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A Need for Contouring Education in Latin America: Evaluating an E-contouring Experience with Novel Reporting of DICE Metrics [Meeting Abstract]

Vega, R. Mailhot; De la Mata, D.; Larrea, L.; Hu, K. S.; Amendola, B. E.
ISI:000447811601187
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 3493462

Patterns of Care and Outcomes of Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Locally Advanced HPV Positive Oropharyngeal Carcinoma: A National Cancer Database Analysis [Meeting Abstract]

Tam, M.; Wu, S. P. P.; Lee, A.; Gerber, N. K.; Givi, B.; Li, Z.; Schreiber, D.; Hu, K. S.
ISI:000447811601113
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 3493482

The impact of adjuvant chemoradiotherapy timing on survival of head and neck cancers

Tam, Moses; Wu, S Peter; Gerber, Naamit K; Lee, Anna; Schreiber, David; Givi, Babak; Hu, Kenneth
BACKGROUND:Delays in postoperative head and neck (HN) radiotherapy have been associated with decreased overall survival; however, the impact of delays in postoperative HN chemoradiotherapy remains undefined. METHODS:All patients with nonmetastatic HN cancer (oral cavity, oropharynx, larynx, hypopharynx) who underwent curative intent surgery and received adjuvant chemoradiotherapy were identified from the National Cancer Database (2005-2012). Overall treatment time (OTT) was defined as the time from surgery to the end of radiation therapy. Statistical methods included Cox proportional hazards modeling, which adjusted for clinicopathologic, demographic, and socioeconomic factors. Recursive partitioning analysis (RPA) identified the optimal threshold of OTT via conditional inference trees to estimate the greatest differences in overall survival (OS) on the basis of randomly selected training and validation sets. RESULTS:A total of 16,733 patients were included, with a median follow-up of 37 months. Median OS for OTT in a predefined threshold of ≤ 13 weeks was 10.1 years (95% confidence interval [CI], 9.8 years; not reached) compared with 8.7 years (95% CI, 8.2-9.2 years) in > 13 weeks. On multivariate analysis, OTT of > 13 weeks versus ≤ 13 weeks independently increased mortality risk (hazard ratio, 1.10; 95% CI, 1.04-1.17; P = < 0.001). RPA identified an optimal OTT threshold of 97 days (interquartile range: 96-98 days). The OTT threshold of 97 days was confirmed in a full Cox regression model estimating the risk of death according to overall treatment time as a continuous variable. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:In this large hospital-based national data, an OTT of greater than approximately 14 weeks most consistently increased the risk of death. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:4. Laryngoscope, 2018.
PMID: 29481712
ISSN: 1531-4995
CID: 2965812

Novel Pilot Curriculum for International Education of Lymphoma Management Using E-Contouring

Mailhot Vega, Raymond B; Ishaq, Omar F; Ahmed, Inaya; Rene, Luis; Amendola, Beatriz E; Hu, Kenneth S
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The International Lymphoma Radiation Oncology Group (ILROG) published consensus guidelines on the management of Hodgkin disease (HD) and nodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL), which became the most downloaded articles from International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, and Physics. E-contouring workshops allow for interactive didactic sessions, allowing participants to see case-based contouring in real time. A pilot 1-hour curriculum was developed with the objective of reviewing ILROG guidelines for HD and NHL management with incorporation of e-contouring tools. This represents the first international education intervention in Spanish using e-contouring with a pre- and postintervention questionnaire. METHODS:A 1-hour presentation was prepared in Spanish reviewing the ILROG recommendations for HD and NHL. The review was followed by the author's demonstration of contour creation using patients with HD and NHL prepared for the American Society for Radiation Oncology's 2015 e-contouring lymphoma session. A five- question evaluation was prepared and administered before and after intervention. A two-tailed paired t test was performed to evaluate any significant change in test value before and after intervention. RESULTS:A total of nine quizzes were collected before and after the intervention. The average test score before the intervention was 75.6%, and the average test score after the intervention was 86.7% ( P = .051). Four students scored 100% on both the pre- and postintervention evaluations, and no student had a decrease in score from pre- to postintervention evaluation. The topic with the lowest score tested dose consideration. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:A substantial but nonsignificant improvement in test evaluation was seen with this pilot curriculum. This pilot intervention identified obstacles for truly interactive didactic sessions that, when addressed, can lead to fully developed interactive didactic sessions.
PMID: 30241149
ISSN: 2378-9506
CID: 3301902

