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Look at those graphs!
Look man. If we have to cut the whole of radiation oncology services to fund Ibrutinib, so be it.
Look at those graphs!
Look man. If we have to cut the whole of radiation oncology services to fund Ibrutinib, so be it.
Exactly Radiation needs to shut up and get out of the way
I read his/her comment as sarcasm...Please let's not throw the baby out with the bath water. Remember, there is a broad audience reading this forum.
I just gave a talk a few weeks ago talking about the curative nature of RT and overall survival benefits for radiation in a number of malignancies. We will still be here far into the future.
Should have gotten better Congressional lobbyists!Exactly Radiation needs to shut up and get out of the way
I read his/her comment as sarcasm...
As an Ortho who is has no idea how rad/onc works, what is the low dose radiation treatments he is doing as compared to a standard hand X-ray?
I’ve never seen or heard anything in the ortho literature about using radiation for OA. I could see maybe plausible in a RA patient not responding to meds but run of the mill OA seems to be a stretch
I’m my training, we used to consult rad/onc for post op complex/revision elbow Orif or acetabular orifs to prevent HO. The rad/oncs halfway through my residency told us the risk of developing a sarcoma was unacceptably high and told us to switch to NSAIDs instead. We completely changed our protocols and never consulted them again.
Where do you hide a $100 bill from an orthopod?Read this thread in its entirety and the papers linked:
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Benign Disease
Sorry if this has been discussed but in Germany they seem to treat a large number of patients with joint arthrosis/degenerative joints with what appears to be good results. Has anybody done this and is this covered by insurance or medicare? I have treated the occasional dupytren's but that...forums.studentdoctor.net
Just cause ortho bros dont know doens't mean it's not an option...
Where do you hide a $100 bill from an orthopod?
For all the stuff germany does you’d think they’d run a prospective rando on that shiz
It seems like they'd have trouble randomizing at this point because it is so widely used and appreciated there. This is just my assumption reading between the lines of all their writing.
It's weird I've never seen a Rad Onc comment on the quality of studies for corticosteroid injections. There is a Cochrane Review you can even go read. It is not favorable. And yet.
It seems like they'd have trouble randomizing at this point because it is so widely used and appreciated there. This is just my assumption reading between the lines of all their writing.
It's weird I've never seen a Rad Onc comment on the quality of studies for corticosteroid injections. There is a Cochrane Review you can even go read. It is not favorable. And yet.
Lol. I never thought of that. Orthos office hours are punctuated with these injections. I remember doing quite a few. Some did it under fluoro
Great to hear. I think many of my ortho colleagues would love this. Now another place to offload the drug seeking, unhealthy, noncompliant patients who we don’t want to operate on.Read this thread in its entirety and the papers linked:
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Benign Disease
Sorry if this has been discussed but in Germany they seem to treat a large number of patients with joint arthrosis/degenerative joints with what appears to be good results. Has anybody done this and is this covered by insurance or medicare? I have treated the occasional dupytren's but that...forums.studentdoctor.net
Just cause ortho bros dont know doens't mean it's not an option...
Don’t worry, we will find a way not to treat!Great to hear. I think many of my ortho colleagues would love this. Now another place to offload the drug seeking, unhealthy, noncompliant patients who we don’t want to operate on.
Be careful what you wish for.
My linac is busy enough as it is treating cancer. I cringe every time I get a keloid or HO referral. My therapists would probably mutiny if we started getting inundated with OA patientsGreat to hear. I think many of my ortho colleagues would love this. Now another place to offload the drug seeking, unhealthy, noncompliant patients who we don’t want to operate on.
Be careful what you wish for.
Wish I could say the same.My linac is busy enough as it is treating cancer. I cringe every time I get a keloid or OH referral. My therapists would probably mutiny if we started getting inundated with OA patients
I like keloids for the variety, but our skin cancer waiting list is looooong and orthovoltage machine is busy busy. If we start getting OA patients by the buckets I’ll celebrate because means we can get another doc to help out. That will be a while. Looking forward to the first large case series which I’m sure will inevitably be in the red journal.My linac is busy enough as it is treating cancer. I cringe every time I get a keloid or OH referral. My therapists would probably mutiny if we started getting inundated with OA patients
probably PRO or advances..unless we're talking something with OA + DEII like keloids for the variety, but our skin cancer waiting list is looooong and orthovoltage machine is busy busy. If we start getting OA patients by the buckets I’ll celebrate because means we can get another doc to help out. That will be a while. Looking forward to the first large case series which I’m sure will inevitably be in the red journal.
Unbelievable effect size. Literally.
But thought provoking.
Don't let the cancer touch the air!
Wow. Agreed that at first glance it seems like random trial BS. But clearly they felt sufficient rationale to run a 1600 person RCT. And an absolutely massive effect in early breast cancer?
Boggles the mind.
Maybe I should be doing Trus guided lidocaine instillations in my proststes in Preop
My linac is busy enough as it is treating cancer. I cringe every time I get a keloid or HO referral. My therapists would probably mutiny if we started getting inundated with OA patients
The underutilization of OA XRT in minority patients (yes you racist), 50 authors, you know it, take it to the bank!probably PRO or advances..unless we're talking something with OA + DEI
Happy to see them and re-treat them as many times as they would like!Great to hear. I think many of my ortho colleagues would love this. Now another place to offload the drug seeking, unhealthy, noncompliant patients who we don’t want to operate on.
Be careful what you wish for.
