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Uh, what?
Surgical, medical, and radiation oncologists that treat cancers in the thorax?
Uh, what?
“Chaos is a ladder”Thoracic oncologists from every specialty including RO have been a little embarrassing on Twitter these days. I mean no offense, my opinion mannnnnn.
But seriously that’s all it takes. I’ve seen it first handThe best way to encourage Urologists to support a Rad Onc consultation is to cut them a share of IMRT profits. Boom! Instant change overnight
The best way to encourage Urologists to support a Rad Onc consultation is to cut them a share of IMRT profits. Boom! Instant change overnight
Realistic thinking would save our specialty.But seriously that’s all it takes. I’ve seen it first hand
ASTRO was very misguided on the anti-urorads campaign. Would have cut inappropriate patterns of care with surgery/cryo/hifu overnight.The best way to encourage Urologists to support a Rad Onc consultation is to cut them a share of IMRT profits. Boom! Instant change overnight
ASTRO was very misguided on the anti-urorads campaign. Would have cut inappropriate patterns of care with surgery/cryo/hifu overnight.
They just couldn't see past their own noses in the air
Oh man, 10 years is nothing… I’ve seen some “IMRT” being delivered without any kind of useful imaging. I had a physicist tell me that these machines can actually last forever.Are these urorads just running their machines into the ground? I mean they have to be about 10 years old on average at this point.
Are these urorads just running their machines into the ground? I mean they have to be about 10 years old on average at this point.
The first fiducial-able IGRT I know of was the Exactrac system which I think first appeared around 2000 or 2001. A special code for it appeared in 2005 but was absorbed into a CPT code specific for kV X-ray Jan 1, 2006. Kupelian was doing prostate IGRT routinely before almost anyone on a pretty simple (the Novalis) linac with Exactrac. In 2006 Varian first started placing OBI on a linac. CBCT wasn’t really clinically usable though until 2007 once a lot of software bugs had been corrected.Oh man, 10 years is nothing… I’ve seen some “IMRT” being delivered without any kind of useful imaging. I had a physicist tell me that these machines can actually last forever.
While the machines may last forever, the service contracts do notOh man, 10 years is nothing… I’ve seen some “IMRT” being delivered without any kind of useful imaging. I had a physicist tell me that these machines can actually last forever.
A lot of them are using iX with rapid arc or just upgrading to halcyon which is way cheaper than any standard linac off the shelfAre these urorads just running their machines into the ground? I mean they have to be about 10 years old on average at this point.
Great to hear!I do give the full unbiased (IMO) radiation spiel and offer rad-onc referral to all patients. About half my patients end up with some form of radiation, either brachy or xrt or combo. Of those that opt for surgery, about half accept the radonc referral to dive further into it, about half are deadset.
I'm sure there are a lot of urologists pushing poor information about radiation. I know I've seen many radoncs pushing incorrect information about surgery.
Like i'm sure with urologists giving poor information about radiation, it has more to do with how the information is presented.
"I was told if i had surgery i would be incontinent forever / never have an erection again / dramatically shorten my penis." Is the usual one i've heard.
All possible side effects, but neglecting to mention the probabilities of recovery, the nuances of partial recovery, the fact that shortening goes away over time with no difference compared to xrt 2 years post op. Now granted, I am hearing this from the patient, maybe the radonc gave a reasonable discussion about risks of SUI and timecourse and degree of recovery and "I WILL LEAK FOREVER" is all they took away.
Likewise Urologists could say post xrt "there is a real chance it will cause cancer / you will have a lot more trouble holding your pee and have accidents and wake up 10 times a night to pee / have chronic diarrhea and bowel symptoms"
Correct side effects presented incorrectly or misleadingly is essentially the same as just lying.
In regards to the bolded, but WHY? This is DOGMA that is unfounded in data. And if we do nothing else on SDN, we challenge DOGMA for the sake of DOGMA.Most community urologists in my area are judicious and none own linacs. I am all for younger men (60 down) with intermediate risk pCa getting surgery. There may be cases for high risk as well (particularly in the 50 y/o crowd). There is a lot of gray zone.
I have found some fairly prominent academic centers in my region to be markedly overaggressive with surgery in men around 70 with high risk or very high risk disease. These men always come back to me however. Recovery in these men can be hard. The community urologists have no interest in dealing with this.
Halcyon seems to be an excellent machine for a Urorads shop that is starting up or looking for a replacement.. Fast and pretty reliable.A lot of them are using iX with rapid arc or just upgrading to halcyon which is way cheaper than any standard linac off the shelf
Thoracic oncologists from every specialty including RO have been a little embarrassing on Twitter these days. I mean no offense, my opinion mannnnnn.
