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Dive into the research topics where Rodney R. Million is active.

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Featured researches published by Rodney R. Million.


Cancer | 1976

Patterns of recurrence following surgery alone for adenocarcinoma of the colon and rectum

Allan W. Cass; Rodney R. Million; William W. Pfaff

Two hundred and eighty patients with previously untreated large bowel adenocarcinoma were retrospectively evaluated following complete primary resection to determine patterns of recurrence. One hundred and five patients (37%) subsequently developed recurrent disease. Sixty percent (63/105) presented with local recurrence alone, 14% (15/105) with concomitant local recurrence and distant metastases, and 26% (27/105) with distant metastases alone. Ninety‐two percent of local recurrences developed in structures contiguous to the operative area of the incision. The degree of tumor anaplasia and depth of tumor penetration into the bowel wall influenced the rate of local recurrence. Through 5 years, local recurrence without clinical evidence of distant metastases was the most common cause of death. Plans for adjuvant radiation therapy are discussed.


Cancer | 2002

Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Oropharynx Surgery, Radiation Therapy, or Both

James T. Parsons; William M. Mendenhall; Scott P. Stringer; Robert J. Amdur; Russell W. Hinerman; Douglas B. Villaret; Giselle J. Moore-Higgs; Bruce D. Greene; Tod W. Speer; Nicholas J. Cassisi; Rodney R. Million

The treatment of patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the oropharynx remains controversial. No randomized trial has addressed adequately the question of whether surgery (S), radiation therapy (RT), or combined treatment is most effective.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1994

Radiation optic neuropathy after megavoltage external-beam irradiation : analysis of time-dose factors

James T. Parsons; Francis J. Bova; Constance R. Fitzgerald; William M. Mendenhall; Rodney R. Million

PURPOSE To investigate the risk of radiation-induced optic neuropathy according to total radiotherapy dose and fraction size, based on both retrospective and prospectively collected data. METHODS AND MATERIALS Between October 1964 and May 1989, 215 optic nerves in 131 patients received fractionated external-beam irradiation during the treatment of primary extracranial head and neck tumors. All patients had a minimum of 3 years of ophthalmologic follow-up (range, 3 to 21 years). The clinical end point was visual acuity of 20/100 or worse as a result of optic nerve injury. RESULTS Anterior ischemic optic neuropathy developed in five nerves (at mean and median times of 32 and 30 months, respectively, and a range of 2-4 years). Retrobulbar optic neuropathy developed in 12 nerves (at mean and median times of 47 and 28 months, respectively, and a range of 1-14 years). No injuries were observed in 106 optic nerves that received a total dose of < 59 Gy. Among nerves that received doses of > or = 60 Gy, the dose per fraction was more important than the total dose in producing optic neuropathy. The 15-year actuarial risk of optic neuropathy after doses of > or = 60 Gy was 11% when treatment was administered in fraction sizes of < 1.9 Gy, compared with 47% when given in fraction sizes of > or = 1.9 Gy. The data also suggest an increased risk of optic nerve injury with increasing age. CONCLUSION As there is no effective treatment of radiation-induced optic neuropathy, efforts should be directed at its prevention by minimizing the total dose, paying attention to the dose per fraction to the nerve, and using reduced-field techniques where appropriate to limit the volume of tissues that receive high-dose irradiation.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1980

A re-evaluation of split-course technique for squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck

James T. Parsons; Francis J. Bova; Rodney R. Million

Abstract Therapeutic results of split-course vs. continuous-course external beam irradiation were analyzed retrospectively in 468 consecutive patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, oropharynx, nasopharynx, hypopharynx, and supraglottic larynx who were treated with curative intent at the University of Florida between September 1964 and August 1976. 214 patients received split-course treatment and 254 were treated by the continuous-course method. Except for the planned 14–16 day interruption after 2820–3000 rad in the split-course group, the techniques and total doses of irradiation did not differ. Local control was poorer for all T-stages in patients who were treated by the split-course technique. Control of neck disease by irradiation alone was also poorer among split-course irradiation patients. For each stage of disease, patients who received continuous-course irradiation had approximately 10% higher 5-year survival rates than patients who were treated by the split-course technique. The rate of development of late radiation complications was similar for the 2 treatment techniques. Routine use of the split-course technique has been discontinued since the dose required to compensate for the rest interval is unknown.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1987

