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Agree!Fairly certain fem neck is the last bone met site in the body I would ever use single fraction RT
Agree!Fairly certain fem neck is the last bone met site in the body I would ever use single fraction RT
I actually prefer old school sbrt for lung. You can find data that Imrt /vmat are just as good but there is conflicting data that the increased inhomogeneity with 3D Sbrt is superior in terms of tumor control. From my standpoint if I can make a good portion of the tumor get 110 percent (or more ) of dose without exceeding any normal tissue tolerance, I think that is preferable. Kind of like why brachy may be beneficial in other disease sites.I like vmat but I agree. Lots of ways to get a good plan.
The Brits randomized 1500 men in 10 years to undergo surgery, radiotherapy or surveillance for prostate cancer...How many patients do you know who would be comfortable leaving surg vs SBRT to a coin flip?
with treatments so different, it’s hard not to think that one MUST be the wrong choice.
Do mobiles bones require 4D imaging? 🤔🤔🤔What are mobile vs non-mobile bones?
Could just either be rubber stamping or the Wild Wild West!chart rounds at ohio st must be nuts
His malpractice insurance company would be rushing to settle. Way outside the standard of care. Even Simon Lo is concerned…
Too lazy to crunch the numbers, but I would imagine there are more men with prostate cancer in the NHS than vets in the US with stage 1 lung cancer.The Brits randomized 1500 men in 10 years to undergo surgery, radiotherapy or surveillance for prostate cancer...
That's a tripple coin flip.
I agree with you from a step-by-step, logical standpoint.I actually prefer old school sbrt for lung. You can find data that Imrt /vmat are just as good but there is conflicting data that the increased inhomogeneity with 3D Sbrt is superior in terms of tumor control. From my standpoint if I can make a good portion of the tumor get 110 percent (or more ) of dose without exceeding any normal tissue tolerance, I think that is preferable. Kind of like why brachy may be beneficial in other disease sites.
I’ll use vmat if close to plexus or some critical central structure but only if needed
it’s probably a difference in culture. Much more complacent and compliant population in NHS eg brits love waiting in long lines.Too lazy to crunch the numbers, but I would imagine there are more men with prostate cancer in the NHS than vets in the US with stage 1 lung cancer.
although to be complete, the Brits also tried to tee up a randomized surgery vs SBRT study and were completely unable to recruit for itThe Brits randomized 1500 men in 10 years to undergo surgery, radiotherapy or surveillance for prostate cancer...
That's a tripple coin flip.
What would be the point of this?
Someone doesn't seem to understand the point of the OLA questions is to confirm ongoing bare minimal competency working knowledge. You should be getting near 100%. It's a fluke of our field that a few people have eidetic memories and can recall every kaplan meier curve from every study they've ever seen. If you want to retake the written exam every 5 years instead to show that off, I say go for it.
Someone doesn't seem to understand the point of the OLA questions is to confirm ongoing bare minimal competency working knowledge. You should be getting near 100%. It's a fluke of our field that a few people have eidetic memories and can recall every kaplan meier curve from every study they've ever seen. If you want to retake the written exam every 5 years instead to show that off, I say go for it.
For context, it looks like 83% of Americans live in metropolitan areas: Topic: Metropolitan areas in the U.S.
Such thin margins between a smart rad onc, a dumb rad onc, and a lifetime certificateHe missed 4? I haven’t missed one in 2 years. Just change the pass rate to 98% and fail this guy.
I have worked with people that would have failed OLA though.
Which Boomer chair wrote that drivel?
67 years young, hopefully he is done with it by now.
Maybe Kent will lend the ASTRO PAC his time machine?
The driver of treatment time is motion management. Non gated/ non breathhold treatments take minimal beam time regardless of technique. (Way less than 20 min)I agree with you from a step-by-step, logical standpoint.
However, having experimented with this myself: how long are your 3D SBRT patients on the table, compared to VMAT?
You might be using different techniques than what I've tried, but 3D SBRT is a significantly slower treatment, which is very difficult for elderly patients to tolerate. You can have the perfect plan in the computer, but if your patient wiggles from discomfort during their 20 minute treatment sessions, it doesn't really matter.
Currently, I use VMAT with a planned hotspot of ~135%-145% to get both "3D-esque" inhomogeneity and fast treatment times.
I'm always looking for ways to do it better, though.
Hmmmm. It's been a few years now since I played around with all this. What's your preferred beam arrangement?The driver of treatment time is motion management. Non gated/ non breathhold treatments take minimal beam time regardless of technique. (Way less than 20 min)
I’ve not found anything that makes a gated treatment “fast”. Having used vmat, static field 3D, and modulated static field.
Like your vmat hot spot
Are we talking fixed beam 3D, or DCA? DCA is way fewer MUs than VMAT and slightly faster in our experience. We do 1 half arc sweep that is comprised of a few partial arc beams. They mode up pretty quickly and are at worst no slower than 2 VMAT arcs.Hmmmm. It's been a few years now since I played around with all this. What's your preferred beam arrangement?
