How will your management of head and neck cancers change with the COVID-19 pandemic?
Are you employing more or less primary chemoRT v. surgery for some cancers? Are you dose de-escalating? What are issues radiation oncologists should be considering at this time?
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
Short answer:
Most head and neck cancer radiation is as necessary as it gets. At this point, my management won't change very much. That may change as the pandemic evolves.
Use all the appropriate precautions to stop the spread of COVID-19 and other viruses (we are using masks for every staff membe...
Comments
Radiation Oncologist at University of North Carolina How have you dealt with dentists considering denta...
Radiation Oncologist at NYC Health + Hospitals Great question, it has not come up for me this wee...
Radiation Oncologist at NYC Health + Hospitals Update! The last 2 HNC patients I have seen have b...
Radiation Oncologist at Radiotherapy Centers of Kentuckiana We continue to treat our community HNC patients wi...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
I am speaking for myself and not my institution. I’ve been slow to respond because I’m conflicted. On the one hand, I dislike split course RT, particularly for head and neck. On the other hand, if you don’t split a covid positive patient, you risk infecting fellow patients and staf...
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Radiation Oncologist at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center I agree. There has been excellent discussion of ma...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Academic Institution
How are people managing contact precaution duration for COVID+ patients receiving head neck chemo/RT, considering that they will have prolonged and excess pharyngeal/oral secretions?
Our infectious disease team decided to prolong contact precautions throughout radiation treatment. They decided...
Comments
Radiation Oncologist at NYC Health + Hospitals I agree...there is no data on this subject and it'...
Answer from: Radiation Oncologist at Community Practice
All answers to these questions are evolving daily.
It is incumbent on us to free up beds, free machine time where possible, and protect patients, ourselves, and staff (if we go down we are no longer a force multiplier).
I agree that curative head and neck cancer treatment should go on ...
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Radiation Oncologist at UPMC Hillman Cancer Center Scopes: Aerosolizing. Do not perform unless absolu...
Radiation Oncologist at NYC Health + Hospitals Yes totally agree with this, data supports staying...
Answer from: Medical Oncologist at Community Practice
I agree with most of the comments, but would differ on the following points.
For patients who would be eligible for curative organ-sparing approaches, that should be considered before any surgical approaches (minimally invasive, TORS or otherwise) (no change in protocol because of COVID). I am not ...
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Medical Oncologist at University of Miami Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center I generally agree with my colleagues above.
Here ...
How have you dealt with dentists considering denta...
Great question, it has not come up for me this wee...
Update! The last 2 HNC patients I have seen have b...
We continue to treat our community HNC patients wi...