How do you treat a high grade prostate cancer with bulky direct bladder invasion?
Assume patient has had maximal TURBT
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
Interesting to see a treatment paradigm presented where an insurer would fathom A) protons and B) fluciclovine for staging, and C) second generation anti-androgen on top of LHRha to treat a locally advanced, non metastatic prostate cancer. I agree that there is the possibility that some of these thi...
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Radiation Oncologist at Washington University School of Medicine I agree with all of the above comments on Proton t...
Radiation Oncologist at Willis Knighton Cancer Center I agree with all comments here. I try to enroll ev...
Radiation Oncologist at Lake Huron Medical Center Even this study is non randomized as far as photon...
Radiation Oncologist at Willis Knighton Cancer Center Yes, it is a pragmatic study. From section 3.2 of ...
Radiation Oncologist at Lake Huron Medical Center The question I have isn't "Should we hypofractiona...
Radiation Oncologist at Willis Knighton Cancer Center Lol agreed! A VMAT prostate plan is a fantastic tr...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
I would treat for cure using my usual approach for very-high risk patients, which is antihormone therapy with 2-3 years of antihormones including abiraterone or another one of the other oral 2nd gen blockers, plus 50 Gy of IMPT to the pelvic nodes and 78 Gy gross tumor boost.
I would use MRI and Ax...
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Radiation Oncologist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/Harvard Medical School I have had push back from some insurance companies...
Radiation Oncologist at Cancer Specialists of North Florida Agree with @Irving D. Kaplan that you can run into...
Radiation Oncologist at Washington University School of Medicine Below is a relevant summary of a published article...
Radiation Oncologist at Cancer Specialists of North Florida Thanks for sharing @Carlos A. Perez.
As someone w...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
Quite proton heavy answers! I’m not sure that comparative effectiveness research is how we should determine the use of high cost therapies that have not been shown to improve outcomes in prospective studies. Protons have been around for decades, and yet no RCTs for prostate cancer have be...
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Radiation Oncologist at Northeast Alabama Regional Medical Center A month (or two) of ADT exposure antecedent to sim...
Radiation Oncologist at Lake Huron Medical Center Not unreasonable to get a few months of ADT in. It...
Radiation Oncologist at Delaware Valley Urology Cancer Treatment Center Can partial cystectomy be accomplished without tum...
I agree with all of the above comments on Proton t...
I agree with all comments here. I try to enroll ev...
Even this study is non randomized as far as photon...
Yes, it is a pragmatic study. From section 3.2 of ...
The question I have isn't "Should we hypofractiona...
Lol agreed! A VMAT prostate plan is a fantastic tr...