I think the last non-VMAT version I tried was similar to this:
I'd have to see if I still have it somewhere, but I once went through and measured the time from CBCT acquisition to delivery of last MU and 3D was consistently longer...
Though that could have been the therapists I was working with at the time.
I’ll add that I really like DCA for targets that move a lot. Has to be the right shape though.Are we talking fixed beam 3D, or DCA? DCA is way fewer MUs than VMAT and slightly faster in our experience. We do 1 half arc sweep that is comprised of a few partial arc beams. They mode up pretty quickly and are at worst no slower than 2 VMAT arcs.
Never forget everyone, we're anonymous misanthropes and no one can be sure we're even doctors, let alone Radiation Oncologists!
I have a lot of comments about this that I'll just...mostly keep to myself...Be careful. I had another account on here in the past and somehow got doxxed at work. Literally no idea how.
Here I am, back for more punishment. A degenerate addict.
I personally do think that surgery is better than SBRT.
What I don’t understand are the other ablation techniques like RFA etc. Who would be appropriate for that?
Great space for a RO NP dependent on your volume - CT chest a few days prior to NP visit, NP sees patient, reads report (reviewing imaging personally can be problematic), lets doc know PRN, otherwise continues the q3-6 month CT surveillance (based on time from previous RT).Best thing is to follow your patients, gets hard with the clinic flow, I've basically tried to alternate with pulm or med onc to space it out, I usually let them go 3-5 years out though. Definitely have gotten some add-on cases through the years, certain pts seem to win that unlucky lottery more than once
Links?I actually prefer old school sbrt for lung. You can find data that Imrt /vmat are just as good but there is conflicting data that the increased inhomogeneity with 3D Sbrt is superior in terms of tumor control. From my standpoint if I can make a good portion of the tumor get 110 percent (or more ) of dose without exceeding any normal tissue tolerance, I think that is preferable. Kind of like why brachy may be beneficial in other disease sites.
I’ll use vmat if close to plexus or some critical central structure but only if needed
I agree with you from a step-by-step, logical standpoint.
However, having experimented with this myself: how long are your 3D SBRT patients on the table, compared to VMAT?
You might be using different techniques than what I've tried, but 3D SBRT is a significantly slower treatment, which is very difficult for elderly patients to tolerate. You can have the perfect plan in the computer, but if your patient wiggles from discomfort during their 20 minute treatment sessions, it doesn't really matter.
Currently, I use VMAT with a planned hotspot of ~135%-145% to get both "3D-esque" inhomogeneity and fast treatment times.
I'm always looking for ways to do it better, though.
The difference in time between dynamic conformal arcs and a VMAT plan is going to be very small. Monitor units will be less for the DCA plan but if the arc arrangement is more complicated, this can add a little time.
DCA can still be inverse planned and with dynamic MLCs. You are just not modulating across the target. In principle, this takes away some dosimetric uncertainty.
I have to admit, the modulation of stereotactic, small field VMAT plans enters into the realm of absurdity. There is no longer any intuition and I am sure there are compounding risks of dose uncertainty...however, it works.
You can get any hotspot you want with VMAT by applying proper planning objectives. The hotter plans are not limited to DCA.
What has bothered me is how we should prescribe these heavily modulated plans, because you don't need to have a very hot center and the prescription paradigm is really a volumetric one (e.g. 95% PTV gets 100% prescription dose as opposed to prescribing to the 60-80% IDL). Should we mimic old 3D plans and try to make the center very hot. Should we try to cover the ITV at 125% the periphery of the PTV (as some have suggested)...this makes for much hotter plan.
Lots of variability in terms of how to prescribe and define objectives for these sorts of plans.
D-bag RD seems to be stimulated by aerobic exercise. Interesting
KO needs more time for Xs, bruh. There’s your opportunity.
Even the Astro leaders are no longer saying there is a shortage
Even the Astro leaders are no longer saying there is a shortage
Kendi is a grifter.it's got to be at least 6-7 years since that was seriously put forth as an opinion, if not longer. Ron D is a grifter.
Ben Smith published his initial paper in 2010: https://ascopubs.org/doi/full/10.1200/JCO.2010.31.2520
'Demand for radiation therapy is expected to grow 10 times faster than supply between 2010 and 2020. Research is needed to explore strategies to enhance capacity to deliver quality radiation therapy despite increased patient loads.'
By 2016, he had altered his opinion: Supply and Demand for Radiation Oncology in the United States: Updated Projections for 2015 to 2025 - PubMed
Conclusion: The supply of radiation oncologists is expected to grow more quickly than the demand for radiation therapy from 2015 to 2025. Further research is needed to determine whether this is an appropriate correction or will result in excess capacity.
Ron D is a grifter.
Oh he's a grifter too. He will happily sell you all kinds of overly onerous and strict CMS compliance advice and scare your hospital adminKendi is a grifter.
This guy appears to be a run of the mill flaming douche bag.
He wants to employ you and strip mine your practice. Future PE vulture written all over him.
Advanced practioner radiation therapist?
Anyone know what an APRT is?