The meningioma controversy: Postoperative radiation therapy

Bernard W. Taylor; Robert B. Marcus; William A. Friedman; William E. Ballinger; Rodney R. Million

Total surgical excision is the main goal of therapy for intracranial meningiomas. The controversy today involves the efficacy of postoperative radiation therapy. To evaluate this question, 132 patients with benign intracranial meningiomas, treated between October 1964 and April 1985, were evaluated. All patients had a minimum 2-year follow-up. The actuarial local control rates at 10 years for the three treatment groups were as follows: subtotal excision alone, 18%; subtotal excision plus postoperative radiation therapy, 82%; and total excision alone, 77%. The actuarial determinate survival rates at 10 years were 49%, 81%, and 93%, respectively. Postoperative radiation therapy was also effective for patients treated at the time of the first recurrence, with an actuarial local control rate at 10 years after salvage treatment of 30% for patients treated with surgery alone and 89% for patients receiving postoperative radiation therapy at the time of salvage. This analysis suggests that radiation therapy has a significant role in the treatment of subtotally excised and recurrent intracranial meningiomas.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1987

Postoperative irradiation for squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck: an analysis of treatment results and complications☆

Robert J. Amdur; James T. Parsons; William M. Mendenhall; Rodney R. Million; Scott P. Stringer; Nicholas J. Cassisi

One hundred thirty-four patients with advanced head and neck cancer were treated with radical surgery and postoperative radiation therapy between October 1964 and October 1984. All patients had greater than or equal to 2 years and 84% had greater than or equal to 5 years of follow-up. All patients included in the study were scheduled to receive continuous-course irradiation following a major cancer operation for previously untreated squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity, oropharynx, hypopharynx, or larynx and began radiation treatment less than or equal to 3 months after the surgical procedure. Ninety-six percent had AJCC pathologic Stage III or IV cancer, and all were without evidence of gross disease at the start of irradiation. The majority of recurrences above the clavicles occurred in the primary field (84%) as opposed to the posterior strip (8%) or low neck (8%). Based on multivariate analysis and tabular comparisons, 4 factors were found to be significantly important for predicting disease control above the clavicles: (a) Surgical margin (5-year actuarial control with invasive cancer at the margin, 53%, versus 81% with negative margins, p = .009). Patients with close margins or in situ cancer at the margins had the same rate of control as those with negative margins. (b) Primary site (oral cavity, 64%, versus other sites, 83%; p = .029). (c) Neck Stage (N0-1 versus N2-3). (d) Number of indications for irradiation--for example, bone invasion, multiple positive nodes, perineural invasion (1-3 indications, 85%, versus greater than or equal to 4, 62%; p = .06). The rate of disease control above the clavicles did not correlate well with AJCC pathologic stage: Stage I-II, 67%; Stage III, 81%; Stage IVA (T1-3, N2-3A), 68%; Stage IVB (T4 and/or N3B), 80%. The interval between surgery and the start of irradiation (range 1-10 weeks) also was not prognostically important, even with stratification by tumor dose, surgical margin, and number of indications for irradiation. At 5 years, the actuarial survival rate was 33% for the entire group; for patients with invasive cancer at the margin, the survival rate was approximately half that of those whose margins were free of invasive cancer (17% versus 37%). Based on multivariate analysis, 2 factors were found to significantly increase the probability of death due to cancer: (a) neck Stage (N0-1 versus N2-3); (b) extension of tumor from the primary site into the skin or soft tissues of the neck.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1990

The incidence of myelitis after irradiation of the cervical spinal cord

Robert B. Marcus; Rodney R. Million

To further define the tolerance of the cervical spinal cord, the dose of radiation to the cervical spinal cord was calculated for all 2901 patients with malignancies of the upper respiratory tract treated at the University of Florida between October 1964 and December 1987. To further define the population evaluated, certain criteria were used: (a) a minimum of 3000 cGy to at least 2 cm of cervical spinal cord and (b) a minimum of 1 year of follow-up, unless a neurological complication occurred before 1 year. A total of 1112 patients were evaluable, of which 2 (0.18%) developed radiation myelitis. One received 4658 cGy to the cervical cord at 172.5 cGy per day, and the other patient received 4907 cGy to the cord at 169.2 cGy per day. The risk of myelitis at each dose level was 0/124 at 3000-3999 cGy, 0/442 at 4000-4499 cGy, 2/471 at 4500-4999 cGy, and 0/75 at a cord dose of 5000 cGy or greater.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1994

