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1.
Gels ; 9(10)2023 Sep 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37888344

RESUMEN

Pulsed focused ultrasound (FUS) in combination with microbubbles has been shown to improve delivery and penetration of nanoparticles in tumors. To understand the mechanisms behind this treatment, it is important to evaluate the contribution of FUS without microbubbles on increased nanoparticle penetration and transport in the tumor extracellular matrix (ECM). A composite agarose hydrogel was made to model the porous structure, the acoustic attenuation and the hydraulic conductivity of the tumor ECM. Single-particle tracking was used as a novel method to monitor nanoparticle dynamics in the hydrogel during FUS exposure. FUS exposure at 1 MHz and 1 MPa was performed to detect any increase in nanoparticle diffusion or particle streaming at acoustic parameters relevant for FUS in combination with microbubbles. Results were compared to a model of acoustic streaming. The nanoparticles displayed anomalous diffusion in the hydrogel, and FUS with a duty cycle of 20% increased the nanoparticle diffusion coefficient by 23%. No increase in diffusion was found for lower duty cycles. FUS displaced the hydrogel itself at duty cycles above 10%; however, acoustic streaming was found to be negligible. In conclusion, pulsed FUS alone cannot explain the enhanced penetration of nanoparticles seen when using FUS and microbubbles for nanoparticle delivery, but it could be used as a tool to enhance diffusion of particles in the tumor ECM.

2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 154(1): 334-345, 2023 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37458513

RESUMEN

Equations describing acoustic streaming in soft, porous media driven by focused ultrasound are derived based on the assumption that acoustic waves pass through the porous material as if it were homogeneous. From these equations, a model that predicts the time-averaged flow on the macroscopic scale, as well as the advective transport of the trace components, is created. The model is used to perform simulations for different shapes of the focused ultrasound beam. For a given shape, and using the paraxial approximation for the ultrasound, the acoustic streaming is found to be linearly proportional to the applied ultrasound intensity, to the permeability of the porous material and to the attenuation coefficient, and inversely proportional to the liquid viscosity. Results from simulations are compared to a simplified expression stating that the dimensionless volumetric liquid flux is equal to the dimensionless acoustic radiation force. This approximation for the acoustic streaming is found to be reasonable near the beam axis for focused ultrasound beam shapes that are long in the axial direction, compared to their width. Finally, a comparison is made between the model and experimental results on acoustic streaming in a gel, and good agreement is found.

3.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 49(9): 2081-2088, 2023 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37336691

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Pre-clinical trials have obtained promising results that focused ultrasound (FUS) combined with microbubbles (MBs) increases tumor uptake and the therapeutic effect of drugs. The aims of the study described here were to investigate whether FUS and MBs could improve the effect of chemotherapy in patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer and to investigate the safety and feasibility of using FUS + MBs. METHODS: We included 17 patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer, selected two lesions in each patient's liver and randomized the lesions for, respectively, treatment with FUS + MBs or control. After chemotherapy (FOLFIRI or FOLFOXIRI), the lesions were treated with FUS (frequency = 1.67 MHz, mechanical index = 0.5, pulse repetition frequency = 0.33 Hz, 33 oscillations, duty cycle = 0.2%-0.4% and MBs (SonoVue) for 35 min). Nine boluses of MBs were injected intravenously at 3.5 min intervals. Patients were scheduled for four cycles of treatment. Changes in the size of metastases were determined from computed tomography images. RESULTS: Treatment with FUS + MBs is safe at the settings used. There was considerable variation in treatment response between lesions and mixed response between lesions receiving only chemotherapy. There is a tendency toward larger-volume reduction in lesions treated with FUS + MBs compared with control lesions, but a mixed response to chemotherapy and lesion heterogeneity make it difficult to interpret the results. CONCLUSION: The combination of FUS and MBs is a safe, feasible and available strategy for improving the effect of chemotherapy in cancer patients. Therapeutic effect was not demonstrated in this trial. Multicenter trials with standardized protocols should be performed.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias Colorrectales , Neoplasias Hepáticas , Humanos , Barrera Hematoencefálica , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/métodos , Neoplasias Hepáticas/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias Hepáticas/tratamiento farmacológico , Microburbujas
4.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 153(3): 1766, 2023 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37002069

