Publications by authors named "M V Moskalenko"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to investigate if the gross tumor volume (GTV) before radiation therapy (RT) affects the risk of progressive disease (PD) in patients with adamantinomatous craniopharyngioma (ACP) who underwent surgery and RT.
  • Forty-eight pediatric and adolescent patients were analyzed, with a median GTV of 9.86 cm³, and the 5-year event-free survival rate was found to be 85.4%. Initial analyses showed a significant link between GTV and PD, but an outlier skewed these results.
  • After excluding the outlier, the second analysis revealed no significant correlation between GTV and PD, suggesting that for most patients, GTV at
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Limited structured educational programs are available for the continued professional development of radiation oncology nurses. In this study, we evaluated a pilot curriculum focusing on clinical workflow and toxicity management for radiation oncology nurses at a single university-affiliated medical center network.

Methods And Materials: Based on a previous multi-institutional needs assessment, a targeted curriculum on clinical workflow and toxicity management was developed, including didactic lectures, written disease-specific toxicity management guidelines, and standardized medication/laboratory order preference lists in the electronic health record.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fiducial markers are utilized for image guided radiotherapy (IGRT) alignment during the delivery of liver stereotactic body radiosurgery (SBRT). There are limited data demonstrating the impact of matching fiducials on the accuracy of liver SBRT. This study quantifies the benefit of fiducial-based alignment and improvements in inter-observer reliability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Total neoadjuvant therapy for locally advanced rectal cancer may include induction chemotherapy and chemoradiation or short-course radiotherapy and consolidative chemotherapy.

Methods: Patients with clinical stage 2 or 3 rectal cancer who received induction chemotherapy followed by long-course chemoradiation at the University of Colorado (2016-2020) or short-course radiotherapy followed by consolidative chemotherapy at Washington University (2017-2020) were assessed.

Results: Eighty-four patients received induction chemotherapy and chemoradiation and 83 received short-course radiotherapy and consolidative chemotherapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Radiation therapy plays a key role in the management of intracranial metastatic disease. Historically, systemic therapy was able to address extracranial disease but not cross the blood-brain barrier and radiation therapy and surgery were the only mechanisms to treat intracranial metastases. There are now several examples of contemporary systemic therapies with central nervous system efficacy in some patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF