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Medical Oncology

Medical Oncology

Physician insights on cancer treatment protocols, immunotherapy, targeted therapies, and clinical trial updates.

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How would you manage a patient with radiation pneumonitis who remains symptomatic on steroids?

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Radiation Oncology · Tennessee Oncology

Engage your Pulmonology colleagues to assist in these difficult cases. Important to rule out other causes of persistent symptoms including infectious processes. Rebronch can be helpful for infectious work up and/or determining the nature of the inflammatory process that is ongoing (for example, the ...

In 2024, do you consider isolated gain(1q) [not amp(1q)] to be a high-risk cytogenetic abnormality in multiple myeloma?

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Medical Oncology · University of Chicago

The brief answer from my standpoint is that some patients with 1q gain will have their disease behave high-risk and some will not. The longer answer...As the question alludes to, the presence of high-risk cytogenetic abnormalities and 1q gain should be considered high-risk (or even ultra high-risk)....

When (if ever) do you check for anti-platelet antibodies for workup of thrombocytopenia?

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Hematology · University of Washington

Routinely available anti-platelet antibody tests have a sensitivity too high and specificity too low to be of much clinical use. A patient's response to first line therapy (steroids or IVIg) is most telling and if there is no response, a bone marrow is warranted as it would be atypical for ITP. Ther...

What duration of ADT + abiraterone do you recommend prior to initiation of HDR brachytherapy followed by EBRT for very high risk localized cT3bN0 prostate cancer?

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Radiation Oncology · Case Western Reserve University/ University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center

This is a short answer (for me) given the lack of data to support brachy boost in T3b disease in a randomized trial.The only randomized multicenter trial comparing dose-escalated EBRT to brachy boost is ASCENDE-RT. They specifically excluded T3b patients (see supplementary content for all exclusion ...

Would you offer adjuvant therapy for poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma of the galbladder s/p R0 resection with negative nodes?

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Medical Oncology · Moffitt Cancer Center

We would offer adjuvant chemotherapy to this patient based on data from the BILCAP study. Final results are still to be published in a peer reviewed journal. This study enrolled patients with biliary malignancies who were randomized to adjuvant capecitabine vs. observation following resection. 18% o...

What factors do you consider when choosing adjuvant treatment for resected (R0) gallbladder carcinoma with positive nodes?

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Medical Oncology · AHN Cancer Institute

There is sparse data directing the best adjuvant treatment plan for R0 resected Gallbladder Cancer with positive lymph nodes. Long term outcomes are poor even for patients who undergo a complete resection. Interestingly, the patterns of recurrence favor distant sites of disease over locoregional rec...

How would you adjust the steroid dose for steroid-induced psychosis in a patient being treated for secondary HLH with the HLH-94 protocol?

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Pediatric Hematology/Oncology · UCSF Medical Center-Mission Bay

If disease status allows weaning, we slowly wean per recommendations in HLH94. If they need steroids because of significant hyperinflammation that is damaging, then we add risperidone, which generally works very well.

How would you adjust the steroid dose for steroid-induced psychosis in a patient being treated for secondary HLH with the HLH-94 protocol?

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Pediatric Hematology/Oncology · UCSF Medical Center-Mission Bay

If disease status allows weaning, we slowly wean per recommendations in HLH94. If they need steroids because of significant hyperinflammation that is damaging, then we add risperidone, which generally works very well.

Given recent OS data from the OlympiA trial, would you offer adjuvant olaparib to a BRCA+ patient with pT1bN0 TNBC?

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Medical Oncology · Sarah Cannon Cancer Institute at Menorah Medical Center

I would not, as those patients were not included in OlympiA.

Would you continue pembrolizumab in a patient with BCG-refractory NMIBC with CIS who has a negative surveillance cystoscopy (including random biopsies) but positive urine cytology?

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Urology · University of Washington School of Medicine

More important priority at this point is to evaluate the positive cytology. If the random biopsies were done with white light cystoscopy only, I would consider blue light and repeat biopsies and would also evaluate the upper tracts and prostatic urethra.