RESUMEN

This paper presents an initial investigation into the use of dual frequency pulse-echo ultrasound, second order ultrasound field (SURF) imaging, to measure the fat content of soft tissues. The SURF imaging method was used to measure the non-linear bulk elasticity (NBE) of several fatty phantoms that were created by mixing different mass fractions of soybean oil uniformly into agar phantoms. The median of the measured NBE within the estimation region was found to increase linearly with fat mass fraction (R2 = 0.99), from 1.7 GPa-1 at 9.6% fat to 2.52 GPa-1 at 63.6% fat, thus, showing promise as a sensitive parameter for fat content measurement. Comparisons to mixture laws in earlier literature are made, and the most important error sources that need to be considered for the in vivo applications of the method are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Ultrasonografía , Elasticidad , Fantasmas de Imagen
5.
J Clin Transl Hepatol ; 11(2): 284-294, 2023 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36643050

RESUMEN

Background and Aims: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) includes a range of progressive disorders generated by excess lipid accumulation in the liver leading to hepatic steatosis and eventually fibrosis. We aimed to identify by high performance mass spectrometry-based proteomics the main signaling pathways and liver proteome changes induced by hypercholesterolemia in a rabbit atherosclerotic model that induced high accumulation of lipids in the liver. Methods: The effect of combined lipid-lowering drugs (statins and anti-PCSK9 monoclonal antibody) were used after the interruption of the hypercholesterolemic diet to identify also the potential mediators, such as alarmins, responsible for the irreversible NAFLD build up under the hyperlipidemic sustained stress. Results: Proteomic analysis revealed a number of proteins whose abundance was altered. They were components of metabolic pathways including fatty-acid degradation, glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. Mitochondrial dysfunction indicated alteration at the mitochondrial respiratory chain level and down-regulation of NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase. The expression of a majority of cytochromes (P4502E1, b5, and c) were up-regulated by lipid-lowering treatment. Long-term hyperlipidemic stress, even with a low-fat diet and lipid-lowering treatment, was accompanied by alarmin release (annexins, galectins, HSPs, HMGB1, S100 proteins, calreticulin, and fibronectin) that generated local inflammation and induced liver steatosis and aggressive fibrosis (by high abundance of galectin 3, fibronectin, and calreticulin). Conclusions: The novel findings of this study were related to the residual effects of hyperlipidemic stress with consistent, combined lipid-lowering treatment with statin and inhibitor of PCSK9.

6.
PLoS One ; 17(11): e0276292, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36327225

RESUMEN

Contrast enhanced ultrasound is a powerful diagnostic tool and ultrasound contrast media are based on microbubbles (MBs). The use of MBs in drug delivery applications and molecular imaging is a relatively new field of research which has gained significant interest during the last decade. MBs available for clinical use are fragile with short circulation half-lives due to the use of a thin encapsulating shell for stabilization of the gas core. Thick-shelled MBs can have improved circulation half-lives, incorporate larger amounts of drugs for enhanced drug delivery or facilitate targeting for use in molecular ultrasound imaging. However, methods for robust imaging of thick-shelled MBs are currently not available. We propose a simple multi-pulse imaging technique which is able to visualize thick-shelled polymeric MBs with a superior contrast-to-tissue ratio (CTR) compared to commercially available harmonic techniques. The method is implemented on a high-end ultrasound scanner and in-vitro imaging in a tissue mimicking flow phantom results in a CTR of up to 23 dB. A proof-of-concept study of molecular ultrasound imaging in a soft tissue inflammation model in rabbit is then presented where the new imaging technique showed an enhanced accumulation of targeted MBs in the inflamed tissue region compared to non-targeted MBs and a mean CTR of 13.3 dB for stationary MBs. The presence of fluorescently labelled MBs was verified by confocal microscopy imaging of tissue sections post-mortem.


Asunto(s)
Medios de Contraste , Microburbujas , Animales , Conejos , Ultrasonografía/métodos , Fantasmas de Imagen , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/métodos
7.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(19)2022 Sep 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36232476

RESUMEN

Increased levels of low-density lipoproteins are the main risk factor in the initiation and progression of atherosclerosis. Although statin treatment can effectively lower these levels, there is still a residual risk of cardiovascular events. We hypothesize that a specific panel of stress-sensing molecules (alarmins) could indicate the persistence of silent atherosclerosis residual risk. New Zealand White rabbits were divided into: control group (C), a group that received a high-fat diet for twelve weeks (Au), and a treated hyperlipidemic group with a lipid diet for eight weeks followed by a standard diet and hypolipidemic treatment (atorvastatin and PCSK9 siRNA-inhibitor) for four weeks (Asi). Mass spectrometry experiments of left ventricle lysates were complemented by immunologic and genomic studies to corroborate the data. The hyperlipidemic diet determined a general alarmin up-regulation tendency over the C group. A significant spectral abundance increase was measured for specific heat shock proteins, S100 family members, HMGB1, and Annexin A1. The hypolipidemic treatment demonstrated a reversed regulation trend with non-significant spectral alteration over the C group for some of the identified alarmins. Our study highlights the discriminating potential of alarmins in hyperlipidemia or following hypolipidemic treatment. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD035692.