My linac is busy enough as it is treating cancer. I cringe every time I get a keloid or HO referral. My therapists would probably mutiny if we started getting inundated with OA patients
Too much social science in IJROBP - I predict Green Journal. Maybe JCO if it's really good.I like keloids for the variety, but our skin cancer waiting list is looooong and orthovoltage machine is busy busy. If we start getting OA patients by the buckets I’ll celebrate because means we can get another doc to help out. That will be a while. Looking forward to the first large case series which I’m sure will inevitably be in the red journal.
Hire another doc!This is why I haven't marketed our LDRT program at all. Need to treat cancer patients.
same, we are busy enough treating cancer patients.This is why I haven't marketed our LDRT program at all. Need to treat cancer patients.
The only thing i can think of that's worse than urorads would be worse than derm rads and the only thing worse than derm rads imo would be OArads. You really think a new doc would look forward to being the benign msk guy?Get an old crap linac, treat 20 OA a day. Easy money.
Hire another doc!
"Busy enough" on what end?same, we are busy enough treating cancer patients.
The only thing i can think of that's worse than urorads would be worse than derm rads and the only thing worse than derm rads imo would be OArads. You really think a new doc would look forward to being the benign msk guy?
Extra Linac make sense if vault space available, not sure if building a center with vault makes sense now in current environment to treat a bunch of OA.
TLDR - theory vs reality, not sure it's that simple
Service contracts and maintenance are EXPENSIVEMy new place is getting rid of an old (not really that old) linac and the vault will just stay empty. The population of this town is not growing so they probably won't ever be busy enough to get a real second machine
Not sure why we can't just keep it treat OAs and palliative patients on it, hire another therapist and grow
While I am currently busy enough with the cancer patients, I'd like the option in the future.
Cheaper through third party but post pandemic I'm that's changed with labor costsService contracts and maintenance are EXPENSIVE
My new place is getting rid of an old (not really that old) linac and the vault will just stay empty. The population of this town is not growing so they probably won't ever be busy enough to get a real second machine
Not sure why we can't just keep it treat OAs and palliative patients on it, hire another therapist and grow
While I am currently busy enough with the cancer patients, I'd like the option in the future.
The Metanalysis certainly is hypothesis generating, but the evidence for radiation is not level 1 like with lidocaine.Amazing what was possible in the pre-Lidocaine and pre non-inferiority era
Effect of radiotherapy after breast-conserving surgery on 10-year recurrence and 15-year breast cancer death: meta-analysis of individual patient data for 10 801 women in 17 randomised trials - PMC
After breast-conserving surgery, radiotherapy reduces recurrence and breast cancer death, but it may do so more for some groups of women than for others. We describe the absolute magnitude of these reductions according to various prognostic and ...www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
I think that might work. If you have an HDR vault or some space to put up some extra steel or lead shielding, it would not necessarily need a linac vault.Wondering if an orthovoltage machine to treat OA if enough patients might make sense?
The Metanalysis certainly is hypothesis generating, but the evidence for radiation is not level 1 like with lidocaine.
I’m not sure, if anything I’ve seen an emergence in radiation with 5 fractions for older women. We still need it for breast conservation in young women and what about all the locally advanced breast cancer patients?In ten years I doubt radiation will play much of a role in breast cancer. Most of the evidence for radiation therapy in breast cancer, both PMRT and early-stage, comes before the advent of modern hormonal therapy, targeted therapy and I guess now lidocaine. DEBRA trial will probably not show any survival benefit from RT. Wonder how many prior breast trials in these meta analyses would be positive if the patients had modern systemic therapy.
Radiation will continue to play a large role in diseases where it’s curative on its own without surgery(prostate, head and neck, cervical, maybe organ sparing rectal) or where survival is too short to experience long term toxicity (GBM, lung cancer, HCC, metastatic disease).
if systemic therapy gets better in breast cancer, surgery may get dropped. Its the worst for cosmesis. Already starting to see some trials.In ten years I doubt radiation will play much of a role in breast cancer. Most of the evidence for radiation therapy in breast cancer, both PMRT and early-stage, comes before the advent of modern hormonal therapy, targeted therapy and I guess now lidocaine. DEBRA trial will probably not show any survival benefit from RT. Wonder how many prior breast trials in these meta analyses would be positive if the patients had modern systemic therapy.
Radiation will continue to play a large role in diseases where it’s curative on its own without surgery(prostate, head and neck, cervical, maybe organ sparing rectal) or where survival is too short to experience long term toxicity (GBM, lung cancer, HCC, metastatic disease).
I’m not sure, if anything I’ve seen an emergence in radiation with 5 fractions for older women. We still need it for breast conservation in young women and what about all the locally advanced breast cancer patients?
Lol... yep.Great to hear. I think many of my ortho colleagues would love this. Now another place to offload the drug seeking, unhealthy, noncompliant patients who we don’t want to operate on.
Be careful what you wish for.
Same hereThis is why I haven't marketed our LDRT program at all. Need to treat cancer patients.
They did:For all the stuff germany does you’d think they’d run a prospective rando on that shiz
PlacebingDid anyone else find the results of this trial concerning? At 0.3 Gy, are we really doing anything?
They did:
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ArthroRad trial: multicentric prospective and randomized single-blinded trial on the effect of low-dose radiotherapy for painful osteoarthritis depending on the dose-results after 3 months' follow-up - PubMed
We found favorable pain relief and a limited response in the functional and quality of life scores in both arms. The effect of low doses such as 0.3 Gy on pain is widely unknown. Further trials are necessary to compare a conventional dose to placebo and to further explore the effect of low doses...pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov