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Dive into the research topics where John P. Christodouleas is active.

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Featured researches published by John P. Christodouleas.


Practical radiation oncology | 2013

A moving target: Image guidance for stereotactic body radiation therapy for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer

Michael N. Corradetti; Nandita Mitra; Lara P. Bonner Millar; John Byun; Fei Wan; S. Apisarnthanarax; John P. Christodouleas; Nathan Anderson; Charles B. Simone; Boon Keng Teo; Ramesh Rengan

PURPOSE Precise patient positioning is critical due to the large fractional doses and small treatment margins employed for thoracic stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). The goals of this study were to evaluate the following: (1) the accuracy of kilovoltage x-ray (kV x-ray) matching to bony anatomy for pretreatment positioning; (2) the magnitude of intrafraction tumor motion; and (3) whether treatment or patient characteristics correlate with intrafraction motion. METHODS AND MATERIALS Eighty-seven patients with lung cancer were treated with SBRT. Patients were positioned with orthogonal kV x-rays matched to bony anatomy followed by cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT), with matching of the CBCT-visualized tumor to the internal gross target volume obtained from a 4-dimensional CT simulation data set. Patients underwent a posttreatment CBCT to assess the magnitude of intrafraction motion. RESULTS The mean CBCT-based shifts after initial patient positioning using kV x-rays were 2.2 mm in the vertical axis, 1.8 mm in the longitudinal axis, and 1.6 mm in the lateral axis (n = 335). The percentage of shifts greater than 3 mm and 5 mm represented 39% and 17%, respectively, of all fractions delivered. The mean CBCT-based shifts after treatment were 1.6 mm vertically, 1.5 mm longitudinally, and 1.1 mm laterally (n = 343). Twenty-seven percent and 10% of shifts were greater than 3 mm and 5 mm, respectively. Univariate and multivariable analysis demonstrated a significant association between intrafraction motion with weight and pulmonary function. CONCLUSIONS Kilovoltage x-ray matching to bony anatomy is inadequate for accurate positioning when a conventional 3-5 mm margin is employed prior to lung SBRT. Given the treatment techniques used in this study, CBCT image guidance with a 5-mm planning target volume margin is recommended. Further work is required to find determinants of interfraction and intrafraction motion that may help guide the individualized application of planning target volume margins.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

Short-Term and Long-Term Health Risks of Nuclear-Power-Plant Accidents

John P. Christodouleas; Robert Forrest; C Ainsley; Zelig Tochner; Stephen M. Hahn; Eli Glatstein

Recent natural disasters in Japan led to a partial meltdown at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. This article reviews the history of such accidents, along with the short-term and long-term health risks associated with environmental exposure to nuclear fission products.


BJUI | 2013

Bladder preservation in the treatment of muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC): a review of the literature and a practical approach to therapy.

Zachary L. Smith; John P. Christodouleas; Stephen M. Keefe; S. Bruce Malkowicz; Thomas J. Guzzo

Bladder preservation therapies for muscle‐invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) have been developed to address the needs of two cohorts: patients with severe medical co‐morbidities for whom radical cystectomy is too high risk and patients with limited disease who wish to avoid aggressive surgery. There are multiple bladder preservation options, although the trimodal approach of maximal transurethral resection with chemoradiotherapy is the most strongly supported. While outcomes are worse for patients unfit for surgery than those otherwise fit for surgery, bladder preservation approaches still offer curative potential.


Cancer | 2014

Optimizing bladder cancer locoregional failure risk stratification after radical cystectomy using SWOG 8710.

John P. Christodouleas; Brian C. Baumann; Jiwei He; Wei-Ting Hwang; Kai Tucker; Justin E. Bekelman; Seth P. Lerner; Thomas J. Guzzo; S. Bruce Malkowicz

Clinical trials of radiation after radical cystectomy (RC) and chemotherapy for bladder cancer are in development, but inclusion and stratification factors have not been clearly established. In this study, the authors evaluated and refined a published risk stratification for locoregional failure (LF) by applying it to a multicenter patient cohort.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2011

Bladder Cancer Patterns of Pelvic Failure: Implications for Adjuvant Radiation Therapy

Brian C. Baumann; Thomas J. Guzzo; Jiwei He; David J. Vaughn; Stephen M. Keefe; Neha Vapiwala; Curtiland Deville; Justin E. Bekelman; Kai Tucker; Wei-Ting Hwang; S. Bruce Malkowicz; John P. Christodouleas

PURPOSE Local-regional failures (LFs) after cystectomy with or without chemotherapy are common in locally advanced disease. Adjuvant radiation therapy (RT) could reduce LFs, but toxicity has discouraged its use. Modern RT techniques with improved normal tissue sparing have rekindled interest but require knowledge of pelvic failure patterns to design treatment volumes. METHODS AND MATERIALS Five-year LF rates after radical cystectomy plus pelvic node dissection with or without chemotherapy were determined for 8 pelvic sites among 442 urothelial bladder carcinoma patients. The impact of pathologic stage, margin status, nodal involvement, and extent of node dissection on failure patterns was assessed using competing risk analysis. We calculated the percentage of patients whose sites of LF would have been completely encompassed within various hypothetical clinical target volumes (CTVs) for postoperative radiation. RESULTS Compared with stage ≤pT2, stage ≥pT3 patients had higher 5-year LF rates in virtually all pelvic sites. Among stage ≥pT3 patients, margin status significantly altered the failure pattern whereas extent of node dissection and nodal positivity did not. In stage ≥pT3 patients with negative margins, failure occurred predominantly in the iliac/obturator nodes and uncommonly in the cystectomy bed and/or presacral nodes. Of these patients in whom failure subsequently occurred, 76% would have had all LF sites encompassed within CTVs covering only the iliac/obturator nodes. In stage ≥pT3 with positive margins, cystectomy bed and/or presacral nodal failures increased significantly. Only 57% of such patients had all LF sites within CTVs limited to the iliac/obturator nodes, but including the cystectomy bed and presacral nodes in the CTV when margins were positive increased the percentage of LFs encompassed to 91%. CONCLUSIONS Patterns of failure within the pelvis are summarized to facilitate design of adjuvant RT protocols. These data suggest that RT should target at least the iliac/obturator nodes in stage ≥pT3 with negative margins; coverage of the presacral nodes and cystectomy bed may be necessary for stage ≥pT3 with positive margins.


Value in Health | 2013

Radical Cystectomy versus Bladder-Preserving Therapy for Muscle-Invasive Urothelial Carcinoma: Examining Confounding and Misclassification Biasin Cancer Observational Comparative Effectiveness Research

Justin E. Bekelman; Elizabeth Handorf; Thomas J. Guzzo; Craig Evan Pollack; John P. Christodouleas; Matthew J. Resnick; Samuel Swisher-McClure; David J. Vaughn; Thomas R. Ten Have; Daniel Polsky; Nandita Mitra

OBJECTIVES Radical cystectomy (RC) is the standard treatment for muscle-invasive urothelial carcinoma of the bladder. Trimodality bladder-preserving therapy (BPT) is an alternative to RC, but randomized comparisons of RC versus BPT have proven infeasible. To compare RC versus BPT, we undertook an observational cohort study using registry and administrative claims data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare database. METHODS We identified patients age 65 years or older diagnosed between 1995 and 2005 who received RC (n = 1426) or BPT (n = 417). We examined confounding and stage misclassification in the comparison of RC and BPT by using multivariable adjustment, propensity score-based adjustment, instrumental variable (IV) analysis, and simulations. RESULTS Patients who received BPT were older and more likely to have comorbid disease. After propensity score adjustment, BPT was associated with an increased hazard of death from any cause (hazard ratio [HR] 1.26; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.05-1.53) and from bladder cancer (HR 1.31; 95% CI 0.97-1.77). Using the local area cystectomy rate as an instrument, IV analysis demonstrated no differences in survival between BPT and RC (death from any cause HR 1.06; 95% CI 0.78-1.31; death from bladder cancer HR 0.94; 95% CI 0.55-1.18). Simulation studies for stage misclassification yielded results consistent with the IV analysis. CONCLUSIONS Survival estimates in an observational cohort of patients who underwent RC versus BPT differ by analytic method. Multivariable and propensity score adjustment revealed greater mortality associated with BPT relative to RC, while IV analysis and simulation studies suggest that the two treatments are associated with similar survival outcomes.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2013

