M. Sanda, J. Cadeddu, Erin Kirkby et al.
Hasil untuk "astro-ph.EP"
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C. Correa, E. Harris, M. Leonardi et al.
J. Eastham, G. Auffenberg, D. Barocas et al.
Purpose: The summary presented herein represents Part I of the three-part series dedicated to Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer: AUA/ASTRO Guideline, discussing risk assessment, staging, and risk-based management in patients diagnosed with clinically localized prostate cancer. Please refer to Parts II and III for discussion of principles of active surveillance, surgery and follow-up (Part II), and principles of radiation and future directions (Part III). Materials and Methods: The systematic review utilized to inform this guideline was conducted by an independent methodological consultant. A research librarian conducted searches in Ovid MEDLINE, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The methodology team supplemented searches of electronic databases with the studies included in the prior AUA review and by reviewing reference lists of relevant articles. Results: The Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer Panel created evidence- and consensus-based guideline statements to aid clinicians in the management of patients with clinically localized prostate cancer. Statements regarding risk assessment, staging, and risk-based management are detailed herein. Conclusions: This guideline aims to inform clinicians treating patients with clinically localized prostate cancer. Continued research and publication of high-quality evidence from future trials will be essential to further improve care for these men.
S. Lutz, T. Balboni, Joshua Jones et al.
M. Sanda, J. Cadeddu, Erin Kirkby et al.
S. Shaitelman, Bethany M. Anderson, D. Arthur et al.
PURPOSE This guideline provides evidence-based recommendations on appropriate indications and techniques for partial breast irradiation (PBI) for patients with early-stage invasive breast cancer and ductal carcinoma in situ. METHODS The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) convened a task force to address 4 key questions focused on the appropriate indications and techniques for PBI as an alternative to whole breast irradiation (WBI) to result in similar rates of ipsilateral breast recurrence (IBR) and toxicity outcomes. Also addressed were aspects related to the technical delivery of PBI including dose-fractionation regimens, target volumes, and treatment parameters for different PBI techniques. The guideline is based on a systematic review provided by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Recommendations were created using a predefined consensus-building methodology and system for grading evidence quality and recommendation strength. RESULTS PBI delivered using 3-D conformal radiation therapy, intensity modulated radiation therapy, multicatheter brachytherapy and single-entry brachytherapy result in similar IBR as WBI with long-term follow-up. Some patient characteristics and tumor features were underrepresented in the randomized controlled trials, making it difficult to fully define IBR risks for patients with these features. Appropriate dose-fractionation regimens, target volume delineation, and treatment planning parameters for delivery of PBI are outlined. Intraoperative radiation therapy alone is associated with a higher IBR rate compared to WBI. A daily or every other day external beam PBI regimen is preferred over twice daily regimens due to late toxicity concerns. CONCLUSIONS Based on published data, the ASTRO task force has proposed recommendations to inform best clinical practices on the use of PBI.
Libu Manjakkal, Saoirse Dervin, Ravinder Dahiya
This review presents recent progress, importance, requirements and future needs of wearable potentiometric pH sensors for healthcare applications.
Joanna K. Barstow, Beth Biller, Mei Ting Mak et al.
Exoplanet atmosphere characterization has seen revolutionary advances over the last few years, providing us with unique insights into atmospheric chemistry, dynamics and planet formation mechanisms. However, true solar system analog planets remain inaccessible. A major goal for exoplanet science over the coming decades is to observe, and characterize, temperate rocky planets and cool gas giants in orbit around solar-type stars, with the prospect of detecting signs of habitability or even life. Characterization and categorization of these planets relies on direct spectroscopic observations capable of identifying molecular species in their atmospheres; however, these observations represent a substantial engineering challenge due to the extreme contrast between a temperate, Earth-sized exoplanet and its parent star. NASA's next flagship mission, the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) - planned for launch in the mid-2040s - will boast a coronagraphic instrument capable of reaching the needed 10$^{-10}$ contrast, on an ultrastable platform enabling long integration times to achieve the required signal to noise. HWO will cover near-ultraviolet to the near-infrared wavelengths, enabling detections of key biosignature molecules and habitability indicators such as ocean glint and a vegetation `red edge'. Via early involvement in this groundbreaking observatory, including a potential UK instrument contribution, the UK exoplanet community now has an important opportunity to influence the telescope's design. To maintain our international competitiveness, we must be at the forefront of observational campaigns with HWO when it eventually launches, and this comes with the need for parallel development in laboratory astrophysics and computational modelling. Maximising our exploitation of this transformative NASA mission requires consistent financial support in these areas across the next two decades.
Joanna K. Barstow, Hannah R. Wakeford, Sarah L. Casewell et al.
The transit method, during which a planet's presence is inferred by measuring the reduction in flux as it passes in front of its parent star, is a highly successful exoplanet detection and characterization technique. During transit, the small fraction of starlight that passes through a planet's atmosphere emerges with the fingerprints of atmospheric gases, aerosols and structure. During eclipse, the relatively small contribution of light from the planet itself may be observed as the planet is occulted by the star. For planets in near-edge-on, short-period orbits, observing the system throughout an entire orbit allows the varying flux from the planet to be extracted as the illuminated `dayside' rotates in and out of view. With spectroscopic observations, we can characterize not only the overall composition of the atmosphere, but also glean insights into atmospheric structure and dynamics. With over 6,000 transiting planets now discovered, such observations are currently our only window into a consistent sample of planetary atmospheres large enough to attempt a population-level study, a critical next step for our understanding of atmospheric science. The vast exoplanet population provides a laboratory for atmospheric physics, including chemistry, dynamics, cloud processes and evolution; extending these results to a larger number of targets will allow us to explore the effects of equilibrium temperature, gravity, mass and parent star type on atmospheric properties, as well as map observable trends to formation scenarios. These findings are critical for addressing STFC's Science Vision Challenge B: how do stars and planetary systems develop and how do they support the existence of life?. Here we outline how the UK must fit within this strategic context, suggest approaches and development for the future, and outline the unique capabilities and leadership of scientists across the UK.
P. Iyengar, S. All, M. Berry et al.
PURPOSE This joint guideline by American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) and the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology (ESTRO) was initiated to review evidence and provide recommendations regarding the use of local therapy in the management of extracranial oligometastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Local therapy is defined as the comprehensive treatment of all known cancer-primary tumor, regional nodal metastases, and metastases-with definitive intent. METHODS ASTRO and ESTRO convened a task force to address 5 key questions focused on the use of local (radiation, surgery, other ablative methods) and systemic therapy in the management of oligometastatic NSCLC. The questions address clinical scenarios for using local therapy, sequencing and timing when integrating local with systemic therapies, radiation techniques critical for oligometastatic disease targeting and treatment delivery, and the role of local therapy for oligoprogression or recurrent disease. Recommendations were based on a systematic literature review and created using ASTRO guidelines methodology. RESULTS Based on the lack of significant randomized phase 3 trials, a patient-centered, multidisciplinary approach was strongly recommended for all decision-making regarding potential treatment. Integration of definitive local therapy was only relevant if technically feasible and clinically safe to all disease sites, defined as 5 or fewer distinct sites. Conditional recommendations were given for definitive local therapies in synchronous, metachronous, oligopersistent, and oligoprogressive conditions for extracranial disease. Radiation and surgery were the only primary definitive local therapy modalities recommended for use in the management of patients with oligometastatic disease, with indications provided for choosing one over the other. Sequencing recommendations were provided for systemic and local therapy integration. Finally, multiple recommendations were provided for the optimal technical use of hypofractionated radiation or stereotactic body radiation therapy as definitive local therapy, including dose and fractionation. CONCLUSIONS Presently, data regarding clinical benefits of local therapy on overall and other survival outcomes is still sparse for oligometastatic NSCLC. However, with rapidly evolving data being generated supporting local therapy in oligometastatic NSCLC, this guideline attempted to frame recommendations as a function of the quality of data available to make decisions in a multidisciplinary approach incorporating patient goals and tolerances.
D. Yeboa, S. Braunstein, Alvin R. Cabrera et al.
PURPOSE The central nervous system World Health Organization (WHO) grade 4 adult-type diffuse glioma represents one of the most aggressive and challenging primary brain tumors. This guideline aims to provide evidence-based recommendations for the multidisciplinary management of these tumors, focusing on diagnosis, initial treatment, reirradiation, and health disparities, while acknowledging that present literature primarily represents historical histological grade 4 glioblastoma. METHODS The American Society for Radiation Oncology convened a task force to address 4 key questions focused on indications for radiation therapy (RT) and/or adjunctive therapies (eg, systemic therapy, alternating electric field therapy), appropriate regimens for external beam RT after initial biopsy/resection including variables such as pretreatment characteristics, target volumes, technique, dose, reirradiation indications and techniques, and health disparities. Recommendations are based on a systematic literature review and created using a predefined consensus-building methodology and system for grading evidence quality and recommendation strength. RESULTS Following maximum safe resection, molecular and pathologic diagnosis, and prognostic stratification of WHO grade 4 adult-type diffuse glioma, concurrent RT with temozolomide followed by adjuvant temozolomide is recommended for eligible patients and incorporation of alternating electric field therapy is conditionally recommended. In elderly patients, hypofractionated RT with concurrent and adjuvant temozolomide is conditionally recommended. In frail patients, supportive and palliative care is conditionally recommended following multidisciplinary, patient-centered discussion. Appropriate reirradiation techniques, with or without additional systemic therapies, can be considered and are conditionally recommended in patients following pathologic or advanced imaging confirmation of WHO grade 4 diffuse glioma recurrence. Health disparities exist in patients with WHO grade 4 adult-type diffuse glioma and attention is necessary to improve outcomes and increase clinical trial enrollment for underserved populations. CONCLUSIONS These evidence-based recommendations and current practice adoption patterns inform best clinical practices on the management of WHO grade 4 adult-type diffuse glioma. Future advancements in personalized medicine, biomarker discovery, and novel therapies are essential to improving outcomes. The integration of multidisciplinary care and participation in future clinical trials, especially in underserved populations, is crucial in addressing the poor outcomes among WHO grade 4 adult-type diffuse glioma.
R. Jimenez, Y. Abdou, Penny Anderson et al.
PURPOSE This guideline provides evidence-based recommendations on the use of postmastectomy radiation therapy (PMRT) in the treatment of breast cancer. PMRT refers to the treatment of the chest wall and ipsilateral regional nodes, including at-risk axillary, supra/infraclavicular, and internal mammary nodes. Updated recommendations detail indications for PMRT in the upfront surgical setting and after neoadjuvant systemic therapy, and provide guidance on appropriate target volumes, dosing, and treatment techniques. METHODS The American Society for Radiation Oncology, American Society of Clinical Oncology, and the Society of Surgical Oncology convened a multidisciplinary task force to address 4 key questions focused on radiation therapy (RT) in patients with breast cancer who undergo mastectomy including (1) indications for PMRT after upfront surgery, (2) indications for PMRT after neoadjuvant systemic therapy followed by surgery, (3) appropriate PMRT treatment volumes and dose-fractionation regimens, and (4) treatment techniques. Recommendations were based on a systematic literature review and created using a predefined consensus-building methodology and system for quality of evidence grading and strength of recommendation. RESULTS After upfront mastectomy, PMRT is indicated for most patients with node-positive breast cancer and select patients with node-negative disease. PMRT is also recommended after neoadjuvant systemic therapy, both for patients presenting with locally advanced disease and for those with residual nodal disease at the time of surgery. PMRT is conditionally recommended for patients with cT1-3N1 or cT3N0 breast cancer with pathologically negative nodes after neoadjuvant systemic therapy (ypN0). When PMRT is delivered, treatment to the ipsilateral chest wall/reconstructed breast and regional lymphatics is recommended, with moderate hypofractionation preferred, but with conventional fractionation approaches acceptable in rare cases. Computed tomography-based volumetric treatment planning with 3-dimensional conformal RT is recommended, with intensity modulated RT advised when 3-dimensional conformal RT is unable to achieve treatment goals. Deep inspiration breath hold techniques are also recommended for normal tissue sparing. For patients with skin involvement, positive superficial margins, and/or lymphovascular invasion, the use of a bolus is recommended, but the routine use of tissue-equivalent bolus is not recommended. CONCLUSIONS These evidence-based recommendations guide clinical practice on the use of PMRT in patients with breast cancer.
