Benefits of omitting primary site radiation therapy after transoral robotic surgery: Only time will tell.
暂无分享,去创建一个
G. Weinstein | A. Chalian | R. Cohen | J. Lukens | S. Swisher-McClure | A. Lin | J. Newman | B. O'Malley | Eric Ojerholm | P. Ahn | G. Geiger
[1] N. Lee,et al. Adjuvant radiation in the TORS era: Is there a benefit to omitting the tumor bed? , 2017, Practical radiation oncology.
[2] Ulrike Schick,et al. Normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) modelling using spatial dose metrics and machine learning methods for severe acute oral mucositis resulting from head and neck radiotherapy. , 2016, Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology.
[3] G. Weinstein,et al. Late consequential surgical bed soft tissue necrosis in advanced oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas treated with transoral robotic surgery and postoperative radiation therapy. , 2012, International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics.
[4] T. McNutt,et al. Radiation dose to the floor of mouth muscles predicts swallowing complications following chemoradiation in oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma. , 2014, Oral oncology.
[5] D. Fried,et al. Dosimetric feasibility of sparing the primary site for oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma after transoral laser microsurgery in patients with unilateral positive neck nodes. , 2013, Practical radiation oncology.
[6] F. Feng,et al. Clinical Investigation : Head and Neck Cancer Reducing Xerostomia After Chemo-IMRT for Head-and-Neck Cancer : Beyond Sparing the Parotid Glands , 2012 .
[7] G. Weinstein,et al. Transoral robotic surgery alone for oropharyngeal cancer: an analysis of local control. , 2012, Archives of otolaryngology--head & neck surgery.
[8] G. Weinstein,et al. Transoral robotic surgery and human papillomavirus status: Oncologic results , 2011, Head & neck.