Impact of PET staging in limited-stage small-cell lung cancer

E.P. Xanthopoulos; Michael N. Corradetti; Nandita Mitra; A. Fernandes; Miranda B. Kim; Surbhi Grover; John P. Christodouleas; Tracey L. Evans; James P. Stevenson; Corey J. Langer; Tony T. Lee; Daniel A. Pryma; Lilie L. Lin; Charles B. Simone; S. Apisarnthanarax; Ramesh Rengan

Introduction: Although positron emission tomography computed tomography (PET-CT) has been widely used for small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) staging, no study has examined the clinical impact of PET staging in limited-stage (LS) SCLC. Methods: We identified patients with LS-SCLC treated definitively with concurrent chemoradiation. Outcomes were assessed using the Kaplan–Meier approach, Cox regression, and competing risks method. Results: We treated 54 consecutive LS-SCLC patients with concurrent chemoradiation from January 2002 to August 2010. Forty underwent PET, 14 did not, and all underwent thoracoabdominopelvic CT and magnetic resonance imaging neuroimaging. Most patient characteristics were balanced between the comparison groups, including age, race, sex, bone scanning, median dosage, and performance status. More number of PET-staged patients presented with nodal metastases (p = 0.05). Median follow-up was similar for PET-staged and non–PET-staged patients (p = 0.59). Median overall survival from diagnosis in PET-staged patients was 32 versus 17 months in patients staged without PET (p = 0.03), and 3-year survival was 47% versus 19%. Median time-to-distant failure was 29 versus 12 months (p = 0.04); median time-to-local failure was not reached versus 16 months (p = 0.04). On multivariable analysis, PET staging (odds ratio [OR] = 0.24; p = 0.04), performance status (OR = 1.89; p = 0.05), and N-stage (OR = 4.94; p < 0.01) were associated with survival. Conclusion: LS-SCLC patients staged with PET exhibited improved disease control and survival when compared with non–PET-staged LS-SCLC patients. Improved staging accuracy and better identification of intrathoracic disease may explain these findings, underscoring the value of PET-CT in these patients.


Cancer | 2015

A case‐matched study of toxicity outcomes after proton therapy and intensity‐modulated radiation therapy for prostate cancer

Penny Fang; Rosemarie Mick; Curtiland Deville; Stefan Both; Justin E. Bekelman; John P. Christodouleas; Thomas J. Guzzo; Zelig Tochner; Stephen M. Hahn; Neha Vapiwala

The authors assessed whether proton beam therapy (PBT) for prostate cancer (PCa) was associated with differing toxicity compared with intensity‐modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) using case‐matched analysis.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2011

Brachial plexopathy in apical non-small cell lung cancer treated with definitive radiation: Dosimetric analysis and clinical implications

Michael J. Eblan; Michael N. Corradetti; J. Nicholas Lukens; E.P. Xanthopoulos; Nandita Mitra; John P. Christodouleas; Surbhi Grover; A. Fernandes; Corey J. Langer; Tracey L. Evans; James P. Stevenson; Ramesh Rengan; S. Apisarnthanarax