L. Tang, Cheng Huang, Shao-Jun Lin et al.
The Chinese Society for Therapeutic Radiology Oncology, the Chinese Anti-Cancer Association, the Chinese Society of Clinical Oncology, Head and Neck Cancer International Group, the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology, and the American Society for Radiation Oncology jointly developed evidence-based guidelines and a contouring atlas for primary target volume delineation for radiotherapy in nasopharyngeal carcinoma. The guidelines systematically address three crucial challenges: margin design of clinical target volumes; target volume delineation after induction chemotherapy; and low-risk clinical target volume delineation based on local stepwise extension patterns. Based on a comprehensive systematic review and critical appraisal by an international multidisciplinary panel of 50 nasopharyngeal carcinoma specialists from 17 countries and regions, these guidelines are in keeping with advances in nasopharyngeal carcinoma diagnosis and treatment, embodying contemporary treatment concepts, and elaborating on the differences in practice. These guidelines aim to support global clinical practice in radiotherapy target volume delineation, substantially enhancing homogeneity and reducing variability in nasopharyngeal carcinoma target delineation.
Antonis A. Zorpas, Vassilis J. Inglezakis, Iliana Papamichael et al.
S. Neibart, Lilie L. Lin, Mark H Einstein et al.
Baptiste Cecconi, L. Debisschop, S'ebastien Derriere et al.
The astronomy communities are widely recognised as mature communities for their open science practices. However, while their data ecosystems are rather advanced and permit efficient data interoperability, there are still gaps between these ecosystems. Semantic artefacts (SAs) -- e.g., ontologies, thesauri, vocabularies or metadata schemas -- are a means to bridge that gap as they allow to semantically described the data and map the underlying concepts. The increasing use of SAs in astronomy presents challenges in description, selection, evaluation, trust, and mappings. The landscape remains fragmented, with SAs scattered across various registries in diverse formats and structures -- not yet fully developed or encoded with rich semantic web standards like OWL or SKOS -- and often with overlapping scopes. Enhancing data semantic interoperability requires common platforms to catalog, align, and facilitate the sharing of FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) SAs. In the frame of the FAIR-IMPACT project, we prototyped a SA catalogue for astronomy, heliophysics and planetary sciences. This exercise resulted in improved vocabulary and ontology management in the communities, and is now paving the way for better interdisciplinary data discovery and reuse. This article presents current practices in our discipline, reviews candidate SAs for such a catalogue, presents driving use cases and the perspective of a real production service for the astronomy community based on the OntoPortal technology, that will be called OntoPortal-Astro.
Todd M. Morgan, S. Boorjian, M. Buyyounouski et al.
Purpose: The summary presented herein covers recommendations on salvage therapy for recurrent prostate cancer intended to facilitate care decisions and aid clinicians in caring for patients who have experienced a recurrence following prior treatment with curative intent. This is Part III of a three-part series focusing on evaluation and management of suspected non-metastatic recurrence after radiotherapy (RT) and focal therapy, evaluation and management of regional recurrence, management for molecular imaging metastatic recurrence, and future directions. Please refer to Part I for discussion of treatment decision-making and Part II for discussion of treatment delivery for non-metastatic biochemical recurrence (BCR) after radical prostatectomy (RP). Materials and Methods: The systematic review that informs this Guideline was based on searches in Ovid MEDLINE (1946 to July 21, 2022), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (through August 2022), and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (through August 2022). Update searches were conducted on July 26, 2023. Searches were supplemented by reviewing electronic database reference lists of relevant articles. Results: In a collaborative effort between AUA, ASTRO, and SUO, the Salvage Therapy for Prostate Cancer Guideline Panel developed evidence- and consensus-based guideline statements to provide guidance for the care of patients who experience BCR after initial definitive local therapy for clinically localized disease. Conclusions: Continuous and deliberate efforts for multidisciplinary care in prostate cancer will be required to optimize and improve the oncologic and functional outcomes of patients treated with salvage therapies in the future.
