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Anthony Ho

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  11
Citations -  1360

Anthony Ho is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cyberknife & Radiosurgery. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 11 publications receiving 1280 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony Ho include Hong Kong Adventist Hospital.

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Phase I study of stereotactic radiosurgery in patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer.

TL;DR: It is feasible to deliver stereotactic radiosurgery to patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer and the recommended dose to achieve local control without significant acute gastrointestinal toxicity is 25 Gy.
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Phase II study to assess the efficacy of conventionally fractionated radiotherapy followed by a stereotactic radiosurgery boost in patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer

TL;DR: Conurrent IMRT and 5-FU followed by SRS in patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer results in excellent local control, but does not improve overall survival and is associated with more toxicity than SRS, alone.
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Results of a Phase I Dose-Escalation Study Using Single-Fraction Stereotactic Radiotherapy for Lung Tumors

TL;DR: Single-fraction stereotactic RT is feasible for selected patients with lung tumors and, for those with prior thoracic RT, 25 Gy may be too toxic; higher dose was associated with improved local control.
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A study of the accuracy of cyberknife spinal radiosurgery using skeletal structure tracking.

TL;DR: This study sought to measure the accuracy of Xsight spine tracking and provide a qualitative assessment of overall system performance and showed this technology to be robust under a wide range of clinical circumstances.
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Fast generation of digitally reconstructed radiographs using attenuation fields with application to 2D-3D image registration

TL;DR: The technique of light field rendering from the computer graphics community is extended, allowing most of the DRR computation to be performed in a preprocessing step; after this precomputation step, DRRs can be generated substantially faster than with conventional ray casting.