PURPOSE Data are limited on the clinical significance of brachial plexopathy in patients with apical non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) treated with definitive radiation therapy. We report the rates of radiation-induced brachial plexopathy (RIBP) and tumor-related brachial plexopathy (TRBP) and associated dosimetric parameters in apical NSCLC patients. METHODS AND MATERIALS Charts of NSCLC patients with primary upper lobe or superiorly located nodal disease who received ≥50 Gy of definitive conventionally fractionated radiation or chemoradiation were retrospectively reviewed for evidence of brachial plexopathy and categorized as RIBP, TRBP, or trauma-related. Dosimetric data were gathered on ipsilateral brachial plexuses (IBP) contoured according to Radiation Therapy Oncology Group atlas guidelines. RESULTS Eighty patients were identified with a median follow-up and survival time of 17.2 and 17.7 months, respectively. The median prescribed dose was 66.6 Gy (range, 50.4-84.0), and 71% of patients received concurrent chemotherapy. RIBP occurred in 5 patients with an estimated 3-year rate of 12% when accounting for competing risk of death. Seven patients developed TRBP (estimated 3-year rate of 13%), comprising 24% of patients who developed locoregional failures. Grade 3 brachial plexopathy was more common in patients who experienced TRBP than RIBP (57% vs 20%). No patient who received ≤78 Gy to the IBP developed RIBP. On multivariable competing risk analysis, IBP V76 receiving ≥1 cc, and primary tumor failure had the highest hazard ratios for developing RIBP and TRBP, respectively. CONCLUSIONS RIBP is a relatively uncommon complication in patients with apical NSCLC tumors receiving definitive doses of radiation, while patients who develop primary tumor failures are at high risk for developing morbid TRBP. These findings suggest that the importance of primary tumor control with adequate doses of radiation outweigh the risk of RIBP in this population of patients.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2014

Occult Pelvic Lymph Node Involvement in Bladder Cancer: Implications for Definitive Radiation

Benjamin Goldsmith; Brian C. Baumann; Jiwei He; Kai Tucker; Justin E. Bekelman; Curtiland Deville; Neha Vapiwala; David J. Vaughn; Stephen M. Keefe; Thomas J. Guzzo; S. Bruce Malkowicz; John P. Christodouleas

PURPOSE To inform radiation treatment planning for clinically staged, node-negative bladder cancer patients by identifying clinical factors associated with the presence and location of occult pathologic pelvic lymph nodes. METHODS AND MATERIALS The records of patients with clinically staged T1-T4N0 urothelial carcinoma of the bladder undergoing radical cystectomy and pelvic lymphadenectomy at a single institution were reviewed. Logistic regression was used to evaluate associations between preoperative clinical variables and occult pathologic pelvic or common iliac lymph nodes. Percentages of patient with involved lymph node regions entirely encompassed within whole bladder (perivesicular nodal region), small pelvic (perivesicular, obturator, internal iliac, and external iliac nodal regions), and extended pelvic clinical target volume (CTV) (small pelvic CTV plus common iliac regions) were calculated. RESULTS Among 315 eligible patients, 81 (26%) were found to have involved pelvic lymph nodes at the time of surgery, with 38 (12%) having involved common iliac lymph nodes. Risk of occult pathologically involved lymph nodes did not vary with clinical T stage. On multivariate analysis, the presence of lymphovascular invasion (LVI) on preoperative biopsy was significantly associated with occult pelvic nodal involvement (odds ratio 3.740, 95% confidence interval 1.865-7.499, P<.001) and marginally associated with occult common iliac nodal involvement (odds ratio 2.307, 95% confidence interval 0.978-5.441, P=.056). The percentages of patients with involved lymph node regions entirely encompassed by whole bladder, small pelvic, and extended pelvic CTVs varied with clinical risk factors, ranging from 85.4%, 95.1%, and 100% in non-muscle-invasive patients to 44.7%, 71.1%, and 94.8% in patients with muscle-invasive disease and biopsy LVI. CONCLUSIONS Occult pelvic lymph node rates are substantial for all clinical subgroups, especially patients with LVI on biopsy. Extended coverage of pelvic lymph nodes up to the level of the common iliac nodes may be warranted in subsets of patients.

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Brian C. Baumann

Washington University in St. Louis

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Neha Vapiwala

University of Pennsylvania

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Thomas J. Guzzo

University of Pennsylvania

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Wei-Ting Hwang

University of Pennsylvania

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Curtiland Deville

University of Pennsylvania

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Kai Tucker

University of Pennsylvania

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Stefan Both

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Ramesh Rengan

University of Washington

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