Amr Mousa
Cairo University
17 Papers
146 Citations
Amr Mousa is an academic researcher from Cairo University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Tomotherapy. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 17 publications.
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Papers
Potential of dose optimisation in MRI-based PDR brachytherapy of cervix carcinoma
TL;DR: MRI-based dose optimisation can play an important role to reduce the dose delivered to the critical organs and to improve target coverage in utero-vaginal carcinoma treatment planning.
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Hypofractionated conformal radiotherapy for pediatric diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG): a randomized controlled trial.
Mohamed S. Zaghloul,Eman Eldebawy,Soha Ahmed,Amr Mousa,Amr Amin,Amal Refaat,Iman Zaky,Nada El-Khateeb,Mohamed Sabry +8 more
TL;DR: Hypofractionated radiotherapy offers lesser burden on the patients, their families and the treating departments, with nearly comparable results to conventional fractionation, though not fulfilling the non-inferiority assumption.
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The radiotherapy utilization rate in pediatric tumors: An analysis of 13,305 patients.
Mai K. Bishr,Mohamed S. Zaghloul,Caroline Elmaraghi,Ahmed Galal,Mohamed S. Abdelaziz,Hagar Elghazawy,Haitham Shaheen,Engy S. Ramzy,Ahmed Mesbah,Salma K. Eissa,Rana Hegazy,Ahmed M. Hamza,Nada El-Khateeb,Amr Mousa +13 more
TL;DR: This is the first analysis to provide valuable insights into the RUR for childhood tumors in a large LMIC center and together with population-based pediatric cancer registries, this will help decipher pediatric RT needs and deficits.
16
Is economic status the main determinant of radiation therapy availability? The Arab world as an example of developing countries.
TL;DR: Although the economic status is of paramount importance, it is not the only factor determining the quantity and quality of radiotherapy services in the Arab world.
15
The role of PET/CT in the management of head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
TL;DR: PET/CT is an imaging modality with high diagnostic performance in the assessment of head and squamous cell carcinoma, and induced a significant change in the management of the study population.
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