If you're in your 50's and you want to have a shot at some erectile function, rads be the way.
Walsh's Oncologic Sparing Prostatectomy aside.. there ain't no way. And yet.. a couple patients after prostatectomy swore they had full erections. Wife was not in the room to confirm.
Nah bruh… don’t want to brag but my patients be like “that was way better then I expected, thank you Dr RadOncDoc21, you’re the best!”And yet, PROTECT trial showed no difference in erectile function at 2 years. Are you counselling your patients as such?
As for age and XRT for prostate cancer, I do agree that it is not an absolute contraindication. However:
1. The younger you are, the better you recover from surgery. continence outcomes, ED outcomes, etc. are all better at 50 then 60 then 70.
2. The younger you are, the more years you have ahead of you for XRT to mess things up. Secondary cancers. Radiation cystitis. urethral strictures. ureteral strictures. Non-radiation induced cancers (after all, plenty of rectal and bladder cancers in men with no prior XRT) with treatment complicated by prior radiation. and so on. Many on this forum poo-poo these problems, but I deal with them LITERALLY every day. Plenty of guys out there with radiation many years ago with late onset issues like this. Maybe your radiation didn't cause a urethral stricture. But maybe they had a traumatic catheter put in 15 years later that did because they had prior radiation. Or maybe they passed a kidney stone and developed a ureteral stricture afterwards. And now they're proper F*ck**, since endoscopic surgical treatments of post-radiation strictures have a failure rate approaching 100%. XRT is the gift that keeps on giving, and patients (and urologists who take call) are often the recipients. Since I started my practice 3 years ago, I've had dozens if not hundreds of surgical cases related to long term complications of radiation. 0 related to sequalae of prostatectomy.
So comparing a 50 year old to a 70 year old, surgery is relatively lower risk and radiation higher risk for the younger patient, and the reverse is true.
At risk of doxing myself, we once had such an old machine here we blew a hole right through the target. Pretty sure I saw it on a trophy in the department at one point.While the machines may last forever, the service contracts do not
As has been said. Very much appreciate your willingness to come here and share your perspective. Very valuable.And yet, PROTECT trial showed no difference in erectile function at 2 years. Are you counselling your patients as such?
As for age and XRT for prostate cancer, I do agree that it is not an absolute contraindication. However:
1. The younger you are, the better you recover from surgery. continence outcomes, ED outcomes, etc. are all better at 50 then 60 then 70.
2. The younger you are, the more years you have ahead of you for XRT to mess things up. Secondary cancers. Radiation cystitis. urethral strictures. ureteral strictures. Non-radiation induced cancers (after all, plenty of rectal and bladder cancers in men with no prior XRT) with treatment complicated by prior radiation. and so on. Many on this forum poo-poo these problems, but I deal with them LITERALLY every day. Plenty of guys out there with radiation many years ago with late onset issues like this. Maybe your radiation didn't cause a urethral stricture. But maybe they had a traumatic catheter put in 15 years later that did because they had prior radiation. Or maybe they passed a kidney stone and developed a ureteral stricture afterwards. And now they're proper F*ck**, since endoscopic surgical treatments of post-radiation strictures have a failure rate approaching 100%. XRT is the gift that keeps on giving, and patients (and urologists who take call) are often the recipients. Since I started my practice 3 years ago, I've had dozens if not hundreds of surgical cases related to long term complications of radiation. 0 related to sequalae of prostatectomy.
So comparing a 50 year old to a 70 year old, surgery is relatively lower risk and radiation higher risk for the younger patient, and the reverse is true.
Are these urorads just running their machines into the ground? I mean they have to be about 10 years old on average at this point.
I feel like this is my current mission on SDN:1) wrt "I see it every day" -- do you notice any patterns with the technique used or you don't dive that deep? I have heard of places still doing 4 field box with a subsequent cone down even today. I'd expect a lot more toxicity with something like that vs IMRT all the way through.
Boomer doc got 3 houses, an ex wife and a mistress. He’s likely on his yacht snorting coke while that smart young physician is preaching about omitting breast radiation making 250k a year in Podunk, SD hoping he makes partner in 8 years!I feel like this is my current mission on SDN:
Dear current and future new grads/early career docs taking over small practices staffed by the same doc(s) since 1995 -
@CaesarRO is not exaggerating. I'll take this claim a step further: I haven't just heard of this, I've seen it with my own eyes. I've argued against it, and lost.
So if you find yourself taking over such a practice, you're not crazy, yes this is happening. Sadly you're not alone, and it's probably more common than you think.