Asunto(s)
Anexina A1 , Aterosclerosis , Proteína HMGB1 , Inhibidores de Hidroximetilglutaril-CoA Reductasas , Alarminas , Animales , Aterosclerosis/metabolismo , Atorvastatina , Proteína HMGB1/metabolismo , Proteínas de Choque Térmico/metabolismo , Hipolipemiantes/farmacología , Hipolipemiantes/uso terapéutico , Lipoproteínas LDL/metabolismo , Proproteína Convertasa 9/metabolismo , ARN Interferente Pequeño , Conejos
8.
Phys Med Biol ; 67(19)2022 09 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36084626

RESUMEN

Objective.Radiotherapy of left-sided breast cancer in deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) reduces the heart dose. Surface guided radiotherapy (SGRT) can guide the DIBH, but the accuracy is subject to variations in the chest wall position relative to the patient surface.Approach.In this study, ten left-sided breast cancer patients received DIBH radiotherapy with tangential fields in 15-18 fractions. After initial SGRT setup in free breathing an orthogonal MV/kV image pair was acquired during SGRT-guided breath-hold. The couch was corrected to align the chest wall during another breath-hold, and a new SGRT reference surface was acquired for the gating. The chest wall position error during treatment was determined from continuous cine MV images in the imager direction perpendicular to the cranio-caudal direction. A treatment error budget was made with individual contributions from the online registration of the setup MV image, the difference in breath-hold level between setup imaging and SGRT reference surface acquisition, the SGRT level during treatment, and intra-fraction shifts of the chest wall relative to the SGRT reference surface. In addition to the original setup protocol (Scenario A), SGRT was also simulated with better integration of image-guidance by capturing either the new reference surface (Scenario B) or the SGRT positional signal (Scenario C) simultaneously with the setup MV image, and accounting for the image-guided couch correction by shifting the SGRT reference surface digitally.Main results.In general, the external SGRT signal correlated well with the internal chest wall position error (correlation coefficient >0.7 for 75% of field deliveries), but external-to-internal target position offsets above 2 mm occasionally occurred (13% of fractions). The PTV margin required to account for the treatment error was 3.5 mm (Scenario A), 3.4 mm (B), and 3.1 mm (C).Significance. Further integration of SGRT with image-guidance may improve treatment accuracy and workflow although the current study did not show large accuracy improvements of scenario B and C compared to scenario A.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Mama , Radioterapia Guiada por Imagen , Neoplasias de Mama Unilaterales , Neoplasias de la Mama/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias de la Mama/radioterapia , Contencion de la Respiración , Femenino , Humanos , Dosificación Radioterapéutica , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador/métodos , Radioterapia Guiada por Imagen/métodos , Neoplasias de Mama Unilaterales/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias de Mama Unilaterales/radioterapia
9.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 48(9): 1840-1857, 2022 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35773079

RESUMEN

Acoustic Cluster Therapy (ACT®) is a platform for improving drug delivery and has had promising pre-clinical results. A clinical trial is ongoing. ACT® is based on microclusters of microbubbles-microdroplets that, when sonicated, form a large ACT® bubble. The aim of this study was to obtain new knowledge on the dynamic formation and oscillations of ACT® bubbles by ultrafast optical imaging in a microchannel. The high-speed recordings revealed the microbubble-microdroplet fusion, and the gas in the microbubble acted as a vaporization seed for the microdroplet. Subsequently, the bubble grew by gas diffusion from the surrounding medium and became a large ACT® bubble with a diameter of 5-50 µm. A second ultrasound exposure at lower frequency caused the ACT® bubble to oscillate. The recorded oscillations were compared with simulations using the modified Rayleigh-Plesset equation. A term accounting for the physical boundary imposed by the microchannel wall was included. The recorded oscillation amplitudes were approximately 1-2 µm, hence similar to oscillations of smaller contrast agent microbubbles. These findings, together with our previously reported promising pre-clinical therapeutic results, suggest that these oscillations covering a large part of the vessel wall because of the large bubble volume can substantially improve therapeutic outcome.


