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Physician discussions on inpatient care, transitions of care, diagnostic reasoning, and hospital-based protocols.

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How do you approach rectal spacer for the patient with renal failure?

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Radiation Oncology · Varian Medical Systems/Allegheny health network

Have not come across this but I would presume it would be filtered with dialysis in pts with renal failure.

Do you refer patients to cardiology if they have no history of cardiac disease but will be receiving XRT with high mean doses to the heart?

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Radiation Oncology · University of Pennsylvania Health System

Great question! Yes, we are starting to refer patients to cardiology who have Stage III NSCLC or LS-SCLC and are receiving high-dose radiation therapy. Trying to tease out whether its heart dose or central tumor location, or some combination of the two, that confers a poorer prognosis is challenging...

Do you perform a bone health assessment in men who will be receiving short term androgen deprivation for localized prostate cancer?

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Radiation Oncology · Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

I do not order bone densitometry on patients I am treating with short term (<= 6 months) of AD, unless they have a risk factor like long-term glucocorticoid use or prior fracture. For patients I am treating with long term >=18 months I perform a baseline bone densitometry. If that is normal-mild ost...

What stage is bilateral orbital/conjunctival NHL (limited only to the bilateral orbit/conjunctiva)?

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Radiation Oncology · Duke University Medical Center

By the Ann Arbor staging system, this is stage IV disease because more than one extranodal site is involved at initial presentation. However, NCCN and other guidelines acknowledge that MALT lymphoma involving both paired organs (e.g., bilateral orbital/conjunctiva) is often best treated with RT alon...

How do you manage soft tissue necrosis in a patient who underwent TORS followed by RT?

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Radiation Oncology · Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

Close observation Minimize trauma Don’t biopsy unless something very suspicious

How would you manage an elderly patient with GE junction adenocarcinoma who is not interested in surgery and who has ulcerative colitis (not currently on medication or symptomatic)?

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Radiation Oncology · Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center

Ulcerative colitis is generally a disease limited to the colon, and is an important distinction from Crohn's disease, which is truly anywhere from mouth to anus in the GI tract. These two diseases are on a spectrum of inflammatory bowel disease and there can be some overlap, but in general I would p...

For small peripherally located NSCLC, when do consider referral for mediastinal evaluation prior to curative surgery vs proceeding to resection with mediastinal eval at time of surgery?

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Thoracic Surgery · University of Michigan Medical School

Although there is variability among the different guidelines (ACCP, ESTS, NCCN) in regards to mediastinal staging, there is consensus that no invasive staging is required for peripheral nodules which are T1A (T1abcN0) given the low prevalence of occult N2 disease. Invasive mediastinal staging should...

Should breast cancer patients with never-treated latent TB and for whom chemotherapy is indicated be treated for latent TB during chemotherapy?

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Medical Oncology · Lincoln Medical Center

Interestingly latent tb reactivation while on cyclic combination Chemotherapy is quite rare even in endemic countries like India, including among patients treated for leukemia. This could be due to cyclic nature of immune suppression rather than chronic immune suppression which is required for tb re...

What is a safe time interval from completion of hormones and external beam radiation to TURP in patients who develop refractory obstruction?

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Radiation Oncology · VA New Jersey Healthcare System - East Orange campus.

Great question. Ordinarily, in my past experience, if a patient had real LUTS >14 AUA score that was not relieved with alpha blockers, and/or had a large median lobe, we would prefer the TURP be done upfront and / or chemical debulking with ADT too. In these instances, we found we had less LUTS then...

How do you approach rectal cancer with a solitary bone metastasis that is biopsy proven?

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Radiation Oncology · Brigham and Women's Hospital

This is a much less common scenario than oligometastatic disease to the liver or lung, but as control rates for bone metastases treated with SBRT are showing promise, the approach may be similar to that taken for patients with more common sites of oligometastatic rectal cancer. We would typically st...