How do you treat a locally advanced cervix cancer in a patient who declines brachytherapy?
What are your volumes and dose/fractionation for external beam boost in lieu of tandem and ovoid or tandem and ring implant?
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
You provide this lady with a curable disease the appropriate social support, mental health support, and transportation coordination in order for her to complete curative treatment with brachytherapy. Anything short of that in America with all our incredible resources and care options is substandard ...
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Radiation Oncologist at Northeast Radiation Oncology This has to be said, and thank you Dr. @Lymberis! ...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
It depends on the circumstances.It’s not uncommon that brachytherapy patients decline initially due to the logistics of treatment. Some patients travel many hours for their brachytherapy and have limited resources and/or support. We involve social work and nurse navigation to get them transpor...
After years of work in a developing country where patients often had access to external beam radiation but not brachytherapy, I have made the following observations:
In locally advanced cervical cancers, the bladder and/or ureter are often densely adherent to the cervix and this is very often not i...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
I’ve had a few patients who could not go through brachytherapy for some reason, such as a pulmonary embolus or inability to turn up. I tried to mimic the dosimetry of an implant and crossed my fingers. It’s difficult as the position of the target structures can change. You need adaptive ...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
All efforts should be made to provide access to brachytherapy and address patient-specific concerns (i.e. sedation for implant and removal), fractionation, travel, etc.
Patients with medical contraindications who cannot receive any anesthesia or bleeding risk whatsoever, have done daily adaptive MR...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
There’s a difference between unable to undergo brachytherapy and declines. Electing to decline brachytherapy is below the standard of care and the patient needs to find another doctor.
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
Brachytherapy is vital to the treatment of cervical cancer. Practices when possible, should avoid treating the cervix without brachytherapy experience and availability.Unfortunately, anyone who has a large cervical brachytherapy practice has encountered patients that for medical, logistical, or psyc...
This has to be said, and thank you Dr. @Lymberis! ...