The effects of concurrent chemoradiation therapy to the base of tongue in a preclinical model

Benedict, Peter A; Ruiz, Ryan; Verma, Avanti; Dion, Gregory R; Oh, Philmo; Wang, Binhuan; Ahmed, Omar H; Hiwatashi, Nao; Bing, Renjie; Victor, Kristen; Hu, Kenneth S; Johnson, Aaron; Branski, Ryan C; Amin, Milan R
OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS/OBJECTIVE:To develop a clinically relevant model of oropharyngeal concurrent chemoradiation therapy (CCRT) in order to quantify the effects of CCRT on tongue function and structure. CCRT for advanced oropharyngeal cancer commonly leads to tongue base dysfunction and dysphagia. However, no preclinical models currently exist to study the pathophysiology of CCRT-related morbidity, thereby inhibiting the development of targeted therapeutics. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS:Animal model. METHODS:Twenty-one male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomized into three groups: 2 week (2W), 5 month (5M), and control (C). The 2W and 5M animals received cisplatin, 5-fluorouracil, and five fractions of 7 Gy to the tongue base; the C animals received no intervention. In vivo tongue strength and displacement, as well as hyoglossus muscle collagen content, were assessed. Analyses were conducted 2 weeks or 5 months following completion of CCRT in the 2W and 5M groups, respectively. RESULTS:Peak tetanic and twitch tongue forces were significantly reduced in both 2W and 5M animals compared to controls (tetanic: P = .0041, P = .0089, respectively; twitch: P = .0201, P = .0020, respectively). Twitch half-decay time was prolonged in 2W animals compared to controls (P = .0247). Tongue displacement was significantly reduced across all testing parameters in 5M animals compared to both the C and 2W groups. No differences in collagen content were observed between experimental groups. CONCLUSIONS:The current study is the first to describe a preclinical model of CCRT to the head and neck with an emphasis on clinical relevance. Tongue strength decreased at 2 weeks and 5 months post-CCRT. Tongue displacement increased only at 5 months post-CCRT. Fibrosis was not detected, implicating alternative causative factors for these findings. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE/METHODS:NA Laryngoscope, 2017.
PMID: 29280493
ISSN: 1531-4995
CID: 2895892

A systematic review of photobiomodulation for oral mucositis with a dose response [Meeting Abstract]

Vasconcelos, R; Corby, P; Hu, K; Barasch, A; Bensadoun, R J; Kerr, A; Concert, C; Carroll, J D
Introduction Photobiomodulation (PBM Therapy) formerly known as Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) is an effective treatment for reducing the incidence and severity of oral mucositis (OM) after high dose chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy. However, reported PBM irradiation parameters, dose per point, number of treatment points or treatment intervals vary widely Objectives To systematically review randomized clinical trials (RCTs), summarise the PBM parameters and detain the most effective treatment regimen. Methods Online databases were searched for RCTs comparing efficacy of PBM verses controls for prevention or treatment cancer therapy induced OM. Papers were scored for quality and effect size for the primary outcome, irradiation parameters and dose were compared with outcomes. Results There was lots of mistakes and missing treatment data (i.e. laser wavelength ranges, power, beam sizes, energy applied and treatment duration) on the reported data, however the majority of the randomized clinical trials reported positive effects: PBM reduced pain, onset of OM, and improved overall quality of life of the patients that received PBM. Conclusions Although no precise conclusion can be drawn due to a large variation on the reported data, PBM used for OM confidently recommend an optimal treatment guideline for this condition
EMBASE:623598822
ISSN: 1433-7339
CID: 3261952

Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Locally Advanced Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma: A National Cancer Database Analysis [Meeting Abstract]

Tam, Moses; Lee, Anna; Wu, S. Peter; Gerber, Naamit K.; Givi, Babak; Hu, Kenneth; Schreiber, David
ISI:000432447200079
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 3132492

Patterns of care and outcomes of adjuvant therapy for high-risk head and neck cancer after surgery

Osborn, Virginia Wedell; Givi, Babak; Rineer, Justin; Roden, Dylan; Sheth, Niki; Lederman, Ariel; Katsoulakis, Evangelia; Hu, Kenneth; Schreiber, David
BACKGROUND:Postoperative chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is considered standard of care in patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer with positive margins and/or extracapsular extension (ECE). METHODS:The National Cancer Data Base (NCDB) was queried to identify patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck with stages III to IVB disease or with positive margins and/or ECE diagnosed between 2004 and 2012 receiving postoperative radiotherapy (RT). Using univariable and multivariable logistic and Cox regression, we assessed for predictors of CRT use and covariables impacting overall survival (OS), including in a propensity-matched subset. RESULTS:Of 12 224 patients, 67.1% with positive margins and/or ECE received CRT as well as 54.0% without positive margins and/or ECE. The 5-year OS was 61.6% for RT alone versus 67.4% for CRT. In the propensity-matched cohort, OS benefit persisted with CRT, including in a subset with positive margins and/or ECE but not without. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Postoperative CRT seems underutilized with positive margins and/or ECE and overutilized without positive margins and/or ECE. The CRT was associated with improved OS but the benefit persisted only in the subset with positive margins and/or ECE.
PMID: 29451961
ISSN: 1097-0347
CID: 2958412

Gradient index in IMRT and SBRT: Implication in organ sparing [Meeting Abstract]

Andersen, A; Wang, H; Schiff, P; Hu, K; Das, I
Purpose: Rapid dose fall off from planning target volume (PTV) is required to spare organs at risk (OAR) that is hallmark of advanced treatment techniques (IMRT, VMAT, and SBRT). Along with conformity index (CI) and homogeneity index (HI) recently, gradient index (GI) was introduced to provide a measurable quality index for dose fall off from PTV. However, it is not clear if GI can be used in IMRT and if there are consistent differences between the two techniques. Methods: Dose volume histogram data for 700 patients equally divided between SBRT and IMRT were retrospectively analyzed. GI was calculated for each patient which is ratio of the volume of at half the prescription (PIV50%) to prescription isodose volume (PIV100%) which was calculated treatment plan and from PTV and CI. Physical distance ratio between OAR and PTV coverage was determined based on the cube root of the GI as an additional tool along with gradient measure distance (rPIV50%-rPIV100%) for the evaluation of SBRT and IMRT plans. Results: The GI varied widely between IMRT and SBRT patients due to inherent differences in techniques. The GIs are nearly constant 4.3 +/-1.1 and 12.8 +/-4.4 for SBRT and IMRT, respectively. The size of PTV is inversely related to GI with data more consistent in SBRT compared to IMRT. The gradient measure increases with PTV size in a well-defined way (0.5-1.5 cm) compared to IMRT where data is widely spread. This can be used as a surrogate for distance between PTV and OAR in IMRT and SBRT. Conclusion: Gradient index and measure are effective parameters in evaluating dose gradient that show consistent differences between treatment techniques. These tools could provide an opportunity for plan evaluation especially the distance from the PTV to OAR to optimize the dose to reduce complications
EMBASE:622803898
ISSN: 0094-2405
CID: 3188052

A Review of Quality of Life and Utility Determination Studies for Health Outcomes Research in the Management of Head and Neck Cancer [Meeting Abstract]

Vega, R. Mailhot; Frakes, J. M.; Caudell, J. J.; Harrison, L. B.; Gold, H.; Hu, K. S.
ISI:000428145600252
ISSN: 0360-3016
CID: 3035542