Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Treatment Paradigm ====== A treatment paradigm is a conceptual framework or standardized approach used by clinicians to guide decision-making and therapeutic strategies for a specific medical condition. 🧠 In Context: It reflects the prevailing model of care, including when, how, and why certain treatments are applied, based on current evidence, guidelines, and clinical consensus. 📚 Key Components of a Treatment Paradigm: Diagnostic criteria (when to intervene) Choice of therapy (first-line, second-line, etc.) Timing (early vs. delayed treatment) Goals (curative, palliative, symptomatic) Evaluation (how success is measured) 🧱 Example: In glioblastoma: The Stupp protocol (surgery → radiotherapy + temozolomide → adjuvant temozolomide) is the established treatment paradigm. ⚠️ Misuse or Premature Adoption: Referring to an anecdotal or unproven approach (e.g., repeated balloon kyphoplasty in super-aged patients) as a "treatment paradigm" is misleading unless supported by rigorous, reproducible evidence. treatment_paradigm.txt Last modified: 2025/06/19 15:12by administrador