Literature DB >> 18491552

Comparison of fixed-beam IMRT, helical tomotherapy, and IMPT for selected cases.

Jan Muzik1, Martin Soukup, Markus Alber.   

Abstract

A growing number of advanced intensity modulated treatment techniques is becoming available. In this study, the specific strengths and weaknesses of four techniques, static and dynamic multileaf collimator (MLC), conventional linac-based IMRT, helical tomotherapy (HT), and spot-scanning proton therapy (IMPT) are investigated in the framework of biological, EUD-based dose optimization. All techniques were implemented in the same in-house dose optimization tool. Monte Carlo dose computation was used in all cases. All dose-limiting, normal tissue objectives were treated as hard constraints so as to facilitate comparability. Five patient cases were selected to offer each technique a chance to show its strengths: a deep-seated prostate case (for 15 MV linac-based IMRT), a pediatric case (for IMPT), an extensive head-and-neck case (for HT), a lung tumor (for HT), and an optical neurinoma (for noncoplanar linac-based IMRT with a miniMLC). The plans were compared by dose statistics and equivalent uniform dose metrics. All techniques delivered results that were comparable with respect to target coverage and the most dose-limiting normal tissues. Static MLC IMRT struggled to achieve sufficient target coverage at the same level of dose homogeneity in the lung case. IMPT gained the greatest advantage when lung sparing was important, but did not significantly reduce the risk of nearby organs. Tomotherapy and dynamic MLC IMRT showed mostly the same performance. Despite the apparent conceptual differences, all four techniques fare equally well for standard patient cases. The absence of relevant differences is in part due to biological optimization, which offers more freedom to shape the dose than do, e.g., dose volume histogram constraints. Each technique excels for certain classes of highly complex cases, and hence the various modalities should be viewed as complementary, rather than competing.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18491552     DOI: 10.1118/1.2890085

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  13 in total

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Authors:  Frank Heinzelmann; Daniela Thorwarth; Ulf Lamprecht; Theodor W Kaulich; Jörg Fuchs; Guido Seitz; Martin Ebinger; Rupert Handgretinger; Michael Bamberg; Martin Weinmann
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Review 4.  Molecular imaging-based dose painting: a novel paradigm for radiation therapy prescription.

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Review 6.  Dosimetric Comparison and Potential for Improved Clinical Outcomes of Paediatric CNS Patients Treated with Protons or IMRT.

Authors:  Kris S Armoogum; Nicola Thorp
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7.  Reducing the probability of radiation-induced hepatic toxicity by changing the treatment modality from helical tomotherapy to fixed-beam intensity-modulated radiotherapy.

Authors:  Jin Ho Song; Seok Hyun Son; Chul Seung Kay; Hong Seok Jang
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2015-10-20

8.  An in-silico comparison of proton beam and IMRT for postoperative radiotherapy in completely resected stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Abigail T Berman; Boon-Keng Kevin Teo; Derek Dolney; Samuel Swisher-McClure; Kambiz Shahnazi; Stefan Both; Ramesh Rengan
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9.  Re-irradiation of recurrent head and neck carcinomas: comparison of robust intensity modulated proton therapy treatment plans with helical tomotherapy.

Authors:  Martin Stuschke; Andreas Kaiser; Jehad Abu-Jawad; Christoph Pöttgen; Sabine Levegrün; Jonathan Farr
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2013-04-20       Impact factor: 3.481

10.  Innovations and the Use of Collimators in the Delivery of Pencil Beam Scanning Proton Therapy.

Authors:  Daniel E Hyer; Laura C Bennett; Theodore J Geoghegan; Martin Bues; Blake R Smith
Journal:  Int J Part Ther       Date:  2021-06-25
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