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    Date Issued2022 (4)2017 (1)Author
    Braschi-Amirfarzan, Marta (5)
    McIntosh, Lacey J. (3)Gosangi, Babina (2)Thomas, Richard (2)Alessandrino, Francesco (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Radiology (3)Radiology (2)Document TypeJournal Article (5)KeywordOncology (3)Radiology (3)Neoplasms (2)Adverse events (1)AIP, acute interstitial pneumonitis (1)View MoreJournalEuropean journal of radiology open (4)Korean journal of radiology (1)

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    Imaging features of toxicities associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors

    Gosangi, Babina; McIntosh, Lacey; Keraliya, Abhishek; Irugu, David Victor Kumar; Baheti, Akshay; Khandelwal, Ashish; Thomas, Richard; Braschi-Amirfarzan, Marta (2022-08-08)
    The past decade has witnessed a change in landscape of cancer management with the advent of precision oncology. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have revolutionized cancer treatment and have played an important role in improving patient survival. While the patients are living longer, treatment with ICIs are sometimes associated with adverse effects, some of which could be fatal. Radiologists can play a crucial role by early identification of some of these adverse effects during restaging scans. Our paper focuses on the imaging features of commonly occurring ICI toxicities based on organ system.
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    Importance of tumor subtypes in cancer imaging

    Khader, Ali; Braschi-Amirfarzan, Marta; McIntosh, Lacey J; Gosangi, Babina; Wortman, Jeremy R; Wald, Christoph; Thomas, Richard (2022-07-26)
    Cancer therapy has evolved from being broadly directed towards tumor types, to highly specific treatment protocols that target individual molecular subtypes of tumors. With the ever-increasing data on imaging characteristics of tumor subtypes and advancements in imaging techniques, it is now often possible for radiologists to differentiate tumor subtypes on imaging. Armed with this knowledge, radiologists may be able to provide specific information that can obviate the need for invasive methods to identify tumor subtypes. Different tumor subtypes also differ in their patterns of metastatic spread. Awareness of these differences can direct radiologists to relevant anatomical sites to screen for early metastases that may otherwise be difficult to detect during cursory inspection. Likewise, this knowledge will help radiologists to interpret indeterminate findings in a more specific manner.
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    Imaging response assessment for oncology: An algorithmic approach

    Ruchalski, Kathleen; Dewan, Rohit; Sai, Victor; McIntosh, Lacey J.; Braschi-Amirfarzan, Marta (2022-06-07)
    Treatment response assessment by imaging plays a vital role in evaluating changes in solid tumors during oncology therapeutic clinical trials. Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) 1.1 is the reference standard imaging response criteria and provides details regarding image acquisition, image interpretation and categorical response classification. While RECIST 1.1 is applied for the majority of clinical trials in solid tumors, other criteria and modifications have been introduced when RECIST 1.1 outcomes may be incomplete. Available criteria beyond RECIST 1.1 can be explored in an algorithmic fashion dependent on imaging modality, tumor type and method of treatment. Positron Emission Tomography Response Criteria in Solid Tumors (PERCIST) is available for use with PET/CT. Modifications to RECIST 1.1 can be tumor specific, including mRECIST for hepatocellular carcinoma and mesothelioma. Choi criteria for gastrointestinal stromal tumors incorporate tumor density with alterations to categorical response thresholds. Prostate Cancer Working Group 3 (PCWG3) imaging criteria combine RECIST 1.1 findings with those of bone scans. In addition, multiple response criteria have been created to address atypical imaging responses in immunotherapy.
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    Teaching cancer imaging in the era of precision medicine: Looking at the big picture

    Chin, Christopher N.; Subhawong, Ty; Grosso, James; Wortman, Jeremy R.; McIntosh, Lacey J.; Tai, Ryan; Braschi-Amirfarzan, Marta; Castillo, Patricia; Alessandrino, Francesco (2022-03-15)
    The role of imaging in cancer diagnosis and treatment has evolved at the same rapid pace as cancer management. Over the last twenty years, with the advancement of technology, oncology has become a multidisciplinary field that allows for researchers and clinicians not only to create individualized treatment options for cancer patients, but also to evaluate patients' response to therapy with increasing precision. Familiarity with these concepts is a requisite for current and future radiologists, as cancer imaging studies represent a significant and growing component of any radiology practice, from tertiary cancer centers to community hospitals. In this review we provide the framework to teach cancer imaging in the era of genomic oncology. After reading this article, readers should be able to illustrate the basics cancer genomics, modern cancer genomics, to summarize the types of systemic oncologic therapies available, their patterns of response and their adverse events, to discuss the role of imaging in oncologic clinical trials and the role of tumor response criteria and to display the future directions of oncologic imaging.
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    T-Cell Non-Hodgkin Lymphomas: Spectrum of Disease and the Role of Imaging in the Management of Common Subtypes

    Park, Hye Sun; McIntosh, Lacey J.; Braschi-Amirfarzan, Marta; Shinagare, Atul B.; Krajewski, Katherine M. (2017-01-05)
    T-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs) are biologically diverse, uncommon malignancies characterized by a spectrum of imaging findings according to subtype. The purpose of this review is to describe the common subtypes of T-cell NHL, highlight important differences between cutaneous, various peripheral and precursor subtypes, and summarize imaging features and the role of imaging in the management of this diverse set of diseases.
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