135 results on '"Marijnen P"'
Search Results
2. Cosmetic outcome in patients with early stage breast cancer after accelerated partial breast irradiation using intraoperative or external beam radiotherapy
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Jetske L.B. Gunster, Daphne H.M. Jacobs, Mirjam E. Mast, Antoinette Verbeek-de Kanter, Ursula J. Fisscher, Anna L. Petoukhova, Gabrielle Speijer, Marieke Straver, Jos Merkus, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, and Astrid N. Scholten
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Breast cancer ,Accelerated partial breast irradiation ,External beam radiotherapy ,Intraoperative electron radiotherapy ,Cosmetic outcome ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of this study is to evaluate the cosmetic outcome among early stage breast cancer patients who underwent accelerated partial breast irradiation with either intraoperative electron radiotherapy (IOERT) or photon external beam radiotherapy (EB-APBI). Materials and methods: This prospective multicenter cohort study enrolled women aged 60 years and older who underwent breast-conserving therapy. Following breast-conserving surgery, patients were treated with either IOERT or EB-APBI. Cosmetic outcome was evaluated over a 5 year follow-up period using both subjective scoring by patients and physicians, as well as objective scoring using BCCT.core software. Differences between treatments over time were described with mixed model analyses. Results: A total of 241 patients treated with IOERT and 164 patients treated with EB-APBI were eligible for cosmetic analysis. In both groups, the majority of patients reported a satisfactory cosmetic outcome, with no significant differences between treatments over time (p = 0.538). This was also observed by physicians, with satisfactory outcomes ranging from 94 % (170/181) to 91 % (69/76) over time in the IOERT group and from 93 % (124/133) to 95 % (54/57) in the EB-APBI group (p = 0.579). BCCT.core analysis returned satisfactory cosmetic outcomes in 75 % (54/72) of the IOERT patients at 3 years and in 77 % (20/26) at 5 years. These numbers were 86 % (72/84) and 90 % (36/40) for the EB-APBI patients, with no significant differences between treatment over time (p = 0.834). Conclusion: Regarding the cosmetic results, IOERT and EB-APBI yield comparable and satisfactory outcomes over 5 years follow-up in the treatment of early stage breast cancer.
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- 2024
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3. Optimised treatment of patients with enlarged lateral lymph nodes in rectal cancer: protocol of an international, multicentre, prospective registration study after extensive multidisciplinary training (LaNoReC)
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Susan Van Dieren, Joost Nederend, Pieter J Tanis, Roel Hompes, Klaas Havenga, Melissa W Taggart, Robert Riedl, Michail Doukas, Evert-Jan G. Boerma, Marinke Westerterp, Corrie A M Marijnen, Jaap Stoker, Andrew Ruszkiewicz, Tsuyoshi Konishi, Jarno Melenhorst, Karin Muller, Krista Gerbrands, Michael Croft, Michael Wilks, Johanne G. Bloemen, Peter A. Neijenhuis, Koen C.M.J. Peeters, Miranda Kusters, Martijn Intven, Jan Peringa, Maria Verseveld, Eline G M van Geffen, Tania C Sluckin, Sanne-Marije J A Hazen, Karin Horsthuis, Geerard Beets, Marilyne M Lange, Regina G H Beets-Tan, Marc R. W. Engelbrecht, Elisabeth D. Geijsen, Philip Meijnen, Jurriaan B. Tuynman, Ingrid M. Bruijnzeel, Bas Lamme, Femke M. Alberts, Rogier M. P. H. Crolla, Joanne Verdult, Johan H. Wijsman, Charlotte S. van Kessel, Erik Jan Mulder, Jan Binne Hulshoff, Ivan M. Cherepanin, Hans F. J. Fabry, G. Y. Mireille, Frank J. M. Kemper, Fatih Polat, Jacobus W. A. Burger, Jeltsje S. Cnossen, Shira H. de Bie, Robbert J. I. Bosker, Aaldert K. Talsma, Leonora S. F. Boogerd, Marc J. P. M. Govaert, Merel M. Scheurkogel, Imogeen E. Antonisse, Joost Rothbarth, Marianne de Vries, Marcel A. H. Ribbert, Anthony W. H. van de Ven, Susan ter Borg, Jennifer W. Bradshaw, Heleen M. Ceha, Fleur I. de Korte, Andreas W. K. S. Marinelli, Tjeerd S. Aukema, Liselotte W. van Bockel, Aukje A. J. M. van Tilborg, Tom Rozema, Amarins Brandsma, Stefan Hoogendoorn, Saskia R. Offerman, Hanneke Vos, Henderik L. van Westreenen, Jeroen W. A. Leijtens, Fabian A. Holman, Laura A. Velema, L Els, van Persijn van Meerten, Frans C. H. Bakers, Iryna Samarska, Nina Šefčovičová, Maaike Berbée, Bastiaan B. Pultrum, Dennis B. Rouw, Matthew Albert, L. René Arensman, Hanneke Basart, Esther C. J. Consten, Bart C.T. van de Laar, Inne Somers, Paul M. Verheijen, Thomas A. Fassaert, Christiaan Hoff, Eino B. van Duyn, Ellen M. Hendriksen, Hugo A.J. Gielkens, Arend G. J. Aalbers, Brechtje A. Grotenhuis, Michalda S. Dunker, Anne M. van Geel, Christof Meischl, W. Hermien Schreurs, Patty H. Spruit, Michael F. Gerhards, Thomas M. Karsten, Eveline J.T. Krul, Sebastiaan van Koeverden, Andre J. A. Bremers, Heidi Rütten, Johannes H. W. de Wilt, Mariska den Hartogh, Vera Oppedijk, Jan Willem T. Dekker, Debora Eschbach-Zandbergen, Daphne Roos, Arjan van Tilburg, Ernst Jan, Spillenaar Bilgen, Nikki Knijn, Marnix A. J. de Roos, Ilse van Dop, Tracy Fitzsimmons, Hidde M. Kroon, Michael Penniment, Mitchell Raeside, Tarik Sammour, Steven J. Oosterling, Jeroen A. W. Tielbeek, Ronald J. C. L. M. Vuylsteke, Erik J. R. J. van der Hoeven, Anke B. Smits, Anniek H. Boer, Edgar J. B. Furnée, Robbert J. de Haas, Manon N. G. J. A. Braat, Wilhelmina M. U. van Grevenstein, Milan C. Richir, Patricia J. A. M. Brouwers, Tilly Leseman, Eric H. J. Belgers, Jasenko Krdzalic, and Roy F. A. Vliegen
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Inadequate treatment of enlarged lateral lymph nodes (LLNs) in rectal cancer patients is associated with an increased lateral local recurrence (LLR) risk, despite neoadjuvant treatment and total mesorectal excision (TME) surgery. There is a promising role for LLN dissection (LLND) to lower this risk, but this challenging procedure requires appropriate training. This study protocol describes a prospective evaluation of oncological outcomes after standardised treatment based on multidisciplinary training, thereby aiming for a 50% reduction in LLR rate.Methods and analysis A prospective registration study will be opened in hospitals in which the involved multidisciplinary team members (radiologists, radiation oncologists, surgeons and pathologists) have received dedicated training to enhance knowledge and awareness of LLNs and in which standardised treatment including LLND has been implemented. Patients with rectal cancer and at least one enlarged LLN (short-axis ≥7.0 mm), or intermediate LLN (short-axis 5.0–6.9 mm) with at least one malignant feature on primary MRI, evaluated by a trained radiologist, are eligible. Patients will undergo neoadjuvant treatment by trained radiation oncologists, followed by TME surgery in combination with a minimally invasive, nerve-sparing LLND performed by trained surgeons. LLND specimens are evaluated by trained pathologists or grossing assistants. The primary outcome is LLR rate 3 years postoperatively. Secondary outcomes are morbidity, disease-free survival, overall survival and quality of life. To demonstrate a significant reduction in LLR rate from 13% (based on historical control data) to 6% after optimised treatment, 200 patients with enlarged LLNs are required.Ethics and dissemination The medical ethics board of the Vrije Universiteit Medical Centre (VUMC), the Netherlands, approved the study on 23 November 2022 (reference: 2021.0524). Participating centres must obtain local approval and participants are required to provide written informed consent. Results obtained from this study will be communicated via peer-reviewed medical journals and presentations at conferences.Trail registration number NCT04486131, 24 July 2020, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04486131.
