.5 years), with a median follow-up time of 7.6 years (range, 3.2-18.2 years). The 6-year and 8-year rates of progression-free survival were 89.7% and 82.8%, respectively, with an 8-year overall survival of 100%. For the subset of patients who received serial neurocognitive testing, there were no significant declines in Full-Scale Intelligence Quotient (P=.80), with a median neurocognitive testing interval of 4.5 years (range, 1.2-8.1 years) from baseline to follow-up, but subgroup analysis indicated some significant decline in neurocognitive outcomes for young children (<7 years) and those with significant dose to the left temporal lobe/hippocampus. The incidence of endocrinopathy correlated with a mean dose of ≥40 GyRBE to the hypothalamus, pituitary, or optic chiasm. Stabilization or improvement of visual acuity was achieved in 83.3% of patients at risk for radiation-induced injury to the optic pathways. Conclusions This report of late effects in children with low-grade gliomas after proton RT is encouraging. Proton RT appears to be associated with good clinical outcome, especially when the tumor location allows for increased sparing of the left temporal lobe, hippocampus, and hypothalamic-pituitary axis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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35. Likelihood of Bone Recurrence in Prior Sites of Metastasis in Patients With High-Risk Neuroblastoma.
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Polishchuk, Alexei L., Li, Richard, Hill-Kayser, Christine, Little, Anthony, Hawkins, Randall A., Hamilton, Jeffrey, Lau, Michael, Tran, Hung Chi, Strahlendorf, Caron, Lemons, Richard S., Weinberg, Vivian, Matthay, Katherine K., DuBois, Steven G., Marcus, Karen J., Bagatell, Rochelle, and Haas-Kogan, Daphne A.
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BONE metastasis , *DISEASE relapse , *NEUROBLASTOMA , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PROGNOSIS , *PATIENTS , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Purpose/Objectives: Despite recent improvements in outcomes, 40% of children with high-risk neuroblastoma will experience relapse, facing a guarded prognosis for long-term cure. Whether recurrences are at new sites or sites of original disease may guide decision making during initial therapy. Methods and Materials: Eligible patients were retrospectively identified from institutional databases at first metastatic relapse of high-risk neuroblastoma. Included patients had disease involving metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG)-avid metastatic sites at diagnosis and first relapse, achieved a complete or partial response with no more than one residual MIBG-avid site before first relapse, and received no total body irradiation or therapy with 131I-MIBG before first relapse. Anatomically defined metastatic sites were tracked from diagnosis through first relapse to determine tendency of disease to recur at previously involved versus uninvolved sites and to assess whether this pattern was influenced by site irradiation. Results: Of 159 MIBG-avid metastatic sites identified among 43 patients at first relapse, 131 (82.4%) overlapped anatomically with the set of 525 sites present at diagnosis. This distribution was similar for bone sites, but patterns of relapse were more varied for the smaller subset of soft tissue metastases. Among all metastatic sites at diagnosis in our subsequently relapsed patient cohort, only 3 of 19 irradiated sites (15.8%) recurred as compared with 128 of 506 (25.3%) unirradiated sites. Conclusions: Metastatic bone relapse in neuroblastoma usually occurs at anatomic sites of previous disease. Metastatic sites identified at diagnosis that did not receive radiation during frontline therapy appeared to have a higher risk of involvement at first relapse relative to previously irradiated metastatic sites. These observations support the current paradigm of irradiating metastases that persist after induction chemotherapy in high-risk patients. Furthermore, they raise the hypothesis that metastatic sites appearing to clear with induction chemotherapy may also benefit from radiotherapeutic treatment modalities (external beam radiation or 131I-MIBG). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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36. Thyroid Malignancies in Survivors of Hodgkin Lymphoma.
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Michaelson, Evan M., Chen, Yu-Hui, Silver, Barbara, Tishler, Roy B., Marcus, Karen J., Stevenson, Mary Ann, and Ng, Andrea. K.
