JCO this issue has a neat cost analysis of treating intermediate-risk prostate cancer with protons. The editorial comment by Dr. Zietman, although pretentious with the Titanic allegory, is very good. Any thoughts?
www.jco.ascopubs.org/cgi/content/full/25/24/3565
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The Titanic allusion is a bit pretentious and overdone, I'll agree, but at least it is understood by the general reading public. This is in contrast to another editorial in the same JCO which gleefully makes use of literary allusion -- "The Sound and the Fury: Financial Conflicts of Interest in Oncology." I don't see what financial conflicts of interest have to do with the Sound and the Fury ... but I've never actually read anything by Faulkner. (As an aside, I find it hilarious that following this article wherein the authors caution about the dangers of conflicts of interest is the standard "conflicts of interest" banner which lists several of the authors' own conflicts of interest. Alrighty then!)
It's also pretentious how Zietman said that he treats prostate cancer
with the Massachusetts General Hospital:
"(Note: The author treats prostate cancer with both IMRT and proton beam and the Massachusetts General Hospital and the Francis H. Burr Proton Therapy Center, Boston, MA.)."
Maybe it was an innocent editing gaffe... or was it?
Anyway, I haven't read the Konski et al article, just the abstract. So I haven't been able to look at their numbers, but intuitively I would think that proton radiotherapy would a lot more expensive than IMRT, more than the 2x figure they deduced.
What struck me was this statement in the conclusion of the Konski article:
"Consideration should be given to limiting the number of proton facilities to allow comprehensive evaluation of this modality."
This statement sounds vaguely territorial, not the type of language that would routinely be used in a cost analysis.