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- 2024
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4. Incorporating patient-specific information for the development of rectal tumor auto-segmentation models for online adaptive magnetic resonance Image-guided radiotherapy
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Chavelli M. Kensen, Rita Simões, Anja Betgen, Lisa Wiersema, Doenja M.J. Lambregts, Femke P. Peters, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, Uulke A. van der Heide, and Tomas M. Janssen
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Rectal cancer ,Deep learning ,Auto-segmentation ,GTV ,MRI-guided radiotherapy ,Online adaptive radiotherapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background and purpose: In online adaptive magnetic resonance image (MRI)-guided radiotherapy (MRIgRT), manual contouring of rectal tumors on daily images is labor-intensive and time-consuming. Automation of this task is complex due to substantial variation in tumor shape and location between patients. The aim of this work was to investigate different approaches of propagating patient-specific prior information to the online adaptive treatment fractions to improve deep-learning based auto-segmentation of rectal tumors. Materials and methods: 243 T2-weighted MRI scans of 49 rectal cancer patients treated on the 1.5T MR-Linear accelerator (MR-Linac) were utilized to train models to segment rectal tumors. As benchmark, an MRI_only auto-segmentation model was trained. Three approaches of including a patient-specific prior were studied: 1. include the segmentations of fraction 1 as extra input channel for the auto-segmentation of subsequent fractions, 2. fine-tuning of the MRI_only model to fraction 1 (PSF_1) and 3. fine-tuning of the MRI_only model on all earlier fractions (PSF_cumulative). Auto-segmentations were compared to the manual segmentation using geometric similarity metrics. Clinical impact was assessed by evaluating post-treatment target coverage. Results: All patient-specific methods outperformed the MRI_only segmentation approach. Median 95th percentile Hausdorff (95HD) were 22.0 (range: 6.1–76.6) mm for MRI_only segmentation, 9.9 (range: 2.5–38.2) mm for MRI+prior segmentation, 6.4 (range: 2.4–17.8) mm for PSF_1 and 4.8 (range: 1.7–26.9) mm for PSF_cumulative. PSF_cumulative was found to be superior to PSF_1 from fraction 4 onward (p = 0.014). Conclusion: Patient-specific fine-tuning of automatically segmented rectal tumors, using images and segmentations from all previous fractions, yields superior quality compared to other auto-segmentation approaches.
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- 2024
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5. Impact of a one-year supervised physical activity program on long-term cancer-related fatigue and mediating effects of the gut microbiota in metastatic testicular cancer patients: protocol of the prospective multicentre, randomized controlled phase-III STARTER trial
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Hwayoung Noh, Amélie Anota, Rodolf Mongondry, Renaud Meyrand, Carmen Dupuis, Camille Schiffler, Philippe Marijnen, Sabina Rinaldi, Joel Lachuer, Pekka Keski-Rahkonen, Marc J Gunter, Aude Fléchon, Béatrice Fervers, and Olivia Pérol
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Physical activity ,Testicular cancer ,Cancer-related fatigue ,Health-related quality of life ,Cancer-related sequelae ,Gut microbiota ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) are the most common malignancy in men aged 15–40 years, with increasing incidence worldwide. About 33 ~ 50% of the patients present with metastatic disease at diagnosis. TGCT survivors experience short- and long-term sequelae, including cancer-related fatigue (CRF). Physical activity (PA) has established effects on reducing CRF and other sequelae and improving health-related quality of life (HRQoL). However, its impact on TGCT survivors has so far received little attention. The gut microbiota plays a crucial role in various physiological functions, including cognition and metabolism, and may mediate the effects of PA on CRF and other sequelae, but this has not been investigated in randomized controlled trials. Methods This national, multicentre, phase-III trial will evaluate the impact of a one-year supervised PA program on CRF and other short- and long-term sequelae in metastatic TGCT patients receiving cisplatin-based chemotherapy combined with etoposide+/-bleomycin. It will also investigate potential mediating effects of the gut microbiota and its metabolites involved in the gut-brain axis on the relationship between PA and CRF and other sequelae. A total of 236 men ≥ 18 years of age with metastatic TGCT (seminoma and non-seminoma) will be enrolled before starting first-line chemotherapy in several French hospitals. The primary (CRF) and secondary (cognitive/psychological/metabolic sequelae, HRQoL, etc.) outcomes and gut microbiota and relevant metabolites will be assessed at inclusion, during and at the end of the one-year intervention, and annually until 10 years since inclusion to assess long-term sequelae, more specifically CRF, cardiovascular toxicities, and second primary cancer occurrence in this population. Discussion This trial will provide comprehensive and novel insights into the effects of a long-term supervised PA program on CRF and other sequelae in metastatic TGCT patients receiving first-line chemotherapy. It will also contribute to understanding the potential role of the gut microbiota and its metabolites in mediating the effects of PA on these outcomes. The findings of this study will help the development of effective PA interventions to improve the health of TGCT survivors and may have implications for other cancer populations as well. Trial registration The study was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05588700) on 20 Oct. 2022.
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- 2024
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6. Evaluation of Deep Learning Clinical Target Volumes Auto-Contouring for Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Guided Online Adaptive Treatment of Rectal Cancer
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Nicole Ferreira Silvério, MSc, Wouter van den Wollenberg, PhD, Anja Betgen, MSc, Lisa Wiersema, BSc, Corrie Marijnen, Prof. Dr., Femke Peters, MD, PhD, Uulke A. van der Heide, Prof. Dr., Rita Simões, PhD, and Tomas Janssen, PhD
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Purpose: Segmentation of clinical target volumes (CTV) on medical images can be time-consuming and is prone to interobserver variation (IOV). This is a problem for online adaptive radiation therapy, where CTV segmentation must be performed every treatment fraction, leading to longer treatment times and logistic challenges. Deep learning (DL)-based auto-contouring has the potential to speed up CTV contouring, but its current clinical use is limited. One reason for this is that it can be time-consuming to verify the accuracy of CTV contours produced using auto-contouring, and there is a risk of bias being introduced. To be accepted by clinicians, auto-contouring must be trustworthy. Therefore, there is a need for a comprehensive commissioning framework when introducing DL-based auto-contouring in clinical practice. We present such a framework and apply it to an in-house developed DL model for auto-contouring of the CTV in rectal cancer patients treated with MRI-guided online adaptive radiation therapy. Methods and Materials: The framework for evaluating DL-based auto-contouring consisted of 3 steps: (1) Quantitative evaluation of the model's performance and comparison with IOV; (2) Expert observations and corrections; and (3) Evaluation of the impact on expected volumetric target coverage. These steps were performed on independent data sets. The framework was applied to an in-house trained nnU-Net model, using the data of 44 rectal cancer patients treated at our institution. Results: The framework established that the model's performance after expert corrections was comparable to IOV, and although the model introduced a bias, this had no relevant impact on clinical practice. Additionally, we found a substantial time gain without reducing quality as determined by volumetric target coverage. Conclusions: Our framework provides a comprehensive evaluation of the performance and clinical usability of target auto-contouring models. Based on the results, we conclude that the model is eligible for clinical use.
