Publications by authors named "Mohiuddin M"

From 1978 through 1987, 78 patients with carcinoma of the bladder were treated with combined pre- and postoperative adjuvant radiation therapy. All were given a single dose of pre-operative radiation therapy, 500 cGy, either on the day of or the day before cystectomy. Histological staging on the cystectomy specimens according to the TNM classification system was performed.

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To reduce local recurrence associated with rectal cancer and to extend the scope of anal sphincter preservation, a selective program of high-dose preoperative radiation therapy and sphincter-preserving surgery was initiated in 1976. High-energy photon therapy (40 to 60 Gy) was administered in doses of 1.8 to 2.

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Tumor mobility of rectal cancer is well known to have prognostic significance for operative resection, local recurrence, and survival. Between 1976-1988, 220 patients have been consecutively treated with high dose preoperative radiotherapy at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital. During this time period, 134 patients were clinically determined by the surgeon and radiotherapist to have extrarectal tumor fixation as a primary indication for preoperative irradiation and are the subject of this review.

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Fifty-one patients with Stage II endometrial carcinoma diagnosed between 1974 and 1987 were restaged according to the FIGO 1988 revisions for endometrial carcinoma. Patients were divided into Stage IIA, those patients with cervical glandular involvement without stromal invasion, and Stage IIB, those patients having stromal invasion of the cervix. Tumor grade was also assessed.

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A retrospective review of a single surgeon's experience with adenocarcinoma of the pancreas was performed. One hundred-one patients were treated over a 10-year period from 1979 to 1988. Seven patients underwent potentially curative resections and 28 patients presented with metastatic (stage IV) disease.

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Since 1973, the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) has staged and stratified patients in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) protocols according to the RTOG staging system. In 1985, the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) revised its lung cancer staging system, with the principle differences from the RTOG system being the staging of involvement of the chest wall and of contralateral mediastinal and hilar lymph nodes. To determine if the AJCC system discriminated outcome differently than the RTOG system in a nonoperative series, all 850 evaluable patients treated with hyperfractionated radiation therapy (RT) on the RTOG protocol 83-11 were restaged by the AJCC system.

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A retrospective analysis of the effect of local control on the development of distant metastases was performed in 2648 patients with carcinoma of the head and neck selected from the RTOG database. The 5-year time-adjusted incidence of distant metastases was 21% for patients who were in local-regional control at 6 months after the start of treatment, compared to 38% for local-regional failure patients (p less than 0.001).

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A prospective, randomized, multi-institutional, Phase I(LE)/II trial of HFX was conducted by the RTOG between 1983 and 1987. Patients with histologically proven, inoperable squamous cell carcinoma of the upper respiratory and digestive tracts stratified by site, nodal status, and performance status, were assigned to one of three arms, were assigned to one of three arms, 67.2 Gy, 72.

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Two hundred twenty patients with adenocarcinoma of the rectum have been treated in a program using high dose (greater than 4000 cGy) preoperative irradiation followed by radical surgical resection. The patients were staged on the basis of pretreatment clinical mobility of the cancers. Seventy-four patients had mobile cancers, 49 had partial fixation (tethered), 85 patients had total tumor fixation, and 12 patients had a frozen pelvis (unresectable).

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One hundred twenty-four eligible patients with advanced mucosal squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck were entered into a pilot study of concomitant cisplatin (100 mg/m2 given every 3 weeks for three doses) and standard irradiation. The initial complete response (CR) was 71% with an additional two cases salvaged by surgery for an overall 73% CR. When no keratin was identified in the histologic specimen (41 patients) the CR was 90%.

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Faced with the responsibility of treating patients with invasive distal rectal cancer who were medically unacceptable for the indicated radical surgery, a prospective study was initiated in which high dose preoperative radiation and full-thickness local excision were used. High dose preoperative radiation permitted full-thickness local excision of select cancers, which, by conventional standards, otherwise would have required radical surgery and permanent colostomy. Feasibility was measured on the basis of safety of the technique, control of the cancer, and the quality of anal sphincter function expected.

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The results of radiotherapy alone for patients with locally advanced (stage III or IV) nasopharyngeal cancer (NPC) are poor in spite of the initial complete clearance. Twenty-seven patients (26 stage IV) were treated with concurrent standard radiotherapy and cisplatin 100 mg/m2 intravenously on day 1 and every 3 weeks for three courses. In 24 (89%) patients, complete response (CR) was achieved.

