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Reproducibility of the lung anatomy under active breathing coordinator control: Dosimetric consequences for scanned proton treatments.
den Otter, Lydia A; Kaza, Evangelia; Kierkels, Roel G J; Meijers, Arturs; Ubbels, Fred J F; Leach, Martin O; Collins, David J; Langendijk, Johannes A; Knopf, Antje-Christin.
Afiliação
  • den Otter LA; Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, 9713 GZ, The Netherlands.
  • Kaza E; CR-UK Cancer Imaging Centre, The Institute of Cancer Research and, The Royal Marsden Hospital, London, SW7 3RP, UK.
  • Kierkels RGJ; Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, 9713 GZ, The Netherlands.
  • Meijers A; Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, 9713 GZ, The Netherlands.
  • Ubbels FJF; Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, 9713 GZ, The Netherlands.
  • Leach MO; CR-UK Cancer Imaging Centre, The Institute of Cancer Research and, The Royal Marsden Hospital, London, SW7 3RP, UK.
  • Collins DJ; CR-UK Cancer Imaging Centre, The Institute of Cancer Research and, The Royal Marsden Hospital, London, SW7 3RP, UK.
  • Langendijk JA; Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, 9713 GZ, The Netherlands.
  • Knopf AC; Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, 9713 GZ, The Netherlands.
Med Phys ; 45(12): 5525-5534, 2018 Dec.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30229930
ABSTRACT

PURPOSE:

The treatment of moving targets with scanned proton beams is challenging. For motion mitigation, an Active Breathing Coordinator (ABC) can be used to assist breath-holding. The delivery of pencil beam scanning fields often exceeds feasible breath-hold durations, requiring high breath-hold reproducibility. We evaluated the robustness of scanned proton therapy against anatomical uncertainties when treating nonsmall-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients during ABC controlled breath-hold.

METHODS:

Four subsequent MRIs of five healthy volunteers (3 male, 2 female, age 25-58, BMI 19-29) were acquired under ABC controlled breath-hold during two simulated treatment fractions, providing both intrafractional and interfractional information about breath-hold reproducibility. Deformation vector fields between these MRIs were used to deform CTs of five NSCLC patients. Per patient, four or five cases with different tumor locations were modeled, simulating a total of 23 NSCLC patients. Robustly optimized (3 and 5 mm setup uncertainty respectively and 3% density perturbation) intensity-modulated proton plans (IMPT) were created and split into subplans of 20 s duration (assumed breath-hold duration). A fully fractionated treatment was recalculated on the deformed CTs. For each treatment fraction the deformed CTs representing multiple breath-hold geometries were alternated to simulate repeated ABC breath-holding during irradiation. Also a worst-case scenario was simulated by recalculating the complete treatment plan on the deformed CT scan showing the largest deviation with the first deformed CT scan, introducing a systematic error. Both the fractionated breath-hold scenario and worst-case scenario were dosimetrically evaluated.

RESULTS:

Looking at the deformation vector fields between the MRIs of the volunteers, up to 8 mm median intra- and interfraction displacements (without outliers) were found for all lung segments. The dosimetric evaluation showed a median difference in D98% between the planned and breath-hold scenarios of -0.1 Gy (range -4.1 Gy to 2.0 Gy). D98% target coverage was more than 57.0 Gy for 22/23 cases. The D1 cc of the CTV increased for 21/23 simulations, with a median difference of 0.9 Gy (range -0.3 to 4.6 Gy). For 14/23 simulations the increment was beyond the allowed maximum dose of 63.0 Gy, though remained under 66.0 Gy (110% of the prescribed dose of 60.0 Gy). Organs at risk doses differed little compared to the planned doses (difference in mean doses <0.9 Gy for the heart and lungs, <1.4% difference in V35 [%] and V20 [%] to the esophagus and lung).

CONCLUSIONS:

When treating under ABC controlled breath-hold, robustly optimized IMPT plans show limited dosimetric consequences due to anatomical variations between repeated ABC breath-holds for most cases. Thus, the combination of robustly optimized IMPT plans and the delivery under ABC controlled breath-hold presents a safe approach for PBS lung treatments.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Terapia com Prótons / Pulmão Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2018 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Terapia com Prótons / Pulmão Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2018 Tipo de documento: Article