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- 2024
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7. Results of a diagnostic imaging audit in a randomised clinical trial in rectal cancer highlight the importance of careful planning and quality control
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Ilaria Prata, Martina Eriksson, Jasenko Krdzalic, Elma Meershoek-Klein Kranenbarg, Annet G. H. Roodvoets, Regina Beets-Tan, Cornelis J. H. van de Velde, Boudewijn van Etten, Geke A. P. Hospers, Bengt Glimelius, Per J. Nilsson, Corrie A. M. Marijnen, Koen C. M. J. Peeters, and Lennart K. Blomqvist
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Rectal cancer ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Image acquisition protocol ,Audit ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is the modality used for baseline assessment of locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC) and restaging after neoadjuvant treatment. The overall audited quality of MR imaging in large multicentre trials on rectal cancer is so far not routinely reported. Materials and methods We collected MR images obtained within the Rectal Cancer And Pre-operative Induction Therapy Followed by Dedicated Operation (RAPIDO) trial and performed an audit of the technical features of image acquisition. The required MR sequences and slice thickness stated in the RAPIDO protocol were used as a reference. Results Out of 920 participants of the RAPIDO study, MR investigations of 668 and 623 patients in the baseline and restaging setting, respectively, were collected. Of these, 304/668 (45.5%) and 328/623 (52.6%) MR images, respectively, fulfilled the technical quality criteria. The main reason for non-compliance was exceeding slice thickness 238/668, 35.6% in the baseline setting and 162/623, 26.0% in the restaging setting. In 166/668, 24.9% and 168/623, 27.0% MR images in the baseline and restaging setting, respectively, one or more of the required pulse sequences were missing. Conclusion Altogether, 49.0% of the MR images obtained within the RAPIDO trial fulfilled the image acquisition criteria required in the study protocol. High-quality MR imaging should be expected for the appropriate initial treatment and response evaluation of patients with LARC, and efforts should be made to maximise the quality of imaging in clinical trials and in clinical practice. Critical relevance statement This audit highlights the importance of adherence to MR image acquisition criteria for rectal cancer, both in multicentre trials and in daily clinical practice. High-resolution images allow correct staging, treatment stratification and evaluation of response to neoadjuvant treatment. Key points - Complying to MR acquisition guidelines in multicentre trials is challenging. - Neglection on MR acquisition criteria leads to poor staging and treatment. - MR acquisition guidelines should be followed in trials and clinical practice. - Researchers should consider mandatory audits prior to study initiation. Graphical Abstract
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- 2023
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8. Evaluation of National Surgical Practice for Lateral Lymph Nodes in Rectal Cancer in an Untrained Setting
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Sluckin, Tania C., Hazen, Sanne-Marije J. A., Horsthuis, Karin, Beets-Tan, Regina G. H., Aalbers, Arend G. J., Beets, Geerard L., Boerma, Evert-Jan G., Borstlap, Jaap, van Breest Smallenburg, Vivian, Burger, Jacobus W. A., Crolla, Rogier M. P. H., Daniëls-Gooszen, Alette W., Davids, Paul H. P., Dunker, Michalda S., Fabry, Hans F. J., Furnée, Edgar J. B., van Gils, Renza A. H., de Haas, Robbert J., Hoogendoorn, Stefan, van Koeverden, Sebastiaan, de Korte, Fleur I., Oosterling, Steven J., Peeters, Koen C. M. J., Posma, Lisanne A. E., Pultrum, Bareld B., Rothbarth, Joost, Rutten, Harm J. T., Schasfoort, Renske A., Schreurs, Wilhelmina H., Simons, Petra C. G., Smits, Anke B., Talsma, Aaldert K., The, G. Y. Mireille, van Tilborg, Fiek, Tuynman, Jurriaan B., Vanhooymissen, Inge J. S., van de Ven, Anthony W. H., Verdaasdonk, Emiel G. G., Vermaas, Maarten, Vliegen, Roy F. A., Vogelaar, F. Jeroen, de Vries, Marianne, Vroemen, Joy C., van Vugt, Sebastiaan T., Westerterp, Marinke, van Westreenen, Henderik L., de Wilt, Johannes H. W., van der Zaag, Edwin S., Zimmerman, David D. E., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Tanis, Pieter J., and Kusters, Miranda
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- 2023
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9. Results of a diagnostic imaging audit in a randomised clinical trial in rectal cancer highlight the importance of careful planning and quality control
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Prata, Ilaria, Eriksson, Martina, Krdzalic, Jasenko, Kranenbarg, Elma Meershoek-Klein, Roodvoets, Annet G. H., Beets-Tan, Regina, van de Velde, Cornelis J. H., van Etten, Boudewijn, Hospers, Geke A. P., Glimelius, Bengt, Nilsson, Per J., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Peeters, Koen C. M. J., and Blomqvist, Lennart K.
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- 2023
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10. ASO Visual Abstract: Evaluation of National Surgical Practice for Lateral Lymph Nodes in Rectal Cancer in an Untrained Setting
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Sluckin, Tania C., Hazen, Sanne-Marije J. A., Horsthuis, Karin, Beets-Tan, Regina G. H., Aalbers, Arend G. J., Beets, Geerard L., Boerma, Evert-Jan G., Borstlap, Jaap, van Breest Smallenburg, Vivian, Burger, Jacobus W. A., Crolla, Rogier M. P. H., Daniëls-Gooszen, Alette W., Davids, Paul H. P., Dunker, Michalda S., Fabry, Hans F. J., Furnée, Edgar J. B., van Gils, Renza A. H., de Haas, Robbert J., Hoogendoorn, Stefan, van Koeverden, Sebastiaan, de Korte, Fleur I., Oosterling, Steven J., Peeters, Koen C. M. J., Posma, Lisanne A. E., Pultrum, Bareld B., Rothbarth, Joost, Rutten, Harm J. T., Schasfoort, Renske A., Schreurs, Wilhelmina H., Simons, Petra C. G., Smits, Anke B., Talsma, Aaldert K., The, G. Y. Mireille, van Tilborg, Fiek, Tuynman, Jurriaan B., Vanhooymissen, Inge J., van de Ven, Anthony W. H., Verdaasdonk, Emiel G. G., Vermaas, Maarten, Vliegen, Roy F. A., Vogelaar, F. Jeroen, de Vries, Marianne, Vroemen, Joy C., van Vugt, Sebastiaan T., Westerterp, Marinke, van Westreenen, Henderik L., de Wilt, Johannes H. W., van der Zaag, Edwin S., Zimmerman, David D. E., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Tanis, Pieter J., and Kusters, Miranda
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- 2023
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11. Optimisation of Organ Preservation treatment strategies in patients with rectal cancer with a good clinical response after neoadjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy: Additional contact X-ray brachytherapy versus eXtending the observation period and local excision (OPAXX) — protocol for two multicentre, parallel, single-arm, phase II studies
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Jacobus W A Burger, Geerard L Beets, Corrie A M Marijnen, Femke P Peters, Brechtje A Grotenhuis, Jeltsje S Cnossen, Monique Maas, Barbara M Geubels, Baukelien van Triest, Petra A Custers, Harm J T Rutten, Jaqueline C M Theuws, and An-Sofie E Verrijssen
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Standard treatment for patients with intermediate or locally advanced rectal cancer is (chemo)radiotherapy followed by total mesorectal excision (TME) surgery. In recent years, organ preservation aiming at improving quality of life has been explored. Patients with a complete clinical response to (chemo)radiotherapy can be managed safely with a watch-and-wait approach. However, the optimal organ-preserving treatment strategy for patients with a good, but not complete clinical response remains unclear. The aim of the OPAXX study is to determine the rate of organ preservation that can be achieved in patients with rectal cancer with a good clinical response after neoadjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy by additional local treatment options.Methods and analysis The OPAXX study is a Dutch multicentre study that investigates the efficacy of two additional local treatments aiming at organ preservation in patients with a good, but not complete response to neoadjuvant treatment (ie near-complete response or a small residual tumour mass
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- 2023
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12. Patient-reported outcomes in PROSPECT trial (Alliance N1048) – FOLFOX is not a panacea
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Sean M. O'Cathail, Richard Adams, Maria A. Hawkins, David Sebag-Montefiore, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, and Emmanouil Fokas
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Rectal cancer ,Trials ,PROSPECT ,QoL ,Radiotherapy ,Chemotherapy ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2023
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13. Impact of endorectal filling on interobserver variability of MRI based rectal primary tumor delineation
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Monica Lo Russo, Marcel Nachbar, Aisling Barry, Shree Bhide, Amy Chang, William Hall, Martijn Intven, Corrie Marijnen, Femke Peters, Bruce Minsky, Paul B. Romesser, Reith Sarkar, Alex Tan, Simon Boeke, Daniel Wegener, Sarah Butzer, Jessica Boldt, Sergios Gatidis, Konstantin Nikolaou, Daniela Thorwarth, Daniel Zips, and Cihan Gani
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Rectal cancer ,MR-guided radiotherapy ,MRI-Linac ,Inter-observer agreement ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: Online adaptive MR-guided radiotherapy allows for the reduction of safety margins in dose escalated treatment of rectal tumors. With the use of smaller margins, precise tumor delineation becomes more critical. In the present study we investigated the impact of rectal ultrasound gel filling on interobserver variability in delineation of primary rectal tumor volumes. Methods: Six patients with locally advanced rectal cancer were scanned on a 1.5 T MRI-Linac without (MRI_e) and with application of 100 cc of ultrasound gel transanally (MRI_f). Eight international radiation oncologists expert in the treatment of gastrointestinal cancers delineated the gross tumor volume (GTV) on both MRI scans. MRI_f scans were provided to the participating centers after MRI_e scans had been returned. Interobserver variability was analyzed by either comparing the observers’ delineations with a reference delineation (approach 1) and by building all possible pairs between observers (approach 2). Dice Similarity Index (DICE) and 95 % Hausdorff-Distance (95 %HD) were calculated. Results: Rectal ultrasound gel filling was well tolerated by all patients. Overall, interobserver agreement was superior in MRI_f scans based on median DICE (0.81 vs 0.74, p
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- 2023
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14. Retrospective evaluation of national MRI reporting quality for lateral lymph nodes in rectal cancer patients and concordance with prospective re-evaluation following additional training