RADIATION RETINOPATHY AFTER EXTERNAL-BEAM IRRADIATION: ANALYSIS OF TIME-DOSE FACTORS

James T. Parsons; Frank J. Bova; Constance R. Fitzgerald; William M. Mendenhall; Rodney R. Million

PURPOSE To investigate the risk of radiation-induced retinopathy according to total radiation dose and fraction size, based on both retrospective and prospectively collected data. METHODS AND MATERIALS Between October 1964 and May 1989, 68 retinae in 64 patients received fractionated external-beam irradiation during the treatment of primary extracranial head and neck tumors. All patients had a minimum of 3 years of ophthalmologic follow-up (range, 3 to 26 years; mean, 9 years; median, 8 years). RESULTS Twenty-seven eyes in 26 patients developed radiation retinopathy resulting in visual acuity of 20/200 or worse. The mean and median times to the onset of symptoms attributable to retinal ischemia were 2.8 and 2.5 years, respectively. Fourteen of the injured eyes developed rubeosis iridis and/or neovascular glaucoma. Radiation retinopathy was not observed at doses below 45 Gy, but increased steadily in incidence at doses > or = 45 Gy. In the range of doses between 45 and 55 Gy, there was an increased risk of injury among patients who received doses per fraction of > or = 1.9 Gy (p = .09). There was also a trend toward increased risk of injury among patients who received chemotherapy (two of two vs. four of ten in the 45-51 Gy range; p = .23). The lowest dose associated with retinopathy was 45 Gy delivered to a diabetic patient by twice-a-day fractionation. The data did not suggest an increased risk of radiation retinopathy with increasing age. CONCLUSION The current study suggests the importance of total dose as well as dose per fraction, and adds support to a small body of literature suggesting that patients with diabetes mellitus or who receive chemotherapy are at increased risk of injury. A sigmoid dose-response curve is constructed from our current data and data from the literature.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1986

Squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck treated with radiation therapy the role of neck dissection for clinically positive neck nodes

William M. Mendenhall; Rodney R. Million; Nicholas J. Cassisi

This is an analysis of 161 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck treated with irradiation to the primary site and neck followed by a neck dissection(s) for clinically positive neck nodes. Patients were treated between October 1964 and December 1982; there was a minimum 2-year follow-up. Fifty-two patients were deleted from analysis of neck disease control because they died of intercurrent disease or cancer less than 2 years from treatment with the neck continuously disease-free. All patients are included in the analysis of complications. Neck disease control rate was the same for radiation plus neck dissection or radiation therapy alone for solitary nodes less than 3 cm. As the size and number of nodes increased, there was a higher rate of neck disease control for combined treatment as compared with irradiation alone. The neck disease control rate, size for size, was lower for patients with fixed nodes and for those with residual tumor in the pathologic specimen. There was no difference in neck disease control as a function of the interval between irradiation and neck dissection. For nodes less than or equal to 6 cm, a minimum node dose of 5000 rad appeared to be sufficient for control, whereas for nodes greater than 6 cm, at least 6000 rad appeared to be required for optimal control. Fixed nodes required a higher dose compared to mobile masses. The incidence of postoperative complications was increased with maximum subcutaneous doses of greater than or equal to 6000 rad. There was also an increased incidence of postoperative complications for patients undergoing simultaneous, as compared with staged, bilateral neck dissection.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1983

The effects of irradiation on the eye and optic nerve

James T. Parsons; Constance R. Fitzgerald; C. Ian Hood; Kenneth E. Ellingwood; Francis J. Bova; Rodney R. Million

Abstract Late effects of irradiation of the eye and optic nerve in 74 patients are reviewed. Time-dose analyses are performed for lacrimal apparatus, retinal, and optic nerve injuries. Management of radiation complications is discussed. Recommendations are made regarding radiation treatment techniques and methods of reducing the risk of late injury.

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Scott P. Stringer

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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