Asunto(s)
Microburbujas , Microscopía , Acústica , Medios de Contraste , Ultrasonografía
10.
Med Phys ; 49(6): 3574-3584, 2022 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35395104

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Hypofractionation in prostate radiotherapy is of increasing interest. Steep dose gradients and a large weight on each individual fraction emphasize the need for motion management. Real-time motion management techniques such as multileaf collimator (MLC) tracking or couch tracking typically adjust for translational motion while rotations remain uncompensated with unknown dosimetric impact. PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to demonstrate and validate dynamic real-time rotation-including dose reconstruction during radiotherapy experiments with and without MLC and couch tracking. METHODS: Real-time dose reconstruction was performed using the in-house developed software DoseTracker. DoseTracker receives streamed target positions and accelerator parameters during treatment delivery and uses a pencil beam algorithm with water density assumption to reconstruct the dose in a moving target. DoseTracker's ability to reconstruct motion-induced dose errors in a dynamically rotating and translating target was investigated during three different scenarios: (1) no motion compensation and translational motion correction with (2) MLC tracking and (3) couch tracking. In each scenario, dose reconstruction was performed online and in real time during delivery of two dual-arc volumetric-modulated arc therapy prostate plans with a prescribed fraction dose of 7 Gy to the prostate and simultaneous intraprostatic lesion boosts with doses of at least 8 Gy, but up to 10 Gy as long as the organs at risk dose constraints were fulfilled. The plans were delivered to a pelvis phantom that replicated three patient-measured motion traces using a rotational insert with 21 layers of EBT3 film spaced 2.5 mm apart. DoseTracker repeatedly calculated the actual motion-including dose increment and the planned static dose increment since the last calculation in 84 500 points in the film stack. The experiments were performed with a TrueBeam accelerator with MLC and couch tracking based on electromagnetic transponders embedded in the film stack. The motion-induced dose error was quantified as the difference between the final cumulative dose with motion and without motion using the 2D 2%/2 mm γ-failure rate and the difference in dose to 95% of the clinical target volume (CTV ΔD95% ) and the gross target volume (GTV ΔD95% ) as well as the difference in dose to 0.1 cm3 of the urethra, bladder, and rectum (ΔD0.1CC ). The motion-induced errors were compared between dose reconstructions and film measurements. RESULTS: The dose was reconstructed in all calculation points at a mean frequency of 4.7 Hz. The root-mean-square difference between real-time reconstructed and film-measured motion-induced errors was 3.1%-points (γ-failure rate), 0.13 Gy (CTV ΔD95% ), 0.23 Gy (GTV ΔD95% ), 0.19 Gy (urethra ΔD0.1CC ), 0.09 Gy (bladder ΔD0.1CC ), and 0.07 Gy (rectum ΔD0.1CC ). CONCLUSIONS: In a series of phantom experiments, online real-time rotation-including dose reconstruction was performed for the first time. The calculated motion-induced errors agreed well with film measurements. The dose reconstruction provides a valuable tool for monitoring dose delivery and investigating the efficacy of advanced motion-compensation techniques in the presence of translational and rotational motion.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Próstata , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Humanos , Masculino , Fantasmas de Imagen , Próstata , Neoplasias de la Próstata/radioterapia , Radiometría/métodos , Dosificación Radioterapéutica , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador/métodos , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada/métodos
11.
Ultrason Sonochem ; 85: 105986, 2022 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35358937

RESUMEN

The aim of this study was to develop high load-capacity antibubbles that can be visualized using diagnostic ultrasound and the encapsulated drug can be released and delivered using clinically translatable ultrasound. The antibubbles were developed by optimising a silica nanoparticle stabilised double emulsion template. We produced an emulsion with a mean size diameter of 4.23 ± 1.63 µm where 38.9 ± 3.1% of the droplets contained a one or more cores. Following conversion to antibubbles, the mean size decreased to 2.96 ± 1.94 µm where 99% of antibubbles were <10 µm. The antibubbles had a peak attenuation of 4.8 dB/cm at 3.0 MHz at a concentration of 200 × 103 particles/mL and showed distinct attenuation spikes at frequencies between 5.5 and 13.5 MHz. No increase in subharmonic response was observed for the antibubbles in contrast to SonoVue®. High-speed imaging revealed that antibubbles can release their cores at MIs of 0.6. In vivo imaging indicated that the antibubbles have a long half-life of 68.49 s vs. 40.02 s for SonoVue®. The antibubbles could be visualised using diagnostic ultrasound and could be disrupted at MIs of ≥0.6. The in vitro drug delivery results showed that antibubbles can significantly improve drug delivery (p < 0.0001) and deliver the drug within the antibubbles. In conclusion antibubbles are a viable concept for ultrasound guided drug delivery.


Asunto(s)
Microburbujas , Nanopartículas , Medios de Contraste , Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/métodos , Emulsiones , Ultrasonografía
12.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 2814, 2022 02 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35181730

RESUMEN

Non-apoptotic regulated cell death (ferroptosis and necroptosis) leads to the release of damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), which initiate and perpetuate a non-infectious inflammatory response. We hypothesize that DAMPs and non-apoptotic regulated cell death are critical players of atherosclerotic plaque progression with inadequate response to lipid-lowering treatment. We aimed to uncover the silent mechanisms that govern the existing residual risk of cardiovascular-related mortality in experimental atherosclerosis. Proteomic and genomic approaches were applied on the ascending aorta of hyperlipidemic rabbits and controls with and without lipid-lowering treatment. The hyperlipidemic animals, which presented numerous heterogeneous atherosclerotic lesions, exhibited high concentrations of serum lipids and increased lipid peroxidation oxidative stress markers. The analyses revealed the significant upregulation of DAMPs and proteins implicated in ferroptosis and necroptosis by hyperlipidemia. Some of them did not respond to lipid-lowering treatment. Dysregulation of five proteins involved in non-apoptotic regulated cell death proteins (VDAC1, VDAC3, FTL, TF and PCBP1) and nine associated DAMPs (HSP90AA1, HSP90AB1, ANXA1, LGALS3, HSP90B1, S100A11, FN, CALR, H3-3A) was not corrected by the treatment. These proteins could play a key role in the atherosclerotic silent evolution and may possess an unexplored therapeutic potential. Mass spectrometry data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD026379.


Asunto(s)
Alarminas/genética , Aterosclerosis/genética , Lípidos/sangre , Placa Aterosclerótica/genética , Alarminas/sangre , Animales , Aorta/metabolismo , Aorta/patología , Apoptosis/genética , Aterosclerosis/sangre , Aterosclerosis/patología , Dieta Alta en Grasa/efectos adversos , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Progresión de la Enfermedad , Regulación de la Expresión Génica/genética , Humanos , Peroxidación de Lípido/genética , Lípidos/genética , Espectrometría de Masas , Estrés Oxidativo/genética , Placa Aterosclerótica/sangre , Placa Aterosclerótica/patología , Proteoma/metabolismo , Conejos
13.
Bioethics ; 36(1): 42-48, 2022 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34674281

RESUMEN

The aim of this article is to argue that one of the central arguments against company-sponsored non-medical egg freezing, namely that this practice is contrary to the reproductive autonomy of women, can be difficult to sustain under certain conditions. More specifically, we argue that company-sponsored egg freezing is not necessarily in conflict with the most common requirements for autonomous choice. That is, there is no reason to assume that employees cannot be adequately informed beforehand about what is scientifically known about the practice, and/or that they lack the required capacity to understand and process this information. Although they may feel a certain pressure to comply with the wishes of their employer, this concern can plausibly be alleviated through privacy regulations. In any event, such pressure is arguably not stronger than or relevantly different from other types of pressure on the labour market that most people readily accept as being ethically acceptable. Finally, we argue that company-sponsored non-medical egg freezing may mitigate certain types of oppressive socialization, although it may well perpetuate others, and should in any case arguably be dealt with through guidelines and counselling, which would ensure that women make autonomous choices when companies offer egg freezing.


Asunto(s)
Preservación de la Fertilidad , Consejo , Criopreservación , Femenino , Humanos , Reproducción
14.
Med Phys ; 49(2): 1161-1180, 2022 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34913495

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Lung stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) is a radiation therapy success story with level 1 evidence demonstrating its efficacy. To provide real-time respiratory motion management for lung SABR, several commercial and preclinical markerless lung target tracking (MLTT) approaches have been developed. However, these approaches have yet to be benchmarked using a common measurement methodology. This knowledge gap motivated the MArkerless lung target Tracking CHallenge (MATCH). The aim was to localize lung targets accurately and precisely in a retrospective in silico study and a prospective experimental study. METHODS: MATCH was an American Association of Physicists in Medicine sponsored Grand Challenge. Common materials for the in silico and experimental studies were the experiment setup including an anthropomorphic thorax phantom with two targets within the lungs, and a lung SABR planning protocol. The phantom was moved rigidly with patient-measured lung target motion traces, which also acted as ground truth motion. In the retrospective in silico study a volumetric modulated arc therapy treatment was simulated and a dataset consisting of treatment planning data and intra-treatment kilovoltage (kV) and megavoltage (MV) images for four blinded lung motion traces was provided to the participants. The participants used their MLTT approach to localize the moving target based on the dataset. In the experimental study, the participants received the phantom experiment setup and five patient-measured lung motion traces. The participants used their MLTT approach to localize the moving target during an experimental SABR phantom treatment. The challenge was open to any participant, and participants could complete either one or both parts of the challenge. For both the in silico and experimental studies the MLTT results were analyzed and ranked using the prospectively defined metric of the percentage of the tracked target position being within 2 mm of the ground truth. RESULTS: A total of 30 institutions registered and 15 result submissions were received, four for the in silico study and 11 for the experimental study. The participating MLTT approaches were: Accuray CyberKnife (2), Accuray Radixact (2), BrainLab Vero, C-RAD, and preclinical MLTT (5) on a conventional linear accelerator (Varian TrueBeam). For the in silico study the percentage of the 3D tracking error within 2 mm ranged from 50% to 92%. For the experimental study, the percentage of the 3D tracking error within 2 mm ranged from 39% to 96%. CONCLUSIONS: A common methodology for measuring the accuracy of MLTT approaches has been developed and used to benchmark preclinical and commercial approaches retrospectively and prospectively. Several MLTT approaches were able to track the target with sub-millimeter accuracy and precision. The study outcome paves the way for broader clinical implementation of MLTT. MATCH is live, with datasets and analysis software being available online at https://www.aapm.org/GrandChallenge/MATCH/ to support future research.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias Pulmonares , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Humanos , Pulmón/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias Pulmonares/diagnóstico por imagen , Neoplasias Pulmonares/radioterapia , Fantasmas de Imagen , Estudios Prospectivos , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador , Estudios Retrospectivos , Tórax
15.
Radiother Oncol ; 164: 175-182, 2021 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34597738