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Tania C. Sluckin, Sanne-Marije J. A. Hazen, Karin Horsthuis, Regina G. H. Beets-Tan, Corrie A. M. Marijnen, Pieter J. Tanis, Miranda Kusters, and The Dutch Snapshot Research Group
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Rectal cancer ,Lateral lymph nodes ,MR imaging ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 - Abstract
Abstract Objectives The presence and size of lateral lymph nodes (LLNs) are important factors influencing treatment decisions for rectal cancer. Awareness of the clinical relevance and describing LLNs in MRI reports is therefore essential. This study assessed whether LLNs were mentioned in primary MRI reports at a national level and investigated the concordance with standardised re-review. Methods This national, retrospective, cross-sectional cohort study included 1096 patients from 60 hospitals treated in 2016 for primary cT3-4 rectal cancer ≤ 8 cm from the anorectal junction. Abdominal radiologists re-reviewed all MR images following a 2-h training regarding LLNs. Results Re-review of MR images identified that 41.0% of enlarged (≥ 7 mm) LLNs were not mentioned in primary MRI reports. A contradictory anatomical location was stated for 73.2% of all LLNs and a different size (≥/
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- 2022
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15. Benchmarking daily adaptation using fully automated radiotherapy treatment plan optimization for rectal cancer
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Thyrza Z. Jagt, Tomas M. Janssen, Anja Betgen, Lisa Wiersema, Rick Verhage, Sanne Garritsen, Tineke Vijlbrief-Bosman, Peter de Ruiter, Peter Remeijer, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, Femke P. Peters, and Jan-Jakob Sonke
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Online plan adaptation ,MRI guided radiotherapy ,Automated treatment planning ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background/purpose: In daily plan adaptation the radiotherapy treatment plan is adjusted just prior to delivery. A simple approach is taking the planning objectives of the reference plan and directly applying these in re-optimization. Here we present a tested method to verify whether daily adaptation without tweaking of the objectives can maintain the plan quality throughout treatment. Materials/methods: For fifteen rectal cancer patients, automated treatment planning was used to generate plans mimicking manual reference plans on the planning scans. For 74 fraction scans (4–5 per patient) an automated plan and a daily adapted plan were generated, where the latter re-optimizes the reference plan objectives without any tweaking. To evaluate the robustness of the daily adaptation, the adapted plans were compared to the autoplanning plans. Results: Median differences between the autoplanning plans on the planning scans and the reference plans were between −1 and 0.2 Gy. The largest interquartile range (1 Gy) was seen for the Lumbar Skin D2%. For the daily scans the PTV D2% and D98% differences between autoplanning and adapted plans were within ±0.7 Gy, with mean differences within ±0.3 Gy. Positive differences indicate higher values were obtained using autoplanning. For the Bowelarea + Bladder and the Lumbar Skin the D2% and Dmean differences were all within ±2.6 Gy, with mean differences between −0.9 and 0.1 Gy. Conclusion: Automated treatment planning can be used to benchmark daily adaptation techniques. The investigated adaptation workflow can robustly perform high quality adaptations without daily adjusting of the patient-specific planning objectives for rectal cancer radiotherapy.
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- 2022
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16. Current controversies in TNM for the radiological staging of rectal cancer and how to deal with them: results of a global online survey and multidisciplinary expert consensus
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Lambregts, Doenja M. J., Bogveradze, Nino, Blomqvist, Lennart K., Fokas, Emmanouil, Garcia-Aguilar, Julio, Glimelius, Bengt, Gollub, Marc J., Konishi, Tsuyoshi, Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Nagtegaal, Iris D., Nilsson, Per J., Perez, Rodrigo O., Snaebjornsson, Petur, Taylor, Stuart A., Tolan, Damian J. M., Valentini, Vincenzo, West, Nicholas P., Wolthuis, Albert, Lahaye, Max J., Maas, Monique, Beets, Geerard L., and Beets-Tan, Regina G.H.
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- 2022
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17. Neoadjuvant FOLFOXIRI prior to chemoradiotherapy for high-risk ('ugly') locally advanced rectal cancer: study protocol of a single-arm, multicentre, open-label, phase II trial (MEND-IT)
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K. van den Berg, D. P. Schaap, E. L. K. Voogt, T. E. Buffart, H. M. W. Verheul, J. W. B. de Groot, C. Verhoef, J. Melenhorst, J. M. L. Roodhart, J. H. W. de Wilt, H. L. van Westreenen, A. G. J. Aalbers, M. van ‘t Veer, C. A. M. Marijnen, J. Vincent, L. H. J. Simkens, N. A. J. B. Peters, M. Berbée, I. M. Werter, P. Snaebjornsson, H. M. U. Peulen, I. G. van Lijnschoten, M. J. Roef, G. A. P. Nieuwenhuijzen, J. G. Bloemen, J. M. W. E. Willems, G. J. M. Creemers, J. Nederend, H. J. T. Rutten, and J. W. A. Burger
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Locally advanced rectal cancer ,Induction chemotherapy ,Neoadjuvant chemotherapy ,Neoadjuvant treatment ,Pathological complete response ,Clinical complete response ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The presence of mesorectal fascia (MRF) invasion, grade 4 extramural venous invasion (EMVI), tumour deposits (TD) or extensive or bilateral extramesorectal (lateral) lymph nodes (LLN) on MRI has been suggested to identify patients with indisputable, extensive locally advanced rectal cancer (LARC), at high risk of treatment failure. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether or not intensified chemotherapy prior to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy improves the complete response (CR) rate in these patients. Methods This multicentre, single-arm, open-label, phase II trial will include 128 patients with non-metastatic high-risk LARC (hr-LARC), fit for triplet chemotherapy. To ensure a study population with indisputable, unfavourable prognostic characteristics, hr-LARC is defined as LARC with on baseline MRI at least one of the following characteristics; MRF invasion, EMVI grade 4, enlarged bilateral or extensive LLN at high risk of an incomplete resection, or TD. Exclusion criteria are the presence of a homozygous DPD deficiency, distant metastases, any chemotherapy within the past 6 months, previous radiotherapy within the pelvic area precluding standard chemoradiotherapy, and any contraindication for the planned treatment. All patients will be planned for six two-weekly cycles of FOLFOXIRI (5-fluorouracil, leucovorin, oxaliplatin and irinotecan) prior to chemoradiotherapy (25 × 2 Gy or 28 × 1.8 Gy with concomitant capecitabine). A resection will be performed following radiological confirmation of resectable disease after the completion of chemoradiotherapy. A watch and wait strategy is allowed in case of a clinical complete response. The primary endpoint is the CR rate, described as a pathological CR or a sustained clinical CR one year after chemoradiotherapy. The main secondary objectives are long-term oncological outcomes, radiological and pathological response, the number of resections with clear margins, treatment-related toxicity, perioperative complications, health-related costs, and quality of life. Discussion This trial protocol describes the MEND-IT study. The MEND-IT study aims to evaluate the CR rate after intensified chemotherapy prior to concomitant chemoradiotherapy in a homogeneous group of patients with locally advanced rectal cancer and indisputably unfavourable characteristics, defined as hr-LARC, in order to improve their prognosis. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT04838496 , registered on 02–04-2021 Netherlands Trial Register: NL9790. Protocol version Version 3 dd 11–4-2022.
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- 2022
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18. Towards Response ADAptive Radiotherapy for organ preservation for intermediate-risk rectal cancer (preRADAR): protocol of a phase I dose-escalation trial
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Miangela M Lacle, Sjoerd G Elias, Leon M G Moons, Helena M Verkooijen, Manon N G J A Braat, Myriam Chalabi, Corrie A M Marijnen, Femke P Peters, Brechtje A Grotenhuis, Miriam Koopman, Petur Snaebjornsson, Esther Consten, Wilhelmina M U van Grevenstein, Maaike E Verweij, Max D Tanaka, Chavelli M Kensen, Uulke A van der Heide, Tomas Janssen, Tineke Vijlbrief, Monique Maas, Inge L Huibregtse, Remond Fijneman, Apollo Pronk, Anke B Smits, Joost T Heikens, Hidde Eijkelenkamp, Maartje M C Schoenmakers, Gert J Meijer, and Martijn Intven
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Organ preservation is associated with superior functional outcome and quality of life (QoL) compared with total mesorectal excision (TME) for rectal cancer. Only 10% of patients are eligible for organ preservation following short-course radiotherapy (SCRT, 25 Gy in five fractions) and a prolonged interval (4–8 weeks) to response evaluation. The organ preservation rate could potentially be increased by dose-escalated radiotherapy. Online adaptive magnetic resonance-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) is anticipated to reduce radiation-induced toxicity and enable radiotherapy dose escalation. This trial aims to establish the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of dose-escalated SCRT using online adaptive MRgRT.Methods and analysis The preRADAR is a multicentre phase I trial with a 6+3 dose-escalation design. Patients with intermediate-risk rectal cancer (cT3c-d(MRF-)N1M0 or cT1-3(MRF-)N1M0) interested in organ preservation are eligible. Patients are treated with a radiotherapy boost of 2×5 Gy (level 0), 3×5 Gy (level 1), 4×5 Gy (level 2) or 5×5 Gy (level 3) on the gross tumour volume in the week following standard SCRT using online adaptive MRgRT. The trial starts on dose level 1. The primary endpoint is the MTD based on the incidence of dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) per dose level. DLT is a composite of maximum one in nine severe radiation-induced toxicities and maximum one in three severe postoperative complications, in patients treated with TME or local excision within 26 weeks following start of treatment. Secondary endpoints include the organ preservation rate, non-DLT, oncological outcomes, patient-reported QoL and functional outcomes up to 2 years following start of treatment. Imaging and laboratory biomarkers are explored for early response prediction.Ethics and dissemination The trial protocol has been approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the University Medical Centre Utrecht. The primary and secondary trial results will be published in international peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration number WHO International Clinical Trials Registry (NL8997; https://trialsearch.who.int).
