| Literature DB >> 23346140 |
Antony Palmer1, Orla Hayman, Sarah Muscat.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To evaluate whether Co-60 is equivalent to Ir-192 for HDR cervical brachytherapy, through 3D-DVH dose comparisons in standard and optimised plans. Previous studies have only considered 2D dosimetry, point dose comparisons or identical loading. Typical treatment times and economics are considered.Entities:
Keywords: Co-60; brachytherapy; cervix cancer; high dose-rate (HDR); treatment plan
Year: 2012 PMID: 23346140 PMCID: PMC3551368 DOI: 10.5114/jcb.2012.27952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Contemp Brachytherapy ISSN: 2081-2841
Fig. 1Comparison of isodose lines (5, 10, 20, 30, 50, 100 and 200% of prescription dose) for Co-60 source (solid lines) and Ir-192 source (dashed lines) for a standard HDR cervix treatment, with identical dwell positions and relative times, based on Manchester loading, normalised to 100% of prescription dose at Point A, shown in sagittal projection. (Condition [A] in method)
Fig. 2Dose distribution around the Ir-192 and Co-60 sources in a uniform unit-density medium. Dose rate variation as a function of distance from the sources, normalised at 2.0cm, (A) perpendicular to the source axis and (B) along the source axis. The radial dose functions are also shown in (A). (C) Anisotropy function variation with polar angle around the sources, at 2.0 cm from the source centre, with 0 degrees at the distal source tip
Comparison of point and dose-volume parameters for the treatment plans of eight patients produced using Co-60 and Ir-192 sources, (A) prescribed to Point A with identical dwell distribution, and (B) prescribed to the HR-CTV with typical clinical optimisation. (D2cc is expressed as the physical brachytherapy dose)
| (A) | Mean percentage difference, Co-60 to Ir-192 | SD of mean | Correlation, |
|---|---|---|---|
| HR-CTV V100% | +2.4% | 1.3 |
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| HR-CTV V150% | +5.9% | 3.3 |
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| HR-CTV V200% | +7.6% | 4.2 |
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| HR-CTV V400% | +22.1% | 9.4 |
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| HR-CTV D90(Gy) | +0.4% | 2.0 |
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| Bladder D2cc | +0.8% | 1.9 |
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| Bladder ICRU ref. point | +0.9% | 2.0 |
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| Rectum D2cc | +3.3% | 1.0 |
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| Rectum ICRU ref. point | +2.2% | 2.0 |
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| Sigmoid D2cc | −0.6% | 1.9 |
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| HR-CTV V100% | +0.7% | 1.4 |
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| HR-CTV V150% | +4.4% | 4.6 |
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| HR-CTV V200% | +7.0% | 3.0 |
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| HR-CTV V400% | +11.6% | 5.1 |
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| HR-CTV D90(Gy) | −0.2% | 2.0 |
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| Bladder D2cc | −0.4% | 2.6 |
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| Rectum D2cc | +0.9% | 3.3 |
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| Sigmoid D2cc | −0.3% | 3.5 |
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Fig. 3Comparison of sparing factors calculated for the bladder, rectum and sigmoid in eight cervix cancer patient plans, prescribed to HR-CTV, using Co-60 and Ir-192 HDR sources. (Condition [B] in method)
Selected physical properties of Ir-192 and Co-60 isotopes and HDR sources: mean energy (Eγ, mean) and energy range (Eγ, range) of gamma radiation, half-life time (T1/2), dose rate constant (), air kerma rate constant (K), typical initial source activity of HDR sources (A), and first tenth-value layer in concrete (TVLconcrete). (U = µGy/m2h). (From National Nuclear Data Centre [19])
| Isotope | Eγ, mean (MeV) | Eγ, range (MeV) | T1/2 (months) | Λ (cGy/hU) | K (U/GBq) | A (GBq) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ir-192 | 0.37 | 0.1–1.1 | 2.4 | 1.108 | 108 | 370 |
| Co-60 | 1.25 | 1.17 & 1.33 | 63.3 | 1.084 | 306 | 74 |
Fig. 4Comparison of total treatment irradiation times for Co-60 and Ir-192 sources for a typical cervix HDR treatment, as a function of time over a six year period, with Co-60 source change at five years and Ir-192 source change at four months