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: The outcome of radiotherapy is a direct consequence of the dose delivered to the patient. Yet image-guidance and motion management to date focus on geometrical considerations as a practical surrogate for dose. Here, we propose real-time dose-guidance realized through continuous motion-including dose reconstructions and demonstrate this new concept in simulated liver stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) delivery. MATERIALS AND METHODS: During simulated liver SBRT delivery, in-house developed software performed real-time motion-including reconstruction of the tumor dose delivered so far and continuously predicted the remaining fraction tumor dose. The total fraction dose was estimated as the sum of the delivered and predicted doses, both with and without the emulated couch correction that maximized the predicted final CTV D95% (minimum dose to 95% of the clinical target volume). Dose-guided treatments were simulated for 15 liver SBRT patients previously treated with tumor motion monitoring, using both sinusoidal tumor motion and the actual patient-measured motion. A dose-guided couch correction was triggered if it improved the predicted final CTV D95% with 3, 4 or 5 %-points. The final CTV D95% of the dose-guidance strategy was compared with simulated treatments using geometry guided couch corrections (Wilcoxon signed-rank test). RESULTS: Compared to geometry guidance, dose-guided couch corrections improved the median CTV D95% with 0.5-1.5 %-points (p < 0.01) for sinusoidal motions and with 0.9 %-points (p < 0.01, 3 %-points trigger threshold), 0.5 %-points (p = 0.03, 4 %-points threshold) and 1.2 %-points (p = 0.09, 5 %-points threshold) for patient-measured tumor motion. CONCLUSION: Real-time dose-guidance was proposed and demonstrated to be superior to geometrical adaptation in liver SBRT simulations.


Asunto(s)
Radiocirugia , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Humanos , Movimiento (Física) , Dosificación Radioterapéutica , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador
16.
Phys Med Biol ; 66(20)2021 10 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34544071

RESUMEN

Compared to x-ray-based stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) of liver cancer, proton SBRT may reduce the normal liver tissue dose. For an optimal trade-off between target and liver dose, a non-uniform dose prescription is often applied in x-ray SBRT, but lacks investigation for proton SBRT. Also, proton SBRT is prone to breathing-induced motion-uncertainties causing target mishit or dose alterations by interplay with the proton delivery. This study investigated non-uniform and uniform dose prescription in proton-based liver SBRT, including effects of rigid target motion observed during planning-4DCT and treatment. The study was based on 42 x-ray SBRT fractions delivered to 14 patients under electromagnetic motion-monitoring. For each patient, a non-uniform and uniform proton plan were made. The uniform plan was renormalized to be iso-toxic with the non-uniform plan using a NTCP model for radiation-induced liver disease. The motion data were used in treatment simulations to estimate the delivered target dose with rigid motion. Treatment simulations were performed with and without a repainting scheme designed to mitigate interplay effects. Including rigid motion, the achieved CTV mean dose after three fractions delivered without repainting was on average (±SD) 24.8 ± 8.4% higher and the D98%was 16.2 ± 11.3% higher for non-uniform plans than for uniform plans. The interplay-induced increase in D2%relative to the static plans was reduced from 3.2 ± 4.1% without repainting to -0.5 ± 1.7% with repainting for non-uniform plans and from 1.5 ± 2.0% to 0.1 ± 1.3% for uniform plans. Considerable differences were observed between estimated CTV doses based on 4DCT motion and intra-treatment motion. In conclusion, non-uniform dose prescription in proton SBRT may provide considerably higher tumor doses than uniform prescription for the same complication risk. Due to motion variability, target doses estimated from 4DCT motion may not accurately reflect the delivered dose. Future studies including modelling of deformations and associated range uncertainties are warranted to confirm the findings.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias Hepáticas , Neoplasias Pulmonares , Radiocirugia , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Humanos , Neoplasias Hepáticas/radioterapia , Neoplasias Pulmonares/radioterapia , Prescripciones , Protones , Radiocirugia/efectos adversos , Dosificación Radioterapéutica , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador
17.
Acta Oncol ; 60(10): 1275-1282, 2021 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34224288