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- 2023
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19. Effect of intrafraction adaptation on PTV margins for MRI guided online adaptive radiotherapy for rectal cancer
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Chavelli M. Kensen, Tomas M. Janssen, Anja Betgen, Lisa Wiersema, Femke P. Peters, Peter Remeijer, Corrie A. M. Marijnen, and Uulke A. van der Heide
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Purpose To determine PTV margins for intrafraction motion in MRI-guided online adaptive radiotherapy for rectal cancer and the potential benefit of performing a 2nd adaptation prior to irradiation. Methods Thirty patients with rectal cancer received radiotherapy on a 1.5 T MR-Linac. On T2-weighted images for adaptation (MRIadapt), verification prior to (MRIver) and after irradiation (MRIpost) of 5 treatment fractions per patient, the primary tumor GTV (GTVprim) and mesorectum CTV (CTVmeso) were delineated. The structures on MRIadapt were expanded to corresponding PTVs. We determined the required expansion margins such that on average over 5 fractions, 98% of CTVmeso and 95% of GTVprim on MRIpost was covered in 90% of the patients. Furthermore, we studied the benefit of an additional adaptation, just prior to irradiation, by evaluating the coverage between the structures on MRIver and MRIpost. A threshold to assess the need for a secondary adaptation was determined by considering the overlap between MRIadapt and MRIver. Results PTV margins for intrafraction motion without 2nd adaptation were 6.4 mm in the anterior direction and 4.0 mm in all other directions for CTVmeso and 5.0 mm isotropically for GTVprim. A 2nd adaptation, applied for all fractions where the motion between MRIadapt and MRIver exceeded 1 mm (36% of the fractions) would result in a reduction of the PTVmeso margin to 3.2 mm/2.0 mm. For PTVprim a margin reduction to 3.5 mm is feasible when a 2nd adaptation is performed in fractions where the motion exceeded 4 mm (17% of the fractions). Conclusion We studied the potential benefit of intrafraction motion monitoring and a 2nd adaptation to reduce PTV margins in online adaptive MRIgRT in rectal cancer. Performing 2nd adaptations immediately after online replanning when motion exceeded 1 mm and 4 mm for CTVmeso and GTVprim respectively, could result in a 30–50% margin reduction with limited reduction of dose to the bowel.
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- 2022
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20. Hypofractionated radiotherapy combined with targeted therapy or immunotherapy: Dutch survey on current practice, knowledge and challenges
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Evert S.M. van Aken, Yvette M. van der Linden, Johannes V. van Thienen, Adrianus J. de Langen, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, and Monique C. de Jong
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Radiotherapy ,Tyrosine kinase inhibitors ,Immune checkpoint blockade ,Toxicity ,Interaction ,Tumor flare ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Introduction: With the introduction of tyrosine kinase inhibitors and systemic antibodies, including immune checkpoint inhibitors, the survival of advanced-stage cancer patients has improved for many tumor types. These patients are increasingly referred for radiotherapy, but it is unclear whether radiotherapy combined with these drugs is safe. No international guidelines exist on whether or how to combine these drugs with radiotherapy. Therefore, we investigated the current clinical practice in the Netherlands regarding hypofractionated radiotherapy in patients using targeted drugs and immunotherapy. Materials and methods: We sent a survey to all 21 Dutch radiotherapy institutes. Dedicated radiation oncologists, medical oncologists and pulmonologists were asked to fill out the survey. The questions explored their familiarity with the combination of targeted drugs and immunotherapy with radiotherapy, the encountered clinical difficulties and factors influencing treatment decisions. Results: The survey was filled out by 54 respondents from 19 different institutes. The median annual number of patients per radiation oncologist referred for radiotherapy when using targeted drugs or immunotherapy was 10 and 15, respectively. Despite this high number, only 11% of the radiation oncologists stated that they had sufficient information (resources) for adequate treatment decision making. Among all physicians, 44% stated that there was insufficient knowledge within their institute regarding this topic. Only 17% stated that there was a multidisciplinary protocol available. The application of radiotherapy treatment adaptations (technique, dose, fractionation, field size) varied widely. Generally, there seemed to be no consensus regarding the expected toxicity of combined drug-radiotherapy treatments and the expected risk of tumor flare upon temporary drug discontinuation. Conclusion: There is no consensus amongst involved medical specialties on expected toxicity. Consequently, it is necessary to perform clinical studies examining the safety of combined drug-radiotherapy treatments, to add radiotherapy to phase I-III clinical trials for new drugs and to incorporate outcomes into multidisciplinary, evidence-based guidelines.
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- 2022
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21. Retrospective evaluation of national MRI reporting quality for lateral lymph nodes in rectal cancer patients and concordance with prospective re-evaluation following additional training
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Sluckin, Tania C., Hazen, Sanne-Marije J. A., Horsthuis, Karin, Beets-Tan, Regina G. H., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Tanis, Pieter J., and Kusters, Miranda
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- 2022
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22. Neoadjuvant FOLFOXIRI prior to chemoradiotherapy for high-risk (“ugly”) locally advanced rectal cancer: study protocol of a single-arm, multicentre, open-label, phase II trial (MEND-IT)
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van den Berg, K., Schaap, D. P., Voogt, E. L. K., Buffart, T. E., Verheul, H. M. W., de Groot, J. W. B., Verhoef, C., Melenhorst, J., Roodhart, J. M. L., de Wilt, J. H. W., van Westreenen, H. L., Aalbers, A. G. J., van ‘t Veer, M., Marijnen, C. A. M., Vincent, J., Simkens, L. H. J., Peters, N. A. J. B., Berbée, M., Werter, I. M., Snaebjornsson, P., Peulen, H. M. U., van Lijnschoten, I. G., Roef, M. J., Nieuwenhuijzen, G. A. P., Bloemen, J. G., Willems, J. M. W. E., Creemers, G. J. M., Nederend, J., Rutten, H. J. T., and Burger, J. W. A.
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- 2022
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23. Effect of intrafraction adaptation on PTV margins for MRI guided online adaptive radiotherapy for rectal cancer
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Kensen, Chavelli M., Janssen, Tomas M., Betgen, Anja, Wiersema, Lisa, Peters, Femke P., Remeijer, Peter, Marijnen, Corrie A. M., and van der Heide, Uulke A.
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- 2022
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24. International consensus recommendations on key outcome measures for organ preservation after (chemo)radiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer
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Fokas, Emmanouil, Appelt, Ane, Glynne-Jones, Robert, Beets, Geerard, Perez, Rodrigo, Garcia-Aguilar, Julio, Rullier, Eric, Joshua Smith, J., Marijnen, Corrie, Peters, Femke P., van der Valk, Maxine, Beets-Tan, Regina, Myint, Arthur S., Gerard, Jean-Pierre, Bach, Simon P., Ghadimi, Michael, Hofheinz, Ralf D., Bujko, Krzysztof, Gani, Cihan, Haustermans, Karin, Minsky, Bruce D., Ludmir, Ethan, West, Nicholas P., Gambacorta, Maria A., Valentini, Vincenzo, Buyse, Marc, Renehan, Andrew G., Gilbert, Alexandra, Sebag-Montefiore, David, and Rödel, Claus
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- 2021
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25. Health-related quality of life of early-stage breast cancer patients after different radiotherapy regimens
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Jacobs, Daphne H. M., Charaghvandi, Ramona K., Horeweg, Nanda, Maduro, John H., Speijer, Gabrielle, Roeloffzen, Ellen M. A., Mast, Mirjam, Bantema-Joppe, Enja, Petoukhova, Anna L., van den Bongard, Desirée H. J. G., Koper, Peter, Crijns, Anne P. G., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., and Verkooijen, Helena M.