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In the era of orthovoltage radiation, multiple nonconfluent pencil beam radiation (GRID) therapy was utilized to minimize superficial normal tissue damage while delivering tumorcidal doses at specified depths in tissues. The success of GRID therapy was based on the fact that small volumes of tissues could tolerate high doses of radiation. Since the development of megavoltage radiation and skin sparing, GRID therapy has been abandoned.

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A prospective, randomized Phase Ilate/II trial of hyperfractionated radiation therapy was conducted: 1.2 Gy minimum tumor dose was administered twice daily with a minimum interval of 4 hr, 5 days per week. Patients with Stage III and IV carcinomas of the oral cavity, oropharynx, nasopharynx, hypopharynx, and supraglottic larynx were stratified by site, presence or absence of nodal metastases, and performance status.

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Sphincter preservation surgery for cancer of the distal rectum is recognized as being associated with a high incidence of local recurrence. High dose preoperative radiation with new surgical techniques is described as an attempt to widen the scope of sphincter preservation in patients who by conventional management would have an abdomino-perineal resection and permanent colostomy and to reduce the incidence of local recurrence. Since 1976, 121 patients with cancers of the rectum have selectively been treated with high dose preoperative radiation (4000 cGy to 6000 cGy) followed by combined abdominotranssacral resection (56); transanal abdominotransanal resection (28); anterior resection (21), or a full thickness wide local excision (16).

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Since 1978, 86 patients with unresectable localized adenocarcinoma of the pancreas have been treated with a combined modality program using radioactive iodine 125-Implantation, external beam radiation, and systemic chemotherapy. Three treatment approaches were used with sequential modifications of the technique based on the course of disease and patterns of failure. Group 1 was comprised of 13 patients treated with a combination of implantation followed by a planned external radiation dose of 5000 to 6000 cGy delivered in 6 weeks.

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Abdominoperineal resection and permanent colostomy have been the mainstay of treatment for rectal cancer. Automatic stapling devices have widened the scope of low anterior resection, permitting sphincter preservation for tumors originating in the upper and middle thirds of the rectum. Attempts at sphincter preservation in low rectal cancer has resulted in higher recurrence in the pelvic/perineal tissues (41%, MSKCC).

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This report details the patterns of tumor recurrence in two prospective randomized studies involving 551 patients with histologically proven unresectable or medically inoperable non-oat cell carcinoma of the lung treated with definitive radiotherapy. Patients were treated according to two protocols, depending on the stage of the tumor: (1) Patients with T1, 2, 3-NO, 1, 2 tumors were randomized to four different regimens: 4000 cGy split course (2000 cGy in five fractions, per 1 week, 2 weeks rest and additional 2000 cGy in five fractions, per 1 week) or 4000, 5000, or 6000 cGy continuous courses, five fractions per week. (2) Patients with T4, any N or N3, any T stage tumors were randomized to be treated with 3000 cGy tumor dose (TD), ten fractions in 2 weeks, 4000 cGy split course (described above), or 4000 cGy continuous course.

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This is the final analysis of Protocol #78-10 which explored increasing single-doses of half-body irradiation (HBI) in patients with multiple (symptomatic) osseous metastases. When given as palliation, HBI was found to relieve pain in 73% of the patients. In 20% of the patients the pain relief was complete; over two thirds of all patients achieved better than 50% pain relief.

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The previously unaddressed impact of radiotherapy and vagotomy on palliative gastroenterostomy (GE) in patients with unresectable pancreatic cancer was studied. Sixty-eight patients were retrospectively evaluated. A higher overall incidence of complications was found in the group (N = 44) undergoing irradiation as well as gastroenterostomy compared to a group undergoing gastroenterostomy alone.

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Adenocarcinoma of the kidney is an unusual tumor, both in its biological behavior and in its response to radiation treatment. Historically, these tumors have been considered to be radioresistant, and the role of radiation therapy remains questionable in the primary management of this disease. However, radiation treatment is routinely used in the palliation of metastatic lesions for relief of symptoms.

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In an attempt to reduce the incidence of local recurrence and maintain normal sphincteric function in selected patients treated for rectal cancer, a clinical experience using full dose preoperative radiation therapy and a combined abdominotranssacral technique was begun in 1976. The first 24 of 55 patients treated have now been followed for 20 to 84 months, the median follow-up period being 39 months; sufficient data related to their clinical courses are available for analysis. Cancers were selected on the basis of unfavorability and location in the rectum (3- and 7-cm levels).

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