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Visual inspections of anatomical changes observed on daily cone-beam CT (CBCT) images are often used as triggers for radiotherapy plan adaptation to avoid unacceptable dose levels to the target or OARs. Direct CBCT dose calculations would improve the ability to adapt only those plans where dosimetric changes are observed. This study investigates the accuracy of dose calculations on CBCTs. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Calibration curves were obtained for CBCT imagers at nine identical accelerators. CBCT scans of a phantom with different density inserts were recorded for two scan modes (Head-Neck and Pelvis) and mean calibration curves were calculated. Subsequently, CBCT scans of the phantom with six different density inserts were recorded, the dose distributions on the CBCTs were calculated and compared to dose on the planning CT (pCT). The uncertainty was quantified by the dosimetric difference between the pCT and the CBCT. The two mean calibration curves were used to calculate the daily delivered CBCT dose for ten Head-Neck-, eleven Lung-, and ten pelvic patients. Additional patient calculations were performed using low-HU empirically corrected calibration curves. Patient doses were compared on target coverage and mean dose, and D1cc for OARs. RESULTS: The dose differences between pCT and CBCT for phantom data were small for all DVH parameters, with mean deviations below ±0.6% for both CBCT modes. For patient data, it was found that low-HU corrected calibration curves performed the best. The mean deviations for the mean dose and coverage of the target were 0.2%±0.7% and 0.1%±0.6%, across all patient groups. CONCLUSION: Dose calculation on CBCT images results in target coverage and mean dose with an accuracy of the order of 1%, which makes this acceptable for clinical use. The CBCT mode specific calibration curves can be used at all identical imaging devices and for all patient groups.


Asunto(s)
Tomografía Computarizada de Haz Cónico , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Calibración , Humanos , Fantasmas de Imagen , Dosificación Radioterapéutica , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador
18.
Ultrasound Med Biol ; 47(5): 1319-1333, 2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33549379

RESUMEN

Delivery of drugs and nanomedicines to tumors is often heterogeneous and insufficient and, thus, of limited efficacy. Microbubbles in combination with ultrasound have been found to improve delivery to tumors, enhancing accumulation and penetration. We used a subcutaneous prostate cancer xenograft model in mice to investigate the effect of free and nanoparticle-encapsulated cabazitaxel in combination with ultrasound and microbubbles with a lipid shell or a shell of nanoparticles. Sonopermeation reduced tumor growth and prolonged survival (26%-100%), whether the free drug was co-injected with lipid-shelled microbubbles or the nanoformulation was co-injected with lipid-shelled or nanoparticle-shelled microbubbles. Coherently with the improved therapeutic response, we found enhanced uptake of nanoparticles directly after ultrasound treatment that lasted several weeks (2.3 × -15.8 × increase). Neither cavitation dose nor total accumulation of nanoparticles could explain the variation within treatment groups, emphasizing the need for a better understanding of the tumor biology and mechanisms involved in ultrasound-mediated treatment.


Asunto(s)
Sistemas de Liberación de Medicamentos/métodos , Microburbujas , Nanopartículas , Neoplasias de la Próstata/tratamiento farmacológico , Taxoides/administración & dosificación , Taxoides/farmacocinética , Animales , Terapia Combinada , Xenoinjertos , Masculino , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos BALB C , Resultado del Tratamiento , Terapia por Ultrasonido
19.
Med Phys ; 48(3): 1427-1435, 2021 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33415778