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- 2021
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26. The immune microenvironment landscape shows treatment-specific differences in rectal cancer patients
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Cristina Graham Martínez, Yari Barella, Sonay Kus Öztürk, Marleen Ansems, Mark A.J Gorris, Shannon van Vliet, Corrie A.M Marijnen, and Iris D Nagtegaal
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immune microenvironment ,response ,rectal cancer ,neoadjuvant treatment ,immune landscape ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Neoadjuvant therapy is the cornerstone of modern rectal cancer treatment. Insights into the biology of tumor responses are essential for the successful implementation of organ-preserving strategies, as different treatments may lead to specific tumor responses. In this study, we aim to explore treatment-specific responses of the tumor microenvironment. Patients with locally advanced adenocarcinoma of the rectum who had received neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (CT), neo-adjuvant radiochemotherapy (RCT), neo-adjuvant radiotherapy with a long-interval (LRT) or short-interval (SRT) or no neoadjuvant therapy (NT) as control were included. Multiplex-immunofluorescence was performed to determine the presence of cytotoxic T-cells (T-cyt; CD3+CD8+), regulatory T-cells (T-reg; CD3+FOXP3+), T-helper cells (T-helper; CD3+CD8-FOXP3-), B cells (CD20+), dendritic cells (CD11c+) and tumor cells (panCK+). A total of 80 rectal cancer patients were included. Treatment groups were matched for gender, tumor location, response to therapy, and TNM stage. The pattern of response (shrinkage vs. fragmentation) was, however, different between treatment groups. Our analyses reveal that RCT-treated patients exhibited lower stromal T-helper, T-reg, and T-cyt cells compared to other treatment regimens. In conclusion, we demonstrated treatment-specific differences in the immune microenvironment landscape of rectal cancer patients. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of this landscape after a specific therapy will benefit future treatment decisions.
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- 2022
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27. Effect of acute aerobic exercise before immunotherapy and chemotherapy infusion in patients with metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer: protocol for the ERICA feasibility trial
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Vincent Pialoux, Christophe Caux, Christine Ménétrier-Caux, Maurice Pérol, Thierry Walzer, Béatrice Fervers, Olivia Pérol, Lidia Delrieu, Pierre Saintigny, Manon Gouez, Marine Villard, and Philippe Marijnen
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Patients with metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (mNSCLC) suffer from numerous symptoms linked to disease and treatment which may further impair the patient’s overall condition. In addition to its benefits on quality of life and fatigue, physical exercise may improve treatment response, notably due to its known effects on the immune system. The ERICA study is designed to assess the feasibility of a supervised acute physical exercise therapy realised immediately prior immune-chemotherapy infusion in patients with mNSCLC. Secondary objectives will examine the effects of acute exercise combined with an unsupervised home-walking programme on clinical, physical, psychosocial and biological parameters.Methods and analysis ERICA is a prospective, monocentric, randomised controlled, open-label feasibility study conducted at the Centre Léon Bérard Comprehensive Cancer Center (France). Thirty patients newly diagnosed with mNSCLC will be randomised (2:1 ratio) to the ‘exercise’ or the ‘control’ group. At baseline and during the last treatment cycle, participants in both groups will receive Physical Activity recommendations, and two nutritional assessments. In the exercise group, participants will receive a 3-month programme consisting of a supervised acute physical exercise session prior to immune-chemotherapy infusion, and an unsupervised home-based walking programme with an activity tracker. The acute exercise consists of 35 min interval training at submaximal intensity scheduled to terminate 15 min prior to infusion. Clinical, physical, biological and psychosocial parameters will be assessed at baseline, 3 and 6 months after inclusion. Biological measures will include immune, inflammatory, metabolic, oxidative stress biomarkers and molecular profiling.Ethics and dissemination The study protocol was approved by the French ethics committee (Comité de protection des personnes Ile de France II, N°ID-RCB 20.09.04.65226, 8 December 2020). The study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT number:NCT04676009) and is at the pre-results stage. All participants will sign an informed consent form. The findings will be disseminated in peer-reviewed journals and academic conferences.
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- 2022
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28. Mesorectal radiotherapy for early stage rectal cancer: A novel target volume
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Femke P. Peters, Mark T.W. Teo, Ane L. Appelt, Simon Bach, Gunnar Baatrup, Johannes H.W. de Wilt, Camilla Jensenius Kronborg, Karen-Lise Garm Spindler, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, and David Sebag-Montefiore
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
With the introduction of population-based bowel cancer screening, rectal cancer is diagnosed at earlier stages, yet standard treatment still requires the same extensive surgery that is used for more advanced stages. Organ preserving treatment is rapidly developing and is subject of investigation in numerous clinical trials. The STAR-TREC trial is an international, multi-centre randomised trial investigating organ preservation using (chemo)radiotherapy. Patients with small mrT1-3bN0V0M0 tumours are randomized between three arms: standard TME, organ preservation with SCRT or with CRT. In this trial, the clinical target volume has been tailored to the early staged disease of the included patients. This mesorectal irradiation volume includes the mesorectum and pre-sacral lymph nodes at the level of the tumour, two centimetres below and cranially up to the S2-3 interspace level. In contrast to conventional irradiation volumes, the lateral lymph nodes and the nodes along the superior rectal artery are excluded. As a result, the dose to the bowel, bladder, anal sphincter and the neurovascular plexus in the lower pelvis is substantially decreased, especially when combined with modern irradiation techniques, such as dynamic arc therapy. These lower doses are expected to lead to decreasing acute and late toxicity and beneficial functional outcomes. The implementation of this novel target volume will be accompanied by an extensive quality assurance program in the STAR-TREC trial. We describe the rationale behind the novel, mesorectal only radiotherapy treatment used in the STAR-TREC trial specifically tailored for early stage disease, with the goal of organ preservation. Keywords: Rectal neoplasms, Radiotherapy, Clinical target volumes, Organ Preservation
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- 2020
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29. Radiotherapy quality assurance for mesorectum treatment planning within the multi-center phase II STAR-TReC trial: Dutch results
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Roy P. J. van den Ende, Femke P. Peters, Ernst Harderwijk, Heidi Rütten, Liza Bouwmans, Maaike Berbee, Richard A. M. Canters, Georgiana Stoian, Kim Compagner, Tom Rozema, Mariska de Smet, Martijn P. W. Intven, Rob H. N. Tijssen, Jacqueline Theuws, Paul van Haaren, Baukelien van Triest, Dave Eekhout, Corrie A. M. Marijnen, Uulke A. van der Heide, and Ellen M. Kerkhof
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Rectal neoplasms ,Radiotherapy ,Treatment planning ,Quality assurance ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The STAR-TReC trial is an international multi-center, randomized, phase II study assessing the feasibility of short-course radiotherapy or long-course chemoradiotherapy as an alternative to total mesorectal excision surgery. A new target volume is used for both (chemo)radiotherapy arms which includes only the mesorectum. The treatment planning QA revealed substantial variation in dose to organs at risk (OAR) between centers. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the treatment plan variability in terms of dose to OAR and assess the effect of a national study group meeting on the quality and variability of treatment plans for mesorectum-only planning for rectal cancer. Methods Eight centers produced 25 × 2 Gy treatment plans for five cases. The OAR were the bowel cavity, bladder and femoral heads. A study group meeting for the participating centers was organized to discuss the planning results. At the meeting, the values of the treatment plan DVH parameters were distributed among centers so that results could be compared. Subsequently, the centers were invited to perform replanning if they considered this to be necessary. Results All treatment plans, both initial planning and replanning, fulfilled the target constraints. Dose to OAR varied considerably for the initial planning, especially for dose levels below 20 Gy, indicating that there was room for trade-offs between the defined OAR. Five centers performed replanning for all cases. One center did not perform replanning at all and two centers performed replanning on two and three cases, respectively. On average, replanning reduced the bowel cavity V20Gy by 12.6%, bowel cavity V10Gy by 22.0%, bladder V35Gy by 14.7% and bladder V10Gy by 10.8%. In 26/30 replanned cases the V10Gy of both the bowel cavity and bladder was lower, indicating an overall lower dose to these OAR instead of a different trade-off. In addition, the bowel cavity V10Gy and V20Gy showed more similarity between centers. Conclusions Dose to OAR varied considerably between centers, especially for dose levels below 20 Gy. The study group meeting and the distribution of the initial planning results among centers resulted in lower dose to the defined OAR and reduced variability between centers after replanning. Trial registration The STAR-TReC trial, ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02945566. Registered 26 October 2016, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02945566 ).
