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Volume 9

J Clin Exp Ophthalmol, an open access journal

ISSN: 2155-9570

Ophthalmology Summit 2018

February 26-27, 2018

February 26-27, 2018 | Berlin, Germany

19

th

Global Ophthalmology Summit

Radiotherapy and ocular side effects: myths, beliefs and scientific evidences

Trinanjan Basu

HCG Apex Cancer Centre, India

Statement of the Problem:

Radiotherapy a curative treatment for majority of head and neck and base skull tumors. It’s

either postoperative or radical. The typical challenge in base skull or nasopharyngeal malignancies is the proximity of ocular

structures (eye, optic nerve, optic chiasm). There have been numerous reports about dreaded and morbid side effects of

incidental radiation dosage to these structures. Radiotherapy has improved enormously in previous decade and with modern

technology any vision compromising side effects are rare. We will look at the techniques, known side effects, incidences and

how we radiation oncologists perceive them.

Methodology & Theoretical Orientation:

Literature reported incidences of ocular side effects while treating tumors in and

around optic apparatus (base skull/nasopharynx/optic pathway gliomas/pituitary tumors) and their relevance in modern day

radiotherapy.

Conclusion & Significance:

With modern radiotherapy and improvement in imaging and treatment delivery these side effects

are myth only. We hardly witness people becoming blind due to radiotherapy and it’s a pure myth.

Recent Publications

1. Basu T, Kataria T, Goyal S, Gupta D. Is There a Hint Towards Clinico-Dosimetric Correlation of Fatigue Among Head

and Neck Cancer (HNC) Patients Treated by Modulated Radiotherapy? BAOJ Pall Medicine 2017, 3: 43: 042.

2. Kataria T, Basu T, Goyal S, Gupta D. Need of collaborative radiology–radiation oncology workshops in decision

making for head and neck cancer (HNC) management in India: Perspectives of the radiation oncologists. J Can Res

Ther 2016;12:1080-3.

3. Kataria T, Gupta D, Basu T, Gupta S, Goyal S, Banerjee S

et.al

. Simple diagrammatic approach to delineate duodenum

on a radiotherapy planning CT scan. Br J Radiol 2016; 89: 20150661.

4. Basu T, Laskar SG, Gupta T, Budrukkar A, Murthy V, Agarwal JP. Toxicity with radiotherapy for oral cancers and its

management: a practical approach. J Cancer Res Ther. 2012;8 Suppl 1:S72-84.

5. Basu T, Kataria T, Goyal S, Gupta D, Sharma K. Do we need to spare central nervous system structures during head

and neck cancer intensity modulated radiotherapy?. Clin Cancer Investig J 2015;4:216-9.

Biography

Dr Trinanjan Basu is a practicing radiation oncologist from India. He has his training from Kolkata where he was born and then obtained specialized training from

Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai. Currently he resides in Mumbai and working in a state of the art centre with latest radiation oncology facilities. During his training

and early career he has been trained in all latest radiation oncology facilities in Mumbai and Delhi in all latest equipment. He has keen interest in clinical studies

and has more than 25 peer reviewed journal publications, authored few books and editorial member of Cambridge Publishing House, UK. He has received grants

and trainings from ESTRO and ESMO at Paris and Vienna respectively.

trinanjan.doctor@gmail.com

Trinanjan Basu, J Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2018, Volume 9

DOI: 10.4172/2155-9570-C1-078