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Showing papers by "Barbara Fisher published in 1998"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The combination of 5 FU infusion and pelvic radiation in the management of locally advanced rectal cancer is well tolerated and provides a baseline for comparison purposes with future combinations of newer systemic agents and radiation.
Abstract: Background and Purpose: To determine the percentage of complete responders and the resectability rate for patients with locally advanced carcinoma of the rectum treated by 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) infusional chemotherapy and pelvic radiation. Materials and Methods: Between October 1992 and June 1996, 29 patients with a diagnosis of locally advanced unresectable rectal cancer received preoperative 5 FU by continuous intravenous infusion at a dose of 225 mg/m 2 /day concurrent with pelvic radiation (median 54 Gy/28 fractions). All patients were clinical stage T4 on the bases of organ invasion or tumor fixation. Median time for surgical resection was 6 weeks. Results: Median follow-up for the group was 28 months (range 5–57 months). Six patients were felt to be persistently unresectable or developed distant metastases and did not undergo surgical resection. Of the 29 patients, 23 proceeded to surgery, 18 were resectable for cure, 13 by abdominoperineal resection, 3 by anterior resection and 2 by local excision. Of the 29 patients, 4 (13%) had a complete response, and 90% were clinically downstaged. Of the 18 resected patients, 1 has died of his disease, 17 are alive, and 15 disease-free. The regimen was well tolerated; there was only one treatment-related complication, a wound dehiscence. Conclusion: The combination of 5 FU infusion and pelvic radiation in the management of locally advanced rectal cancer is well tolerated and provides a baseline for comparison purposes with future combinations of newer systemic agents and radiation.

87 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the frequency, degree, and timing of radiologically confirmed response to radiotherapy of low-grade gliomas in children were examined and documented by comparing postoperative, pre-radiation computerized tomography (CT) scans with post-irradiation, follow-up CT scans.
Abstract: Object. The authors conducted a retrospective review to examine and document the frequency, degree, and timing of the radiologically confirmed response to radiotherapy of low-grade gliomas in children. Methods. Between 1963 and 1995, 80 patients 17 years of age or younger were referred to the London Regional Cancer Centre in London, Ontario after diagnosis of a low-grade glioma. All patients underwent surgical resection or biopsy procedures and 47 underwent radiotherapy (40 postoperatively and seven at the time of tumor progression). Nineteen patients with residual measurable lesions who received radiation therapy were selected for volumetric analysis of tumor response to this treatment. The extent and timing of response to radiation were determined by the process of comparing postoperative, preirradiation computerized tomography (CT) scans with postirradiation, follow-up CT scans. For one patient the comparison was made by using serial magnetic resonance images. Residual tumor was found on postoperative ...

53 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the frequency, degree, and timing of radiologically confirmed response to radiotherapy of low-grade gliomas in children was examined and document the frequency and degree of response.
Abstract: Object. The authors conducted a retrospective review to examine and document the frequency, degree, and timing of the radiologically confirmed response to radiotherapy of low-grade gliomas in children. Methods. Between 1963 and 1995, 80 patients 17 years of age or younger were referred to the London Regional Cancer Centre in London, Ontario after diagnosis of a low-grade glioma. All patients underwent surgical resection or biopsy procedures and 47 underwent radiotherapy (40 postoperatively and seven at the time of tumor progression). Nineteen patients with residual measurable lesions who received radiation therapy were selected for volumetric analysis of tumor response to this treatment. The extent and timing of response to radiation were determined by the process of comparing postoperative, preirradiation computerized tomography (CT) scans with postirradiation, follow-up CT scans. For one patient the comparison was made by using serial magnetic resonance images. Residual tumor was found on postoperative CT scans in all cases. The mean preradiotherapy tumor volume was 17.1 cm 3 , and the postradiotherapy volume was reduced to a mean of 11.5 cm 3 . A reduction in tumor volume was demonstrated in eight patients by the time of their first postirradiation follow-up CT scan and in two patients a slower reduction in volume over time was shown, bringing the total number of responders to 10. In five of these 10 patients the tumor had shown a maximum response by the time of the first postirradiation CT scan; the median time to response was 3.3 months. A 25% or greater reduction in tumor volume was seen in eight (42%) of the 19 patients. A 50% or greater reduction was noted in five (26%) of the patients. A complete response was demonstrated at 7, 12, and 15 months, and 5 years, respectively, in four patients (21%). One responder's tumor eventually increased in size after radiotherapy and he died of his disease. The magnitude of the radiographically demonstrated response to radiation did not correlate significantly with clinical outcome (that is, survival or symptom improvement). Conclusions. On the basis of this CT scan analysis of the response of low-grade gliomas in children to radiotherapy, the authors suggest that these lesions respond to radiation, as demonstrated by tumor shrinkage on serial imaging. Major or complete responses occur occasionally. However, low-grade gliomas in children mimic other benign brain tumors such as pituitary adenomas and meningiomas in that, although growth is frequently arrested after radiotherapy, residual tumor can persist for many years, illustrating that tumor shrinkage may not be a good measure of treatment efficacy. Nevertheless, radiation therapy can result in improvement of clinical symptomatology in association with or independent of visible tumor reduction. As radiation treatment techniques become increasingly conformal and because studies indicate that lower doses of radiation may be equally effective, improvement of symptoms may be an important consideration when weighing treatment options, particularly in patients with residual or unresectable disease.

41 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A rare occurrence of solitary intracranial plasmacytoma arising from the meninges over the left hemisphere is reported.
Abstract: A rare occurrence of solitary intracranial plasmacytoma arising from the meninges over the left hemisphere is reported. Clinical features and management of the case are described with review of literature.

34 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Recurrence of malignant glioma following radiotherapy most commonly occurs in close proximity to the original contrast enhancing CT/MRI tumor volume, so focal radiotherapy fields designed to cover the preoperative tumor contrast enhancing volume ± surrounding edema with a 2–4 centimetre margin are preferred.
Abstract: Recurrence of malignant glioma following radiotherapy most commonly occurs in close proximity to the original contrast enhancing CT/MRI tumor volume. For this reason current radiation planning favors focal radiotherapy fields designed to cover the preoperative tumor contrast enhancing volume ± surrounding edema with a 2–4 centimetre margin. Two patients with bifrontal malignant gliomas treated with such radiotherapy fields experienced out of field tumor progression while on treatment. Posterior extension along the corpus callosum, not evident on pretreatment imaging, was hypothesized as the cause of the geographic miss. The literature documenting recurrence patterns of malignant glioma following radiotherapy support focal field radiotherapy fields for most patients with malignant glioma. Reporting bias may exist in the literature, however, due to the whole brain radiotherapy used in older series reporting recurrence patterns and exclusion of patients with bihemispheric or more locally extensive tumors in more modern series. Tumor location and pattern of growth at presentation may be important factors in predicting patterns of spread and relapse after radiotherapy.

12 citations