Clinical director, Vice Chair of education, Professor of Radiation Oncology @ Cleveland Clinic. Tweets mine.

Joined September 2015
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Burnout & moral injury in medicine have affected so many health care workers. As a mid-career physician, here’s what I’ve learned to combat it - I hope others find it to be helpful. In Search of Joy and Meaning in Modern Medicine @JCOOP_ASCO ascopubs.org/doi/pdf/10.1200…
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Outstanding, funny & memorable roast from our chief resident @KateRadOnc during our graduation celebration for @JKocsisMD @AniBommireddy @EDaviesMD! 🙏 for your dedication & leadership as chief resident! 👏🐱@RTendulkarMD @SamuelChaoMD @ShaunaRadOnc @ARRO_org #CleClinicCancer
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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
Congratulations to @AniBommireddy for receiving the @RSNA Roentgen research award and @EDaviesMD for receiving the Jerrold P. Saxton Award for Clinical excellence! @RTendulkarMD @ARRO_org #CleClinicCancer
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Wonderful to celebrate our graduating #radonc residents @EDaviesMD @AniBommireddy @JKocsisMD who will be taking their talents to @BayCare, @DukeRadOnc & @CleClinicMD, respectively! 🎊 The department is very proud of them! @RTendulkarMD @ARRO_org #CleClinicCancer
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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
General Omar Bradley called it the most dangerous mission of D-Day. He was not wrong. At 6:30am on June 6, 1944, 225 Army Rangers approached a 100-foot sheer cliff face on the Normandy coast called Pointe du Hoc. Their mission: climb it. The cliff was vertical. The Germans were at the top with full visibility of everyone below. As the Rangers fired grappling hooks upward, the Germans cut the ropes. Shot the men hanging on them. Dropped grenades over the edge onto the climbers beneath. The Rangers kept climbing. It took roughly 40 minutes. Men fell. Men were shot off the ropes. The ones behind them grabbed the ropes and kept going. They reached the top. Then came the gut punch: the massive 155mm artillery guns they had been sent to destroy were gone. The Germans had moved them inland before the invasion. The entire mission had been sent to destroy guns that weren't there. Most commanders would have regrouped and called it done. The Rangers fanned out. Two miles inland, they found the guns, hidden in an orchard, already aimed at Utah Beach and loaded to fire. They destroyed every one with thermite grenades. Then they dug in. Cut off, with almost no ammunition, no reinforcements, and no resupply, 225 men held Pointe du Hoc against relentless German counterattacks for two full days. When relief finally arrived, only 90 Rangers could still stand and fight. Their names are carved on a memorial in Normandy. Most Americans today cannot name a single one.
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🚨 REPORT: 82% of physicians are now employed by hospitals or corporate entities. Nearly two-thirds of practices are no longer physician-owned. This outcome should not surprise anyone. For more than a decade, Medicare payment cuts, mounting administrative burden, growing insurer oligopolies, and policies that disadvantage independent practices have made this outcome entirely predictable. If lawmakers want more competition, lower costs, and better access to care, preserving independent practice must be part of the conversation. No single reform will reverse decades of consolidation. But policymakers can start by fixing Medicare, fixing prior authorization, expanding physician-owned hospitals, and strengthening antitrust enforcement. Dive into the full study 👉 physiciansadvocacyinstitute.… @AANSNeuro @CNS_Update @spinesection @AANSCNStrauma @painsection @councilsns @physicianhosp

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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
🚀 Virtual Grand Round in Radiation Oncology Latest results of the EXTEND trial 🎤 Dr. Chad Tang Addition of MTD to SoC for Oligometastatic Solid Tumors: Primary Analysis of EXTEND 📅 2. June 2026, 17:00–17:30 CEST 💻 Join us virtually here: lnkd.in/eiPx5WhQ
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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
It’s #radonc away rotation season! For #medstudents and junior #residents, here are my go-to resources in radiation oncology (1/2).
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🚨The first American guidelines for low-dose radiotherapy in osteoarthritis were just published. That’s not a small thing. For decades, European centers have been treating OA with low-dose RT. American patients largely couldn’t access it. No formal guidance. No insurer framework. No roadmap for referring providers. That changes today. The American Radium Society Appropriate Use Criteria, published in the American Journal of Clinical Oncology, define exactly when and how to use LDRT for OA. Radiation oncologists, rheumatologists, physiatrists, and orthopedic surgeons built this together. For insurers, this is the clinical framework they’ve been waiting for. Honored to be a co-author alongside the global experts who made this possible.
