The cancer journal
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Clinical Trial
Induction chemotherapy followed by concomitant chemoradiotherapy in the treatment of locoregionally advanced oropharyngeal cancer.
Locoregionally advanced oropharyngeal cancer has been conventionally treated with either surgery and adjuvant radiotherapy or radiotherapy alone, and clinical and functional outcomes have been poor. Chemoradiotherapy has been demonstrated to improve functional outcome and disease control over conventional treatment in recent randomized head and neck trials. Herein, we report overall survival, progression-free survival, and patterns of failure in locoregionally advanced oropharyngeal cancer treated with induction chemotherapy with or without conservative surgery followed by concomitant chemoradiation. ⋯ PFL-IFN given with 5-fluorouracil, hydroxyurea, and radiotherapy produces a high rate of cures with organ preservation in a disease group that has traditionally fared poorly. Local and distant disease control and survival rates exceed those observed with more standard treatment approaches involving surgery and radiotherapy. Further investigation into chemoradiotherapy as a curative modality for this disease is warranted.
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Brain metastases are a common problem in patients with lung cancer. This retrospective review was performed to describe the efficacy and toxicity of stereotactic radiosurgery for brain metastases from lung carcinoma and to evaluate prognostic factors for survival. ⋯ Radiosurgery is an effective therapy for selected patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent brain metastases from lung carcinoma. Initial whole-brain radiotherapy with radiosurgery appears to improve brain control but not survival. Prospective, randomized trials are needed to further investigate the role of radiosurgery with and without whole-brain radiotherapy for brain metastases.