Yes, your contouring and planning is significantly better than the Boomer(s) who retired. Yes, even though you're better at this than they are, you have now inherited a community of physicians who have seen Dr Boomer's 4-Field-Box Bloody Proctitis happen 3-4 times a year since Britney Spears was #1 on the TRL countdown.
Just...slow and steady. Don't rage at the machine and trash Dr Boomer. The best revenge is doing well for your patients and community.
Boomer doc got 3 houses, an ex wife and a mistress. He’s likely on his yacht snorting coke while that smart young physician is preaching about omitting breast radiation making 250k a year in Podunk, SD hoping he makes partner in 8 years!
TRUTHBoomer doc got 3 houses, an ex wife and a mistress. He’s likely on his yacht snorting coke while that smart young physician is preaching about omitting breast radiation making 250k a year in Podunk, SD hoping he makes partner in 8 years!
He was treating the important half.TRUTH
One time, I had one of the - let's go with "Vintage Edition RadOncs" - tell me about this elaborate trust setup he created so his kids would avoid capital gains taxes...
...then turn around and approve a palliative plan where he only treated half the tumor. Fun times!
I’ll admit I generally don’t deep dive so can’t comment on the xrt techniques used. I do live in a “well served” area that is usually all about new tech, so many patients get “cutting edge” care, sometimes to their detriment.As has been said. Very much appreciate your willingness to come here and share your perspective. Very valuable.
Two questions:
1) wrt "I see it every day" -- do you notice any patterns with the technique used or you don't dive that deep? I have heard of places still doing 4 field box with a subsequent cone down even today. I'd expect a lot more toxicity with something like that vs IMRT all the way through.
2) as a youngish Rad Onc I do worry that we under capture the late late toxicities. Like 30-40 years later.
I think we see the counter examples of over aggressive surgeons. My biggest frustration is the highest risk cases where it's clear the patient would still need RT and ADT post op and the surgeon convinces the patient surgery is still a benefit. Haven't seen any data that trimodality adds any benefits to RT+ADT in high/very high risk.
TRUTH
One time, I had one of the - let's go with "Vintage Edition RadOncs" - tell me about this elaborate trust setup he created so his kids would avoid capital gains taxes...
...then turn around and approve a palliative plan where he only treated half the tumor. Fun times!
@DoctwoB with good answer above.In regards to the bolded, but WHY? This is DOGMA that is unfounded in data. And if we do nothing else on SDN, we challenge DOGMA for the sake of DOGMA.
I've had dozens if not hundreds of surgical cases related to long term complications of radiation. 0 related to sequalae of prostatectomy.
I 100% believe this goes on. I think the argument here is that we all have our own biases, just let the doctors that do the procedures have a chance to talk to the patients.I'm sure there are a lot of urologists pushing poor information about radiation. I know I've seen many radoncs pushing incorrect information about surgery.
I get the sentiment. I’m sure I would be annoyed if there was a situation where a radonc somehow treated with no GU involvement unless I really knew and trusted the radonc to give a balanced/fair perspective. I get VERY annoyed when I see a CT report saying “ 2cm renal mass consistent with RCC, recommend percutaneous ablation, cal XXX to schedule”I 100% believe this goes on. I think the argument here is that we all have our own biases, just let the doctors that do the procedures have a chance to talk to the patients.
I am fortunate to work with some excellent urologists, some others are not. I'm sure the reverse is true.
I do think radiaiton oncologists tend to under-estimate late effects of XRT. Many patients are lost to follow up and late hematuria/proctitis can happen without us knowing it.
I still think any new prostate diagnosis should be seen by both rad onc and urology.
Just a quick note, I don't believeit is true that "PROTECT trial showed no difference in erectile function at 2 years". From the PROTECT trial:And yet, PROTECT trial showed no difference in erectile function at 2 years. Are you counselling your patients as such?
As for age and XRT for prostate cancer, I do agree that it is not an absolute contraindication. However:
1. The younger you are, the better you recover from surgery. continence outcomes, ED outcomes, etc. are all better at 50 then 60 then 70.
2. The younger you are, the more years you have ahead of you for XRT to mess things up. Secondary cancers. Radiation cystitis. urethral strictures. ureteral strictures. Non-radiation induced cancers (after all, plenty of rectal and bladder cancers in men with no prior XRT) with treatment complicated by prior radiation. and so on. Many on this forum poo-poo these problems, but I deal with them LITERALLY every day. Plenty of guys out there with radiation many years ago with late onset issues like this. Maybe your radiation didn't cause a urethral stricture. But maybe they had a traumatic catheter put in 15 years later that did because they had prior radiation. Or maybe they passed a kidney stone and developed a ureteral stricture afterwards. And now they're proper F*ck**, since endoscopic surgical treatments of post-radiation strictures have a failure rate approaching 100%. XRT is the gift that keeps on giving, and patients (and urologists who take call) are often the recipients. Since I started my practice 3 years ago, I've had dozens if not hundreds of surgical cases related to long term complications of radiation. 0 related to sequalae of prostatectomy.
