E. Mannarino
Brigham and Women's Hospital
23 Papers
103 Citations
E. Mannarino is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radiosurgery & Radiation therapy. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 23 publications. Previous affiliations of E. Mannarino include Rush University Medical Center & Harvard University.
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Papers
The treatment of recurrent brain metastases with stereotactic radiosurgery.
Jay S. Loeffler,Hanne M. Kooy,Patrick Y. Wen,Howard A. Fine,Chee-Wai Cheng,E. Mannarino,Jen San Tsai,Eben Alexander +7 more
TL;DR: Stereotactic radiosurgery is an effective and relatively safe treatment for recurrent solitary metastases and is an appealing technique for the initial management of deep-seated lesions as a boost to whole brain radiotherapy.
302
Adaptation and verification of the relocatable gill-thomas- cosman frame in stereotactic radiotherapy
Hanne M. Kooy,Susan F. Dunbar,Nancy J. Tarbell,E. Mannarino,Nalton Ferarro,Stephen Shusterman,Marc R. Bellerive,Linda Finn,Coleman V. McDonough,Jay S. Loeffler +9 more
TL;DR: The GTC frame is a noninvasive and versatile fixation system that provides patient comfort, as well as accurate relocatibility for SRT, and a new frame, the "Boston Childrens' Hospital" frame, was designed.
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Local control after fractionated stereotactic radiation therapy for brain metastases
Selvan Rajakesari,Nils D. Arvold,Rachel B. Jimenez,Laura W. Christianson,M.C. Horvath,Elizabeth B. Claus,Elizabeth B. Claus,Alexandra J. Golby,Mark D. Johnson,Ian F. Dunn,Eudocia Q. Lee,Nan Lin,Scott Friesen,E. Mannarino,M Wagar,Fred Hacker,Stephanie E. Weiss,Brian M. Alexander +17 more
TL;DR: SRT appears to be a safe and reasonably effective technique to treat brain metastases deemed less suitable for SRS, though dose intensification strategies may further improve local control.
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Low Incidence of Chest Wall Pain with a Risk-Adapted Lung Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy Approach Using Three or Five Fractions Based on Chest Wall Dosimetry
Thibaud P. Coroller,Raymond H. Mak,John H. Lewis,Elizabeth H. Baldini,Aileen B. Chen,Aileen B. Chen,Yolonda L. Colson,Fred Hacker,Gretchen Hermann,David Kozono,E. Mannarino,C. Molodowitch,Jon O. Wee,David J. Sher,Joseph H. Killoran +14 more
TL;DR: Optimization of treatment plans to reduce CW dose and a risk-adapted fractionation strategy of three or five fractions based on the CW V30 resulted in a low incidence of CW toxicity.
Acute gastrointestinal toxicity and bowel bag dose-volume parameters for preoperative radiation therapy for retroperitoneal sarcoma.
Kimberley S. Mak,Kimberley S. Mak,John G. Phillips,John G. Phillips,Constance M. Barysauskas,Leslie K. Lee,E. Mannarino,Liam Van Benthuysen,Chandrajit P. Raut,Chandrajit P. Raut,John T. Mullen,Mark Fairweather,Thomas F. DeLaney,Elizabeth H. Baldini,Elizabeth H. Baldini +14 more
TL;DR: Among patients treated with preoperative RT for RPS, significant acute GI toxicity was very low despite BB dose exceeding established constraints for most cases, and acceptable dose constraints for R PS may be higher than those for GI or GYN cancers.
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