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HODGKIN'S disease treatment , *THYROID cancer , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE incidence , *REGRESSION analysis , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) , *CANCER radiotherapy , *CANCER risk factors - Abstract
Purpose: To quantify the incidence of thyroid cancer after Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) and determine disease characteristics, risk factors, and treatment outcomes. Methods and Materials: Thyroid cancer cases were retrospectively identified from a multi-institutional database of 1981 HL patients treated between 1969 and 2008. Thyroid cancer risk factors were evaluated by a Poisson regression model. Results: With a median follow-up duration of 14.3 years (range, 0-41.2 years), 28 patients (1.4%) developed a thyroid malignancy. The overall incidence rate (expressed as the number of cases per 10,000 person-years) and 10-year cumulative incidence of thyroid cancer were 9.6 and 0.26%, respectively. There were no observed cases of thyroid malignancy in patients who received neck irradiation for HL after age 35 years. Age <20 years at HL diagnosis and female sex were significantly associated with thyroid cancer. The incidence rates of females aged <20 at HL diagnosis in the first 10 years, ≥10 years, ≥15 years, and ≥20 years after treatment were 5, 31, 61, and 75 cases per 10,000 person-years of follow-up, respectively. At a median follow-up of 3.5 years after the thyroid cancer diagnosis, 26 patients (93%) were alive without disease, 1 (4%) was alive with metastatic disease, and 1 (4%) died of metastatic disease, at 6 and 3.6 years after the thyroid cancer diagnosis, respectively. Conclusions: Although HL survivors have an increased risk for thyroid cancer, the overall incidence is low. Routine thyroid cancer screening may benefit females treated at a young age and ≥10 years from HL treatment owing to their higher risk, which increases over time. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
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37. Proton Radiotherapy for Pediatric Ewing’s Sarcoma: Initial Clinical Outcomes
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Rombi, Barbara, DeLaney, Thomas F., MacDonald, Shannon M., Huang, Mary S., Ebb, David H., Liebsch, Norbert J., Raskin, Kevin A., Yeap, Beow Y., Marcus, Karen J., Tarbell, Nancy J., and Yock, Torunn I.
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EWING'S sarcoma , *CANCER radiotherapy , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *TISSUES , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) - Abstract
Purpose: Proton radiotherapy (PT) has been prescribed similarly to photon radiotherapy to achieve comparable disease control rates at comparable doses. The chief advantage of protons in this setting is to reduce acute and late toxicities by decreasing the amount of normal tissue irradiated. We report the preliminary clinical outcomes including late effects on our pediatric Ewing’s sarcoma patients treated with PT at the Francis H. Burr Proton Therapy Center at Massachusetts General Hospital (Boston, MA). Methods and Materials: This was a retrospective review of the medical records of 30 children with Ewing’s sarcoma who were treated with PT between April 2003 and April 2009. Results: A total of 14 male and 16 female patients with tumors in several anatomic sites were treated with PT at a median age of 10 years. The median dose was 54 Gy (relative biological effectiveness) with a median follow-up of 38.4 months. The 3-year actuarial rates of event-free survival, local control, and overall survival were 60%, 86%, and 89%, respectively. PT was acutely well tolerated, with mostly mild-to-moderate skin reactions. At the time of writing, the only serious late effects have been four hematologic malignancies, which are known risks of topoisomerase and anthracyline exposure. Conclusions: Proton radiotherapy was well tolerated, with few adverse events. Longer follow-up is needed to more fully assess tumor control and late effects, but the preliminary results are encouraging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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38. Stereotactic Irradiation of the Postoperative Resection Cavity for Brain Metastasis: A Frameless Linear Accelerator-Based Case Series and Review of the Technique
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Kelly, Paul J., Lin, Yijie Brittany, Yu, Alvin Y., Alexander, Brian M., Hacker, Fred, Marcus, Karen J., and Weiss, Stephanie E.