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Intrafractional motion during radiotherapy delivery can deteriorate the delivered dose. Dynamic rotational motion of up to 38 degrees has been reported during prostate cancer radiotherapy, but methods to determine the dosimetric consequences of such rotations are lacking. Here, we create and experimentally validate a dose reconstruction method that accounts for dynamic rotations and translations in a commercial treatment planning system (TPS). Interplay effects are quantified by comparing dose reconstructions with dynamic and constant rotations. METHODS: The dose reconstruction accumulates the dose in points of interest while the points are moved in six degrees of freedom (6DoF) in a precalculated time-resolved four-dimensional (4D) dose matrix to emulate dynamic motion in a patient. The required 4D dose matrix was generated by splitting the original treatment plan into multiple sub-beams, each representing 0.4 s dose delivery, and recalculating the dose of the split plan in the TPS (Eclipse). The dose accumulation was performed via TPS scripting by querying the dose of each sub-beam in dynamically moving points, allowing dose reconstruction with any dynamic motion. The dose reconstruction was validated with film dosimetry for two prostate dual arc VMAT plans with intra-prostatic lesion boosts. The plans were delivered to a pelvis phantom with internal dynamic rotational motion of a film stack (21 films with 2.5 mm separation). Each plan was delivered without motion and with three prostate motion traces. Motion-including dose reconstruction was performed for each motion experiment using the actual dynamic rotation as well as a constant rotation equal to the mean rotation during the experiment. For each experiment, the 3%/2 mm γ failure rate of the TPS dose reconstruction was calculated with the film measurement being the reference. For each motion experiment, the motion-induced 3%/2 mm γ failure rate was calculated using the static delivery as the reference and compared between film measurements and TPS dose reconstruction. DVH metrics for RT structures fully contained in the film volume were also compared between film and TPS. RESULTS: The mean γ failure rate of the TPS dose reconstructions when compared to film doses was 0.8% (two static experiments) and 1.7% (six dynamic experiments). The mean (range) of the motion-induced γ failure rate in film measurements was 35.4% (21.3-59.2%). The TPS dose reconstruction agreed with these experimental γ failure rates with root-mean-square errors of 2.1% (dynamic rotation dose reconstruction) and 17.1% (dose reconstruction assuming constant rotation). By DVH metrics, the mean (range) difference between dose reconstructions with dynamic and constant rotation was 4.3% (-0.3-10.6%) (urethra D 2 % ), -0.6% (-5.6%-2.5%) (urethra D 99 % ), 1.1% (-7.1-7.7%) (GTV D 2 % ), -1.4% (-17.4-7.1%) (GTV D 95 % ), -1.2% (-17.1-5.7%) (GTV D 99 % ), and -0.1% (-3.2-7.6%) (GTV mean dose). Dose reconstructions with dynamic motion revealed large interplay effects (cold and hot spots). CONCLUSIONS: A method to perform dose reconstructions for dynamic 6DoF motion in a TPS was developed and experimentally validated. It revealed large differences in dose distribution between dynamic and constant rotations not identifiable through dose reconstructions with constant rotation.


Asunto(s)
Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Humanos , Masculino , Fantasmas de Imagen , Radiometría , Dosificación Radioterapéutica
20.
Radiother Oncol ; 156: 10-18, 2021 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33264640

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Both gating and tracking can mitigate the deteriorating dosimetric impact of intrafraction translation during prostate stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). However, their ability to manage intrafraction rotation has not yet been thoroughly investigated. The dosimetric accuracy of gating, MLC tracking and couch tracking to manage intrafraction prostate rotation was investigated. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Treatment plans for end-to-end tests of prostate SBRT with focal boosting were generated for a dynamic anthropomorphic pelvis phantom. The phantom applied internal lateral rotation (up to 25°) and coupled vertical and longitudinal translation of a radiochromic film stack that was used for dose measurements. Dose was delivered for each plan while the phantom applied motion according to three typical prostate motion traces without compensation (i), with gating (ii), with MLC tracking (iii) or with couch tracking (iv). Measured doses for the four motion compensation strategies were compared with the planned dose in terms of γ-index analysis, target coverage and organs at risk (OAR) sparing. RESULTS: Intrafraction rotation reduced the 3%(global)/2mm γ-index passing rate (γPR) for the prostate target volume by median (range) -33.2% (-68.6%, -4.1%) when no motion compensation was applied. The use of motion compensation improved the γPR by 13.2% (-0.4%, 32.9%) for gating, by 6.0% (-0.8%, 27.7%) for MLC tracking and by 11.1% (1.2%, 22.9%) for couch tracking. The three compensation techniques improved the target coverage in most cases. Gating showed better OAR sparing than MLC tracking or couch tracking. CONCLUSIONS: Compensation of intrafraction prostate rotation with gating, MLC tracking and couch tracking was investigated experimentally for the first time. All three techniques improved the dosimetric accuracy, but residual motion-related dose errors remained due to the lack of rotation correction.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Próstata , Radioterapia de Intensidad Modulada , Humanos , Masculino , Movimiento , Neoplasias de la Próstata/radioterapia , Planificación de la Radioterapia Asistida por Computador , Rotación
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