So comparing a 50 year old to a 70 year old, surgery is relatively lower risk and radiation higher risk for the younger patient, and the reverse is true.
Bolded line - ????? Figure 2 from https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMoa1606221And yet, PROTECT trial showed no difference in erectile function at 2 years. Are you counselling your patients as such?
As for age and XRT for prostate cancer, I do agree that it is not an absolute contraindication. However:
1. The younger you are, the better you recover from surgery. continence outcomes, ED outcomes, etc. are all better at 50 then 60 then 70.
2. The younger you are, the more years you have ahead of you for XRT to mess things up. Secondary cancers. Radiation cystitis. urethral strictures. ureteral strictures. Non-radiation induced cancers (after all, plenty of rectal and bladder cancers in men with no prior XRT) with treatment complicated by prior radiation. and so on. Many on this forum poo-poo these problems, but I deal with them LITERALLY every day. Plenty of guys out there with radiation many years ago with late onset issues like this. Maybe your radiation didn't cause a urethral stricture. But maybe they had a traumatic catheter put in 15 years later that did because they had prior radiation. Or maybe they passed a kidney stone and developed a ureteral stricture afterwards. And now they're proper F*ck**, since endoscopic surgical treatments of post-radiation strictures have a failure rate approaching 100%. XRT is the gift that keeps on giving, and patients (and urologists who take call) are often the recipients. Since I started my practice 3 years ago, I've had dozens if not hundreds of surgical cases related to long term complications of radiation. 0 related to sequalae of prostatectomy.
So comparing a 50 year old to a 70 year old, surgery is relatively lower risk and radiation higher risk for the younger patient, and the reverse is true.
MSKCC pre-surgical nomogram biochemical control numbers are not equal to XRT biochemical control numbers, at least for high-risk disease. It is an apples to oranges comparison but XRT will always look better because of the differences in how biochemical failure is defined. If you're treating FIR with 60-70% biochemical control you're not doing so hot.@DoctwoB with good answer above.
The other factor is just the long term risk of biochemical failure (which does not correlate terribly well with pCa survival).
Biochemical failure is common. Run through MSKCC pre-surgical nomogram and look at 10 year biochemical control numbers (these numbers only get worse over time). Even in really ideal cases these are like 89% and in most cases run in the 60%-70% range. These trend fairly well with XRT biochemical control numbers.
Local salvage after XRT is usually complicated and often stupid. Indefinite ADT (even intermittent) is a bit of a bummer.
I'm happy to salvage a man in his late 60s who got surgery in his 50s.
Sigh, what a tired old trope.You rad oncs and your “data.” So good at understanding and breaking it down. How cute!
Meanwhile, I’m having a discussion with a patient on why his urologist told him that leaving the prostate inside the body will cause him to have more of a chance of disease recurrence after radiation. He also told the patient that after surgery, radiation can be given which is curative but after radiation, surgery can not be given, which means he’ll likely die. No bias discussion there at all!
That’s where the bad stuff wasHe was treating the important half.
I have done it for all risk groups. Sbrt is really indicated to capture distant pts or those with severe transportation hardships.Is adt and sbrt a thing? I don't really do sbrt outside low risk or favorable intermediate.
I do it for unfavorable intermediate.Is adt and sbrt a thing? I don't really do sbrt outside low risk or favorable intermediate.
Is adt and sbrt a thing? I don't really do sbrt outside low risk or favorable intermediate.
I'm glad he posted too. A tweet like that takes balls. And after several months of ADT, the clock's ticking.I'm also glad that a senator is extolling the virtues of SBRT for prostate cancer. Lord knows we need all the publicity we can get.
An effective and long term solution to erectile dysfunction after ADT will be hard.Are you guys ok when the senator blames SBRT for not being able to get a hard on one night he’s out with his secretary?
Exactly my point! He could easily tweet how SBRT killed his mojo and all the “brutal” toxicities of radiation.An effective and long term solution to erectile dysfunction after ADT will be hard.
Maybe large prostate. I still like to start ADT and get radiation after a couple of weeks.Why neoadjuvant ADT? I thought we stopped that after the Spratt meta analysis.