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TREATMENT of brain cancer , *RADIOTHERAPY , *METASTASIS , *STEREOTAXIC techniques , *RADIOSURGERY , *CANCER diagnosis , *BRAIN surgery , *LINEAR accelerators in medicine - Abstract
Purpose: Whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) is the standard of care after resection of a brain metastasis. However, concern regarding possible neurocognitive effects and the lack of survival benefit with this approach has led to the use of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) to the resection cavity in place of WBRT. We report our initial experience using an image-guided linear accelerator-based frameless stereotactic system and review the technical issues in applying this technique. Methods and Materials: We retrospectively reviewed the setup accuracy, treatment outcome, and patterns of failure of the first 18 consecutive cases treated at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The target volume was the resection cavity without a margin excluding the surgical track. Results: The median number of brain metastases per patient was 1 (range, 1–3). The median planning target volume was 3.49 mL. The median prescribed dose was 18 Gy (range, 15–18 Gy) with normalization ranging from 68% to 85%. In all cases, 99% of the planning target volume was covered by the prescribed dose. The median conformity index was 1.6 (range, 1.41–1.92). The SRS was delivered with submillimeter accuracy. At a median follow-up of 12.7 months, local control was achieved in 16/18 cavities treated. True local recurrence occurred in 2 patients. No marginal failures occurred. Distant recurrence occurred in 6/17 patients. Median time to any failure was 7.4 months. No Grade 3 or higher toxicity was recorded. A long interval between initial cancer diagnosis and the development of brain metastasis was the only factor that trended toward a significant association with the absence of recurrence (local or distant) (log-rank p = 0.097). Conclusions: Frameless stereotactic irradiation of the resection cavity after surgery for a brain metastasis is a safe and accurate technique that offers durable local control and defers the use of WBRT in select patients. This technique should be tested in larger prospective studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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39. American College of Radiology Appropriateness Criteria on Multiple Brain Metastases
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Videtic, Gregory M.M., Gaspar, Laurie E., Aref, Amr M., Germano, Isabelle M., Goldsmith, Brian J., Imperato, Joseph P., Marcus, Karen J., McDermott, Michael W., McDonald, Mark W., Patchell, Roy A., Robins, H. Ian, Rogers, C. Leland, Suh, John H., Wolfson, Aaron H., and Wippold, Franz J.
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- 2009
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40. Unilateral and Bilateral Breast Cancer in Women Surviving Pediatric Hodgkin's Disease
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Basu, Swati K., Schwartz, Cindy, Fisher, Susan G., Hudson, Melissa M., Tarbell, Nancy, Muhs, Ann, Marcus, Karen J., Mendenhall, Nancy, Mauch, Peter, Kun, Larry E., and Constine, Louis S.
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BREAST cancer , *HODGKIN'S disease , *DISEASES in women , *TUMORS in children - Abstract
Purpose: To define demographic and therapeutic associations with the risk of breast cancer in children treated for Hodgkin''s disease (HD), particularly the frequency and interval to the development of contralateral breast cancer. Methods and Materials: All 398 female patients (<19 years) treated for HD in five institutions during the accrual period were evaluated. Mean follow-up was 16.9 years. The standardized incidence ratio (SIR) was calculated as the ratio of the observed number of cases to the expected number of cases, estimated using age-matched controls from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database. Results: A total of 29 women developed breast cancer (25 invasive, 4 ductal carcinoma in situ; SIR, 37.25; 95% confidence interval, 24.96–53.64). Time to diagnosis was 9.4 to 36.1 years. Cumulative incidence was 24% at 30 years. Ten patients (34%) had bilateral disease (9 metachronous, 1 synchronous). The interval to contralateral breast cancer was 12 to 34 months. On univariate analysis, significant variables included stage of HD, mantle radiation dose, pelvic radiation (protective), and follow-up time. On multivariate analysis, early stage and older age at diagnosis of HD (≤12 vs. >12 years) were significant predictors of secondary breast cancer. Conclusions: Women surviving pediatric HD were found to have a 37-fold increase in the risk of breast cancer and a high likelihood of rapidly developing bilateral disease. Early-stage HD and age greater than 12 years at diagnosis of HD were independent risk factors. Higher radiation doses may augment risk, and pelvic radiation may be protective. Breast cancer screening methodology and frequency, plus the role of prophylaxis in patients with unilateral disease, require definition. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2008
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41. Ovarian function in pediatric brain cancer survivors after laparoscopic oophoropexy.
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Kuohung, Wendy, Laufer, Marc R., Marcus, Karen J., Cheng, Debbie M., and Diller, Lisa R.
