Introduction: Oligodendroglioma (ODG) is a rare type of brain tumour, typically diagnosed in younger adults and associated with prolonged survival following treatment. The current standard of care is maximal safe debulking surgery, radiotherapy (RT) and adjuvant procarbazine, lomustine and vincristine (PCV) chemotherapy. Patients may experience long-term treatment-related toxicities, with RT linked to impairments of neurocognitive function (NCF) and health-related quality of life (HRQoL). With proton beam therapy (PBT), radiation dose falls off sharply beyond the target with reduced normal brain tissue radiation doses compared with photon RT. Therefore, PBT might result in reduced radiation-induced toxicity compared with photon RT.
Methods And Analysis: APPROACH is a multicentre open-label phase III randomised controlled trial of PBT versus photon RT in patients with ODG, investigating the impact of PBT on long-term NCF measured using the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Core Clinical Trial Battery Composite (CTB COMP). The trial will randomise 246 participants from 18 to 25 UK RT sites, allocated 1:1 to receive PBT or photon RT, with PBT delivered at one of the two UK PBT centres. Participants with grade 2 and grade 3 ODG will receive 54 Gy in 30 fractions and 59.4 Gy in 33 fractions, respectively, followed by 6×6-weekly cycles of PCV chemotherapy. The trial contains staged analyses, with an internal pilot for feasibility of recruitment at 12 months, early assessment of efficacy at 2 years, futility assessment and final primary endpoint comparison of NCF between arms at 5 years. Secondary endpoints include additional NCF, treatment compliance, acute and late toxicities, endocrinopathies, HRQoL, tumour response, progression-free survival and overall survival.
Ethics And Dissemination: Ethical approval was obtained from Newcastle North Tyneside REC (reference 22/NE/0232). Final trial results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and adhere to International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) guidelines.
Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN:13390479.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-097810 | DOI Listing |
Radiother Oncol
March 2025
Department of Radiation Oncology (Maastro Clinic), Maastricht University Medical Centre+ (MUMC+), GROW School on Oncology and Developmental Biology, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Background/purpose: Proton radiation-therapy (PrT) may provide clinical benefit for lung cancer compared to photon radiation-therapy (PhT), however is more costly. Literature reporting costs for PrT, PhT, and comparisons thereof, particularly from a societal perspective, are scarce. This study aims to provide an adaptable framework to estimate PrT/PhT costs, demonstrated through application to lung cancer, from societal and healthcare perspectives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurotrauma
March 2025
Kentucky Spinal Cord Injury Research Center, School of Medicine, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
Contusive and compressive spinal cord injury (SCI) induces pathological changes to spinal cord white matter (WM) including periaxonal swelling and resultant disruption of the axomyelinic interface, axonal swelling/spheroid formation, and secondary axonal transection. To further our knowledge of the role of vascular edema in these pathological changes to WM, we designed, and three-dimensional (3D) printed a dual-compartment imaging chamber separated by a semipermeable membrane to mimic and manipulate interstitial and vascular fluid compartments in real time. We hypothesized that hypertonic saline (HTS) applied to the "vascular" chamber would osmotically shift fluid out of the periaxonal space and preserve myelinated fibers after SCI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Radiol
March 2025
Professor of Radiology, Montefiore Medical Center, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, New York; Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York.
Purpose: Lung transplant candidates routinely undergo dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) screening due to increased risk of osteoporosis secondary to comorbidities and prolonged immunosuppression. Nonetheless, postoperative insufficiency fractures have been well documented, even in patients with normal bone mineral density (BMD). This study investigated the added value of trabecular bone score (TBS) as a complementary screening index of bone microarchitecture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biomed Opt
March 2025
Université de Lorraine, CNRS, CRAN UMR, Vandoeuvre-Lès-Nancy, France.
Significance: The incidence of keratinocyte carcinomas (KCs) is increasing every year, making the task of developing new methods for KC early diagnosis of utmost medical and economical importance.
Aim: We aim to evaluate the KC diagnostic aid performance of an optical spectroscopy device associated with a machine-learning classification method.
Approach: We present the classification performance of autofluorescence and diffuse reflectance optical spectra obtained from 131 patients on four histological classes: basal cell carcinoma (BCC), squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), actinic keratosis (AK), and healthy (H) skin.
J Neuropathol Exp Neurol
March 2025
Surgical Photonics & Engineering Laboratory, Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Maximum intensity projection is a simple post-hoc dimension reduction approach that yields sharp 2-dimensional images from image stacks but is limited by low signal or high background. Herein, we demonstrated improvement in image contrast using maximum contrast versus maximum intensity projection in 3-dimensional phase-contrast and quantitative phase imaging of frozen cross-sections of murine peripheral nerve. Fresh frozen murine sciatic nerve sections were imaged using 3-dimensional fluorescence, phase-contrast, and quantitative phase microscopy.
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