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The medical clinic I've been visiting the last 10 years was bought out by private equity. They cut costs so aggressively that they could not even keep a full time doctor on staff. Then they cut the staff. They replaced experienced nurses with cheaper workers. The place fell apart in under a year. Labor is the highest cost in any healthcare practice. Cut it, and the margins improve on paper. It is wild how fast a successful business gets destroyed by this model. PE acquisitions often use leveraged buyouts — meaning the debt used to buy the practice gets loaded onto the practice itself. It services that debt from operating revenue while also generating investor returns. Healthcare is a goldmine for private equity. In 2024, private equity completed 1,136 healthcare deals in the US. People get sick no matter what the economy is doing. It's guaranteed cash flow. The business model is simple. Buy a clinic. Load it up with debt. Cut costs to make the profit margin look amazing. Sell it to someone else in about 5 years. If the clinic goes bankrupt from all that debt later on? The investors don't care. They already made their money. Why is this happening? Greed.
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Lets bring #MedTwitter back! Introducing #HemeOncHeroes ➡️ a series about the pioneers, rebels, and visionaries who changed hematology and oncology forever! Lets dive in 👇 #HemeOncHeroes series. Story #1 In 1994, his own institutions fired him in a single week. He was 76 years old. The University of Pittsburgh fired him. The NCI fired him. He had spent forty years proving that almost every breast cancer surgery for a century had been pointless. He was right. 🧵 1/15
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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
Critique of the IRRADIaTE Study: Disclaimer: I am a pediatric cancer survivor and now radiation oncologist. All cancer treatments cause side effects. I strongly believe we should be looking for ways to rationally combine treatments rather than undercutting other modalities. 1/
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Interesting read! All radical treatments for pca have toxicities. The key issue for pts is not simply if toxicity occurs, but which toxicities persist and how they affect long-term QOL. Transient GU symptoms are not equivalent to permanent incontinence or impotence
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If insurance companies can deny care and call it "medically unnecessary", why aren't they required to have malpractice insurance doe when they get it wrong and someone gets sicker or tragically dies ?
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In 458 BC, Rome was on the brink of collapse. An invading army had trapped the Roman consul and his legion in a mountain pass. Panic spread through the city. The Senate did the only thing they could think of: They sent messengers to find a 60-year-old farmer plowing his field. His name was Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus. He had once been a senator, then lost his fortune paying his son's bail. Now he worked his own four-acre plot just to feed his family. When the Senate's envoys arrived, they found him sweating behind a plow. They asked him to put on his toga so they could deliver an official message. The message: Rome was making him dictator. Absolute power. Total command of the army. No checks. No oversight. No term limit. He accepted. Within 16 days, Cincinnatus had raised an army, marched out, surrounded the enemy, and forced their surrender. The republic was saved. He had legal authority to rule for six months. He could have stayed. He could have expanded his power. He could have done what every other ruler in human history did when handed unlimited control. Instead, he resigned on day 16. He took off the toga, walked back to his farm, and finished plowing the field he'd left half-done. Twenty years later, when Rome faced another crisis, they called him back. He was 80 years old. He took command, crushed the conspiracy, and resigned again, this time after just 21 days. He died poor. On his farm. 2,200 years later, when George Washington was offered a kingship after winning the American Revolution, he refused and went home to Mount Vernon. The reason he was hailed as "the American Cincinnatus" is because Europeans literally could not believe a man who had won would willingly give up power. King George III, on hearing Washington would resign rather than rule, said: "If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world." The lesson isn't that Cincinnatus was humble. The lesson is that for most of human history, the people most qualified to lead were the ones who didn't want to. And the moment a society starts rewarding those who chase power instead of those who flee from it is the moment the republic begins to die. Cincinnati, Ohio is named after him. Most people who live there have no idea why.
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Becoming a physician is not good for your health. - High stress - Sleep disruption - Intense workload - Feelings of isolation - Putting your life on hold - Limited time for exercise - Exposure to traumatic cases - Not having time for family and friends - Always having to be perfect because the stakes are so high biologicalpsychiatryjournal.…
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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
US nonprofit hospitals spent $7.8 billion on management consultants from 2009 to 2023, but contracts were not associated with meaningful changes in finance, operations, or quality of care. 🧵 ja.ma/4d46zfq
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Replying to @ZilliThomas
@ZilliThomas highlights the progress made with SBRT in mCRPC. The OS benefit in ARTO by @GiulioFrancoli1 is very encouraging. All trials in this setting point in the same direction: benefit on all endpoints! #APCCC26
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Rahul Tendulkar, MD retweeted
1/7 🧵 New in @LancetOncology: we built a Delphi consensus on primary endpoints for MDT trials in oligometastatic cancer — because the endpoints we've been using were designed for drugs, not for ablation. On behalf of the EORTC–ESTRO OligoCare consortium.
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In healthcare, no amount of personal wellness practices can substitute for appropriate staffing, humane scheduling, efficient clinical workflows, adequate administrative support, or a culture of psychological safety.
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