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OVARIAN function tests , *BRAIN cancer patients , *LAPAROSCOPIC surgery , *SURGICAL excision , *CHILDHOOD cancer , *CANCER radiotherapy - Published
- 2003
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42. Outcome for children with group III rhabdomyosarcoma treated with or without radiotherapy
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Viswanathan, Akila N., Grier, Holcombe E., Litman, Heather J., Perez-Atayde, Antonio, Tarbell, Nancy J., Neuberg, Donna, Shamberger, Robert C., and Marcus, Karen J.
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DRUG therapy , *RHABDOMYOSARCOMA , *MUSCLE tumors , *RIB resection , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *DOXORUBICIN , *VINCRISTINE , *CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE , *ANALYSIS of variance , *CANCER relapse , *COMBINED modality therapy , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research , *PROGNOSIS , *RADIATION doses , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DISEASE remission , *THERAPEUTICS , *DACTINOMYCIN - Abstract
: PurposeTo analyze the sites of relapse, relapse-free survival, and overall survival in children with Group III rhabdomyosarcoma treated with or without radiotherapy (RT).: Methods and materialsThe outcomes of 48 children with Group III rhabdomyosarcoma treated between 1980 and 1997 were evaluated. The median overall survival follow-up was 7.3 years. Of the 48 patients, 65% had embryonal histology. Local treatment after induction chemotherapy included complete surgical resection (CSR) alone in 9 (19%), CSR plus RT in 13 (27%), partial resection or rebiopsy plus RT in 10 (21%), and RT alone in 15 patients (31%). One child developed distant disease before completing local therapy.: ResultsOf the 48 patients, 12 developed relapse at local (n = 3), regional (n = 4), or distant (n = 5) sites. All 9 patients treated with CSR after induction chemotherapy had embryonal/botryoid histology. Only 1 of these 9 patients developed relapse. No statistically significant difference was found in overall survival (p = 0.95) or relapse-free survival (p = 0.67) between patients treated with or without RT. The Kaplan-Meier estimate of 5-year overall survival and relapse-free survival was 76% ± 7% and 74% ± 7%, respectively. Significant predictors of relapse-free survival on univariate analysis included CSR (p = 0.03), nodal positivity (p = 0.001), and embryonal histology (p = 0.0003). On multivariate analysis, embryonal histology was the most significant predictor of relapse-free (p = 0.001) and overall (p = 0.01) survival.: ConclusionThe overall survival for children with Group III rhabdomyosarcoma in this series was favorable. Embryonal/botryoid histology was the most significant predictor of both overall and relapse-free survival. We found that for a selected subgroup of children with embryonal histology, induction chemotherapy followed by complete surgical resection alone may be adequate local therapy. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2004
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43. Continuing Medical Education Preferences and Pediatric Radiation Practices of Radiation Oncologists Attending the 2019 Meeting of the Pediatric Radiation Oncology Society.
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Paulino, Arnold, Dieckmann, Karin, Esiashvili, Natia, Mahajan, Anita, Janssens, Geert, Halperin, Edward, Carrie, Christian, Parkes, Jeannette, Wolden, Suzanne, Seiersen, Klaus, Awrey, Susan, Dieter-Kortmann, Rolf, and Marcus, Karen
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CHILDHOOD cancer , *CONTINUING medical education , *ONCOLOGISTS , *RADIATION - Published
- 2020
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44. Proton beam therapy for medulloblastoma - Author's reply.
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Yock, Torunn I, Tarbell, Nancy J, Yeap, Beow Y, Ebb, David H, Weyman, Elizabeth, Eaton, Bree R, Sherry, Nicole A, Jones, Robin M, MacDonald, Shannon M, Pulsifer, Margaret B, Lavally, Beverly, Abrams, Annah N, Huang, Mary S, and Marcus, Karen J
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PROTON therapy , *MEDULLOBLASTOMA , *OTOTOXICITY , *CHILDHOOD cancer , *DEAFNESS , *CANCER chemotherapy , *BRAIN tumors , *GLIOMAS , *PROTONS - Published
- 2016
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