2022
Evaluation of Substantial Reduction in Elective Radiotherapy Dose and Field in Patients With Human Papillomavirus–Associated Oropharyngeal Carcinoma Treated With Definitive Chemoradiotherapy
Tsai CJ, McBride SM, Riaz N, Kang JJ, Spielsinger DJ, Waldenberg T, Gelblum D, Yu Y, Chen LC, Zakeri K, Wong RJ, Dunn L, Pfister DG, Sherman EJ, Lee NY. Evaluation of Substantial Reduction in Elective Radiotherapy Dose and Field in Patients With Human Papillomavirus–Associated Oropharyngeal Carcinoma Treated With Definitive Chemoradiotherapy. JAMA Oncology 2022, 8: 364-372. PMID: 35050342, PMCID: PMC8778604, DOI: 10.1001/jamaoncol.2021.6416.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDistant metastasis-free survivalProgression-free survivalMetastasis-free survivalOropharyngeal carcinomaConcurrent chemoradiotherapyDe-escalation strategiesRadiotherapy doseTotal doseSubclinical regionsLocoregional controlGross diseaseCohort studyOverall survivalClinical outcomesHuman Papillomavirus–Associated Oropharyngeal CarcinomaHigh-dose cisplatin therapyHPV-positive oropharyngeal carcinomaTarget volumeBilateral level IBGy of radiotherapyPrimary concurrent chemoradiotherapyRetrospective cohort studyFavorable clinical outcomeAmerican Joint CommitteeLong-term follow
2021
Postoperative PET/CT for detection of early recurrence (ER) after surgery for squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) of the oral cavity (OC).
Yu Y, Schöder H, Kang J, McBride S, Tsai C, Chen L, Zakeri K, Gelblum D, Boyle J, Cracchiolo J, Cohen M, Singh B, Ganly I, Patel S, Michel L, Dunn L, Pfister D, Wong R, Riaz N, Lee N. Postoperative PET/CT for detection of early recurrence (ER) after surgery for squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) of the oral cavity (OC). Journal Of Clinical Oncology 2021, 39: 6060-6060. DOI: 10.1200/jco.2021.39.15_suppl.6060.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPostoperative PET/CTIntermediate risk factorsSquamous cell carcinomaHigh-risk factorsPET/CTPT3-4 diseasePositive surgical marginsEarly recurrenceSurgical marginsExtranodal extensionLymphovascular invasionPerineural invasionRisk factorsOral cavityPostoperative radiotherapyOverall survivalPostoperative radiationPET/CT planningDistant metastasis-free survivalImproved disease-free survivalClinicopathologic risk factorsClose surgical marginsDisease-free survivalSalvage therapyDistant recurrence
2019
Outcomes of multimodal therapy in a large series of patients with anaplastic thyroid cancer
Fan D, Ma J, Bell AC, Groen AH, Olsen KS, Lok BH, Leeman JE, Anderson E, Riaz N, McBride S, Ganly I, Shaha AR, Sherman EJ, Tsai CJ, Kang JJ, Lee NY. Outcomes of multimodal therapy in a large series of patients with anaplastic thyroid cancer. Cancer 2019, 126: 444-452. PMID: 31593317, PMCID: PMC7302673, DOI: 10.1002/cncr.32548.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedAged, 80 and overAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsChemoradiotherapy, AdjuvantDose-Response Relationship, RadiationDoxorubicinFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansIndazolesMaleMiddle AgedPaclitaxelProgression-Free SurvivalPyrimidinesRadiotherapy DosageRadiotherapy, Intensity-ModulatedRetrospective StudiesSulfonamidesThyroid Carcinoma, AnaplasticThyroid GlandThyroid NeoplasmsThyroidectomyTumor BurdenConceptsLocoregional progression-free survivalRole of radiotherapyAnaplastic thyroid cancerTreatment of patientsOverall survivalAdverse eventsMetastatic diseaseTrimodal therapyThyroid cancerAcute grade 3 adverse eventsAdvanced anaplastic thyroid cancerGrade 3 adverse eventsPostoperative RTDistant metastasis-free survivalTrimodal treatment approachAcceptable toxicity profileProgression-free survivalLate adverse eventsLocal tumor controlMetastasis-free survivalLong-term outcomesLPFS ratesOS benefitConcurrent chemoradiationSystemic agents