1 on the challenges and future approaches to curing patients with primary brain tumours. We congratulate Cancer Research UK (CRUK) on convening this group of expert clinicians and scientists, and we applaud the authors' elegant synthesis of multiple complex issues. However, we note that among the disciplines represented by the 26 authors of this article, expertise in radiation oncology is conspicuously absent. The authors assert that CRUK "convened an international panel of brain cancer researchers with interests in neurobiology, preclinical tumour modelling, genomics, pharmaco logy, drug discovery and/or development, neuropathology, neurosurgery, imaging, radiotherapy and medical oncology, with the task of identifying the most important challenges that must be overcome if we are to eventually be in the position to cure all patients with a brain tumour" 1. Aside from radiation oncology, all of the neurooncological subspecialties listed above were represented. Beyond issues of author representation, radiotherapy is only discussed in the context of efforts to reduce the dose of radiation or to eliminate radiotherapy entirely from the treatment of patients with certain disease characteristics. Even in clinical situations in which attempts to reduce the radiation dose have failed (such as medulloblastoma) 2,3 , the authors contend that this is a function of