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- 2020
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30. Mapping of sentinel lymph node drainage using SPECT/CT to tailor elective nodal irradiation in head and neck cancer patients (SUSPECT-2): a single-center prospective trial
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Pieter D. de Veij Mestdagh, Willem H. Schreuder, Wouter V. Vogel, Maarten L. Donswijk, Eric van Werkhoven, Jacqueline E. van der Wal, Richard Dirven, Baris Karakullukcu, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Michiel W. M. van den Brekel, Corrie A. M. Marijnen, and Abrahim Al-Mamgani
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Head and neck cancer ,Unilateral elective irradiation ,Bilateral elective irradiation ,Lymph drainage mapping ,Sentinel node ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The majority of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) receive bilateral elective nodal irradiation (ENI), in order to reduce the risk of regional failure. Bilateral ENI, as compared to unilateral ENI, is associated with higher incidence of acute and late radiation-induced toxicity with subsequent deterioration of quality of life. Increasing evidence that the incidence of contralateral regional failure (cRF) in lateralized HNSCC is very low (
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- 2019
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31. Robust dose planning objectives for mesorectal radiotherapy of early stage rectal cancer – A multicentre dose planning study
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Ane L. Appelt, Ellen M. Kerkhof, Lars Nyvang, Ernst C. Harderwijk, Natalie L. Abbott, Mark Teo, Femke P. Peters, Camilla J.S. Kronborg, Karen-Lise G. Spindler, David Sebag-Montefiore, and Corrie A.M. Marijnen
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background and purpose: Organ preservation strategies are increasingly being explored for early rectal cancer. This requires revision of target volumes according to disease stage, as well as new guidelines for treatment planning. We conducted an international, multicentre dose planning study to develop robust planning objectives for modern radiotherapy of a novel mesorectal-only target volume, as implemented in the STAR-TReC trial (NCT02945566). Materials and methods: The published literature was used to establish relevant dose levels for organ at risk (OAR) plan optimisation. Ten representative patients with early rectal cancer were identified. Treatment scans had mesorectal target volumes as well as bowel cavity, bladder and femoral heads outlined, and were circulated amongst the three participating institutions. Each institution produced plans for short course (SCRT, 5 × 5 Gy) and long course (LCRT, 25 × 2 Gy) treatment, using volumetric modulated arc therapy on different dose planning systems. Optimisation objectives for OARs were established by determining dose metric objectives achievable for ≥90% of plans. Results: Sixty plans, all fulfilling target coverage criteria, were produced. The planning results and literature review suggested optimisation objectives for SCRT: V10Gy
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- 2019
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32. Cross-Sectional Study on MRI Restaging After Chemoradiotherapy and Interval to Surgery in Rectal Cancer: Influence on Short- and Long-Term Outcomes
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Detering, Robin, Borstlap, Wernard A. A., Broeders, Lisa, Hermus, Linda, Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Beets-Tan, Regina G. H., Bemelman, Willem A., van Westreenen, Henderik L., Tanis, Pieter J., and Dutch Snapshot Research Group
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- 2019
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33. Radiotherapy quality assurance for mesorectum treatment planning within the multi-center phase II STAR-TReC trial: Dutch results
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van den Ende, Roy P. J., Peters, Femke P., Harderwijk, Ernst, Rütten, Heidi, Bouwmans, Liza, Berbee, Maaike, Canters, Richard A. M., Stoian, Georgiana, Compagner, Kim, Rozema, Tom, de Smet, Mariska, Intven, Martijn P. W., Tijssen, Rob H. N., Theuws, Jacqueline, van Haaren, Paul, van Triest, Baukelien, Eekhout, Dave, Marijnen, Corrie A. M., van der Heide, Uulke A., and Kerkhof, Ellen M.
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- 2020
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34. Effectiveness and toxicity of conventional radiotherapy treatment for painful spinal metastases: a detailed course of side effects after opposing fields versus a single posterior field technique
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Westhoff, Paulien G., de Graeff, Alexander, Monninkhof, Evelyn M., de Pree, Ilse, van Vulpen, Marco, Leer, Jan Willem H., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., van der Linden, Yvette M., and The Dutch Bone Metastasis Study Group
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- 2018
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35. EUS-guided fiducial marker placement for radiotherapy in rectal cancer: feasibility of two placement strategies and four fiducial types
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Lisanne S. Rigter, Eva C. Rijkmans, Akin Inderson, Roy P.J. van den Ende, Ellen M. Kerkhof, Martijn Ketelaars, Jolanda van Dieren, Roeland A. Veenendaal, Baukelien van Triest, Corrie A.M. Marijnen, Uulke A. van der Heide, and Monique E. van Leerdam
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Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,RC799-869 - Abstract
Background and study aims To facilitate image guidance during radiotherapy of rectal cancer, we investigated the feasibility of fiducial marker placement. This study aimed to evaluate technical success rate and safety of two endoscopic ultrasound (EUS)-guided placement strategies and four fiducial types for rectal cancer patients. Patients and methods This prospective multicenter study included 20 participants who were scheduled to undergo rectal cancer treatment with neoadjuvant short-course radiotherapy or chemoradiation. EUS-guided endoscopy was used for fiducial placement at the tumor site (n = 10) or in the mesorectal fat and in the tumor (n = 10). Four fiducial types were used (Visicoil 0.75 mm, Visicoil 0.50 mm, Cook, Gold Anchor). The endpoints were technical success rate and retention of fiducials, the latter of which was evaluated on cone-beam computed tomography scans during the first five radiotherapy fractions. Results A total of 64 fiducials were placed in 20 patients. For each fiducial type, at least three fiducials were successfully placed in all patients. Technical failure consisted of fiducial blockage within the needle (n = 2) and ejection of two preloaded fiducials at once (n = 4). No serious adverse events were reported. In three patients, one of the fiducials was misplaced without clinical consequences; two in the prostate and one in the intraperitoneal cavity. After a median time of 17 days after placement (range 7 – 47 days), a total of 42/64 (66 %) fiducials were still present (24/44 intratumoral vs. 18/20 mesorectal fiducials, P = 0.009). Conclusions Placement of fiducials in rectal cancer patients is feasible, however, retention rates for intratumoral fiducials were lower (55 %) than for mesorectal fiducials (90 %).
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- 2019
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36. Abandonment of Routine Radiotherapy for Nonlocally Advanced Rectal Cancer and Oncological Outcomes
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Hazen, Sanne-Marije J. A., Sluckin, Tania C., Intven, Martijn P. W., Beets, Geerard L., Beets-Tan, Regina G. H., Borstlap, Wernard A. A., Buffart, Tineke E., Buijsen, Jeroen, Burger, Jacobus W. A., van Dieren, Susan, Furnée, Edgar J. B., Geijsen, E. Debby, Hompes, Roel, Horsthuis, Karin, Leijtens, Jeroen W. A., Maas, Monique, Melenhorst, Jarno, Nederend, Joost, Peeters, Koen C. M. J., Rozema, Tom, Tuynman, Jurriaan B., Verhoef, Cornelis, de Vries, Marianne, van Westreenen, Henderik L., de Wilt, Johannes H.W., Zimmerman, David D. E., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Tanis, Pieter J., and Kusters, Miranda
- Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Neoadjuvant short-course radiotherapy was routinely applied for nonlocally advanced rectal cancer (cT1-3N0-1M0 with >1 mm distance to the mesorectal fascia) in the Netherlands following the Dutch total mesorectal excision trial. This policy has shifted toward selective application after guideline revision in 2014. OBJECTIVE: To determine the association of decreased use of neoadjuvant radiotherapy with cancer-related outcomes and overall survival at a national level. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This multicenter, population-based, nationwide cross-sectional cohort study analyzed Dutch patients with rectal cancer who were treated in 2011 with a 4-year follow-up. A similar study was performed in 2021, analyzing all patients that were surgically treated in 2016. From these cohorts, all patients with cT1-3N0-1M0 rectal cancer and radiologically unthreatened mesorectal fascia were included in the current study. The data of the 2011 cohort were collected between May and October 2015, and the data of the 2016 cohort were collected between October 2020 and November 2021. The data were analyzed between May and October 2022. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The main outcomes were 4-year local recurrence and overall survival rates. RESULTS: Among the 2011 and 2016 cohorts, 1199 (mean [SD] age, 68 [11] years; 430 women [36%]) of 2095 patients (57.2%) and 1576 (mean [SD] age, 68 [10] years; 547 women [35%]) of 3057 patients (51.6%) had cT1-3N0-1M0 rectal cancer and were included, with proportions of neoadjuvant radiotherapy of 87% (2011) and 37% (2016). Four-year local recurrence rates were 5.8% and 5.5%, respectively (P = .99). Compared with the 2011 cohort, 4-year overall survival was significantly higher in the 2016 cohort (79.6% vs 86.4%; P < .001), with lower non–cancer-related mortality (13.8% vs 6.3%; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The results of this cross-sectional study suggest that an absolute 50% reduction in radiotherapy use for nonlocally advanced rectal cancer did not compromise cancer-related outcomes at a national level. Optimizing clinical staging and surgery following the Dutch total mesorectal excision trial has potentially enabled safe deintensification of treatment.
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- 2024
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37. Mapping of sentinel lymph node drainage using SPECT/CT to tailor elective nodal irradiation in head and neck cancer patients (SUSPECT-2): a single-center prospective trial
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de Veij Mestdagh, Pieter D., Schreuder, Willem H., Vogel, Wouter V., Donswijk, Maarten L., van Werkhoven, Eric, van der Wal, Jacqueline E., Dirven, Richard, Karakullukcu, Baris, Sonke, Jan-Jakob, van den Brekel, Michiel W. M., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., and Al-Mamgani, Abrahim
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- 2019
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38. Locoregional Failure During and After Short-course Radiotherapy Followed by Chemotherapy and Surgery Compared With Long-course Chemoradiotherapy and Surgery.
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Dijkstra, Esmée A., Nilsson, Per J., Hospers, Geke A. P., Bahadoer, Renu R., Kranenbarg, Elma Meershoek-Klein, Roodvoets, Annet G. H., Putter, Hein, Berglund, Åke, Cervantes, Andrés, Crolla, Rogier M. P. H., Hendriks, Mathijs P., Capdevila, Jaume, Edhemovic, Ibrahim, Marijnen, Corrie A. M., de Velde, Cornelis J. H. van, Glimelius, Bengt, and van Etten, Boudewijn
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Objective: To analyze risk and patterns of locoregional failure (LRF) in patients of the RAPIDO trial at 5 years. Background: Multimodality treatment improves local control in rectal cancer. Total neoadjuvant treatment (TNT) aims to improve systemic control while local control is maintained. At 3 years, LRF rate was comparable between TNT and chemoradiotherapy in the RAPIDO trial. Methods: A total of 920 patients were randomized between an experimental (EXP, short-course radiotherapy, chemotherapy, and surgery) and a standard-care group (STD, chemoradiotherapy, surgery, and optional postoperative chemotherapy). LRFs, including early LRF (no resection except for organ preservation/R2 resection) and locoregional recurrence (LRR) after an R0/R1 resection, were analyzed. Results: Totally, 460 EXP and 446 STD patients were eligible. At 5.6 years (median follow-up), LRF was detected in 54/460 (12%) and 36/446 (8%) patients in the EXP and STD groups, respectively (P=0.07), in which EXP patients were more often treated with 3-dimensional-conformed radiotherapy (P=0.029). In the EXP group, LRR was detected more often [44/431 (10%) vs. 26/428 (6%); P=0.027], with more often a breached mesorectum (9/44 (21%) vs. 1/26 (4); P=0.048). The EXP treatment, enlarged lateral lymph nodes, positive circumferential resection margin, tumor deposits, and node positivity at pathology were the significant predictors for developing LRR. Location of the LRRs was similar between groups. Overall survival after LRF was comparable [hazard ratio: 0.76 (95% CI, 0.46--1.26); P=0.29]. Conclusions: The EXP treatment was associated with an increased risk of LRR, whereas the reduction in disease-related treatment failure and distant metastases remained after 5 years. Further refinement of the TNT in rectal cancer is mandated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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39. The EORTC QLQ-CR29 quality of life questionnaire for colorectal cancer: validation of the Dutch version
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Stiggelbout, A. M., Kunneman, M., Baas-Thijssen, M. C. M., Neijenhuis, P. A., Loor, A. K., Jägers, S., Vree, R., Marijnen, C. A. M., and Pieterse, A. H.
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- 2016
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40. Modern Treatment of Rectal Cancer Closes the Gap Between Common Adenocarcinoma and Mucinous Carcinoma
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Hugen, Niek, van de Velde, Cornelis J., Bosch, Steven L., Fütterer, Jurgen J., Elferink, Marloes A., Marijnen, Corrie A., Rutten, Harm J., de Wilt, Johannes H., and Nagtegaal, Iris D.
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- 2015
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41. Efficacy of a Non-Hormonal Treatment, BRN-01, on Menopausal Hot Flashes: A Multicenter, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial
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Colau, Jean-Claude, Vincent, Stéphane, Marijnen, Philippe, and Allaert, François-André
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- 2012
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42. Multidisciplinary Discussion and Management of Rectal Cancer: A Population-based Study
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Swellengrebel, H. A. M., Peters, E. G., Cats, A., Visser, O., Blaauwgeers, H. G. T., Verwaal, V. J., van Velthuysen, M. L., Cense, H. A., Bruin, S. C., and Marijnen, C. A. M.
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- 2011
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43. Treating hot flushes in menopausal women with homeopathic treatment–Results of an observational study
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Bordet, MF, Colas, A, Marijnen, P, Masson, JL, and Trichard, M
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- 2008
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44. The future of TNM staging in rectal cancer: The era of neoadjuvant therapy
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Nagtegaal, Iris D. and Marijnen, Corrie A. M.
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- 2008
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45. Lakes as Rebellious Landscapes: From 'Fishing Rebels' to 'Fishy State Officials' in DR Congo.
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Marijnen, Esther
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POWER (Social sciences) ,LAKES ,LANDSCAPES ,FISHING villages ,INTERVENTION (International law) ,FISHERIES - Abstract
• Lakes are key landscapes at the intersection of geography, war and authority. • Lakes should be conceptualised beyond the rebel territory versus state-governed dichotomy. • Lakes in areas of armed conflict are 'rebellious landscapes' • A longue durée approach reveals lakes' influence on political, social and economic orders. • Converting lakes into enclaves neglects their historical socio-political connectivity. Lakes are rarely considered to be political spaces in the literature on the inter-linkages between landscapes, authority, and armed conflict. Scholars mainly focussed on the role of mountains, forests, and mud fields, in war and resistance, and examine how a variety of state(-like) actors try to make these 'unruly' spaces legible. This article discusses the frictions that emerge when the management of Virunga National Park in eastern DR Congo tries to retake control of Lake Edward through infrastructural and military interventions. These interventions not only encounter resistance from multiple rebel groups that hold various fishing villages along the shores of Lake Edward, but also from other state authorities present in the area—'fishing rebels' and 'fishy state officials'. Drawing on a longue durée perspective to understand contemporary contestations allows us to move beyond focussing on practices of illegal fishing in conflict areas and, instead, embed such issues within the broader historically shaped political and social landscapes of power. Park authorities aim to carve the lake into 'enclaves'—to counter subversion and render fishing sustainable—neglecting the ways in which the lake is interconnected. This article argues that we should abandon the dichotomy of landscapes as either producing subversive politics/rebellion or as controlled by 'the state'. Instead of approaching landscapes in conflict areas —in this case lakes— as 'rebel landscapes' they should be approached as 'rebellious landscapes', as they are controlled fluidly amongst different de facto authorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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46. Preoperative Chemoradiotherapy with Capecitabine and Oxaliplatin in Locally Advanced Rectal Cancer. A Phase I–II Multicenter Study of the Dutch Colorectal Cancer Group
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Hospers, Geke A., Punt, Cornelis J. A., Tesselaar, Margot E., Cats, Annemieke, Havenga, Klaas, Leer, Jan W. H., Marijnen, Corrie A., Jansen, Edwin P., Van Krieken, Han H. J. M., Wiggers, Theo, Van de Velde, Cornelis J. H., and Mulder, Nanno H.
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- 2007
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47. Gene expression profiling reveals two separate mechanisms regulating apoptosis in rectal carcinomas in vivo
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de Bruin, Elza C., van de Pas, Simone, van de Velde, Cornelis J. H., van Krieken, J. Han J. M., Peltenburg, Lucy T. C., Marijnen, Corrie A. M., and Medema, Jan Paul
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- 2007
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48. The Impact of Diagnosis and Treatment of Rectal Cancer on Paid and Unpaid Labor
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van den Brink, Mandy, van den Hout, Wilbert B., Kievit, Job, Marijnen, Corrie A. M., Putter, Hein, van de Velde, Cornelis J. H., and Stiggelbout, Anne M.
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- 2005
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49. Missing forms and dropout in the TME quality of life substudy
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Putter, H., Marijnen, C. A. M., Kranenbarg, E. Klein, van de Velde, C. J. H., and Stiggelbout, A. M.
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- 2005
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50. Radiation induces different changes in expression profiles of normal rectal tissue compared with rectal carcinoma
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Nagtegaal, I. D., Gaspar, C. G. S., Peltenburg, L. T. C., Marijnen, C. A. M., Kapiteijn, E., van de Velde, C. J. H., Fodde, R., and van Krieken, J. H. J. M.
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- 2005
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