Jennifer Y. Wo, J. Ashman, N. Bhadkamkar et al.
PURPOSE With the results of several recently published clinical trials, this guideline focused update provides evidence-based recommendations for the indications and dose-fractionation regimens for neoadjuvant radiation therapy (RT), optimal sequencing of RT and systemic therapy in the context of total neoadjuvant therapy (TNT), and considerations for selective omission of RT and surgery for rectal cancer. METHODS The American Society for Radiation Oncology convened a multidisciplinary task force to update 3 key questions that focused on the role of RT for patients with operable rectal cancer. The key questions addressed (1) indications for neoadjuvant RT, (2) selection of neoadjuvant regimens, and (3) indications for consideration of a nonoperative management (NOM) or local excision approach after definitive/preoperative chemoradiation. Recommendations were based on a systematic literature review and created using a predefined consensus-building methodology and system for quality of evidence grading and strength of recommendation. RESULTS For patients with stage II-III rectal cancer, neoadjuvant RT was strongly recommended; however, among patients deemed at lower risk of locoregional recurrence, consideration of omission of neoadjuvant RT was conditionally recommended in favor of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with a favorable treatment response or upfront surgery. For patients with T3-T4 and node positive rectal cancer undergoing neoadjuvant RT, a TNT approach was strongly recommended. Among patients with higher risk of locoregional recurrence, TNT with chemotherapy before or after long-course chemoradiation was strongly recommended, whereas TNT with short-course RT followed by chemotherapy was conditionally recommended. For patients with rectal cancer for whom NOM is a priority, concurrent chemoradiation followed by consolidation chemotherapy was strongly recommended. Selection of RT dose-fractionation regimen, sequencing of therapies, and consideration of NOM should be determined by multidisciplinary consensus, and based on disease extent, disease location, patient preferences, and quality of life considerations. CONCLUSIONS The task force has proposed recommendations to inform best clinical practices on the use of RT for rectal cancer with strong emphasis on multidisciplinary care. Future studies should focus on further addressing optimal treatment regimens to allow for more personalized recommendations based on individual risk stratification and patient priorities regarding quality of life.
I. Chetty, Bin Cai, Michael D. Chuong et al.
PURPOSE Adaptive radiation therapy (ART) is the latest topic in a series of white papers published by the American Society for Radiation Oncology addressing quality processes and patient safety. ART widens the therapeutic index by improving precision of radiation dose to targets, allowing for dose escalation and/or minimization of dose to normal tissue. ART is performed via offline or online methods; offline ART is the process of replanning a patient's treatment plan between fractions, whereas online ART involves plan adjustment with the patient on the treatment table. This is achieved with in-room imaging capable of assessing anatomical changes and the ability to reoptimize the treatment plan rapidly during the treatment session. Although ART has occurred in its simplest forms in clinical practice for decades, recent technological developments have enabled more clinical applications of ART. With increased clinical prevalence, compressed timelines and associated complexity of ART, quality and safety considerations are an important focus area. METHODS ASTRO convened an interdisciplinary task force to provide expert consensus on key workflows and processes for ART. Recommendations were created using a consensus-building methodology and task force members indicated their level of agreement based on a 5-point Likert scale, from "strongly agree" to "strongly disagree." A prespecified threshold of ≥75% of raters selecting "strongly agree" or "agree" indicated consensus. Content not meeting this threshold was removed or revised. SUMMARY Establishing and maintaining an adaptive program requires a team-based approach, appropriately trained and credentialed specialists as well as significant resources, specialized technology, and implementation time. A comprehensive quality assurance program must be developed, using established guidance, to make sure all forms of ART are performed in a safe and effective manner. Patient safety when delivering ART is everyone's responsibility and professional organizations, regulators, vendors, and end-users must demonstrate a clear commitment to working together to deliver the highest levels of quality and safety.
Ruiling Du, Lee A. Fielding
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