Literature DB >> 23718584

Lung sparing and dose escalation in a robust-inspired IMRT planning method for lung radiotherapy that accounts for intrafraction motion.

Claire McCann1, Thomas Purdie, Andrew Hope, Andrea Bezjak, Jean-Pierre Bissonnette.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To test the efficacy of a simple, robust-inspired intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) planning strategy for lung radiotherapy designed to reduce lung dose and escalate tumor dose using realistic dose accumulation tools.
METHODS: A deformable image registration tool was used to plan and accumulate dose over all phases of the breathing cycle for conventional and robust-inspired IMRT strategies of eight nonsmall cell lung cancer patients exhibiting peak-to-peak respiratory motion with amplitudes ranging from 1 to 2 cm in the craniocaudal direction. The authors' robust-inspired plans were designed to have smaller beam apertures based on target location during exhale, combined with edge-enhanced intensity maps to ensure target coverage during inspiration. For these, a new planning target volume defined as the rPTV was generated from a 5-mm isotropic expansion of the clinical target volume (CTV) on end-exhale combined with a boost volume, set to 110% of the prescription dose. Plans were evaluated in terms of (i) lung sparing and (ii) dose escalation for mean lung dose (MLD) isotoxicity. CTV and planning target volumes (PTV) coverage and lung dose were compared to the conventional IMRT approach.
RESULTS: Robust-inspired plans showed potential lung dose reductions in seven out of eight patients. For non-GTV lung, percent reductions of 3%-14% in MLD and 6%-15% in V20 were observed. For seven of eight cases, the robust-like approach yielded increased accumulated doses to CTV. Isotoxicity studies for MLD showed increased dose to the CTV and the rPTV, in the range of 104%-118% and 95%-114% of prescription dose, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: A 4D dose calculation based on deformable image registration was used to evaluate a robust-inspired planning strategy for lung radiotherapy. This method offers notable reductions to lung dose while improving tumor coverage through the use of reduced geometric margins combined with edge enhancements.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23718584     DOI: 10.1118/1.4805101

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


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