Publications by authors named "I J Weigensberg"

Purpose: To identify factors that are predictive of satisfactory acute and long-term pulmonary tolerance of definitive irradiation and, conversely, factors that are predictive of excessive impairment of pulmonary functions. To determine if there is any correlation between early elevation of biochemical markers obtained in blood of irradiated patients and subsequent pulmonary abnormalities as detected by clinical findings, pulmonary function tests, and/or radiographic findings of pneumonitis/fibrosis.

Materials And Methods: This was a multi-institutional prospective trial sponsored by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group.

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The validity of the assumption, that laboratory estimates of heritabilities will tend to overestimate natural heritabilities, due to a reduction in environmental variability and thus the phenotypic variance of traits, is examined. One hundred sixty-five field estimates of narrow sense heritabilities derived from the literature are compared with 189 estimates from laboratory studies on wild, outbred animal populations derived from the data set of Mousseau and Roff. The results indicate that 84% of field heritabilities are significantly different from zero and that for morphological, behavioral, and life-history traits there are no significant differences between laboratory and field estimates of heritability.

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Purpose: To determine if the addition of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdUrd) to radiotherapy prolongs survival when compared to radiotherapy alone in patients with brain metastases.

Methods And Materials: Seventy-two patients with brain metastases were randomized to 37.5 Gy in 15 fractions of 2.

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Hemibody irradiation (HBI) in a single exposure is an effective and safe technique for palliation of symptoms due to widespread bony metastases (RTOG 78-10). The present study (82-06) sought to explore the possibility that HBI added to local-field irradiation might delay the onset of metastases in the hemibody effected, as assessed by bone scans and X rays, and decrease the frequency of further treatment. The results of this clinical trial establish that 800 cGy of HBI is indeed causes micro-metastases to regress, perhaps completely.

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Cisplatin (cis-platinum, 100 mg/m2) and fluorouracil (1000 mg/m2/d), for 120 hours' infusion every three weeks for three courses, produced a 93% overall response rate and a 54% complete clinical response at the single-institution level. The same combination was tested in the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group to evaluate the effectiveness and feasibility of this combination. An overall response rate of 86% was obtained, with a 38% complete clinical response.

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