https://www.selleckchem.com/products/ABT-737.html Despite the routine practice of sending tissue for histology during surgery for known and diffuse MBD, a change in the subsequent clinical management is uncommon. Prior to sending tissue, surgeons should discuss this practice with the multidisciplinary care team on a per-patient basis. Despite the routine practice of sending tissue for histology during surgery for known and diffuse MBD, a change in the subsequent clinical management is uncommon. Prior to sending tissue, surgeons should discuss this practice with the multidisciplinary care team on a per-patient basis. Adaptive radiation therapy (ART) is a technique capable of reducing radiation dose to normal tissue without compromising local control. For potentially resectable thymoma, induction therapy is standard of care. Because large disease volume is common in this context, ART has been suggested to reduce toxicity from induction chemoradiation. This has not been previously illustrated in the literature. A 38-year-old man with initially unresectable thymoma was treated with induction chemoradiation including cisplatin and etoposide. He received 45 Gy in 25 fractions and ART was utilized to shrink the radiotherapy field for the final 10 fractions. Thymectomy showed Masaoka stage III disease with negative margins. He experienced no treatment-related toxicity and has no evidence of disease 8 years after diagnosis. Induction chemoradiotherapy with ART appears to be feasible, safe, and efficacious for locally advanced intact thymoma. Induction chemoradiotherapy with ART appears to be feasible, safe, and efficacious for locally advanced intact thymoma. For patients with locally recurrent rectal cancer (LRRC) extensive surgery is often the only curative option and patient selection is crucial. This study aimed to investigate whether magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics of the primary tumour can predict oncological outcome after surgery for locally recurrent