Literature DB >> 27845913

Bladder accumulated dose in image-guided high-dose-rate brachytherapy for locally advanced cervical cancer and its relation to urinary toxicity.

Roja Zakariaee1, Ghassan Hamarneh, Colin J Brown, Marc Gaudet, Christina Aquino-Parsons, Ingrid Spadinger.   

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to estimate locally accumulated dose to the bladder in multi-fraction high-dose-date (HDR) image-guided intracavitary brachytherapy (IG-ICBT) for cervical cancer, and study the locally-accumulated dose parameters as predictors of late urinary toxicity. A retrospective study of 60 cervical cancer patients who received five HDR IG-ICBT sessions was performed. The bladder outer and inner surfaces were segmented for all sessions and a bladder-wall contour point-set was created in MATLAB. The bladder-wall point-sets for each patient were registered using a deformable point-set registration toolbox called coherent point drift (CPD), and the fraction doses were accumulated. Various dosimetric and volumetric parameters were calculated using the registered doses, including [Formula: see text] (minimum dose to the most exposed n-cm3 volume of bladder wall), r V n Gy (wall volume receiving at least m Gy), and [Formula: see text] (minimum equivalent biologically weighted dose to the most exposed n-cm3 of bladder wall), where n  =  1/2/5/10 and m  =  3/5/10. Minimum dose to contiguous 1 and 2 cm3 hot-spot volumes was also calculated. The unregistered dose volume histogram (DVH)-summed equivalent of [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] parameters (i.e. [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]) were determined for comparison. Late urinary toxicity was assessed using the LENT-SOMA scale, with toxicity Grade 0-1 categorized as Controls and Grade 2-4 as Cases. A two-sample t-test was used to identify the differences between the means of Control and Case groups for all parameters. A binomial logistic regression was also performed between the registered dose parameters and toxicity grouping. Seventeen patients were in the Case and 43 patients in the Control group. Contiguous values were on average 16 and 18% smaller than parameters for 1 and 2 cm3 volumes, respectively. Contiguous values were on average 26 and 27% smaller than parameters. The only statistically significant finding for Case versus Control based on both methods of analysis was observed for r V3 Gy (p  =  0.01). DVH-summed parameters based on unregistered structure volumes overestimated the bladder dose in our patients, particularly when contiguous high dose volumes were considered. The bladder-wall volume receiving at least 3 Gy of accumulated dose may be a parameter of interest in further investigations of Grade 2+  urinary toxicity.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27845913     DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/61/24/8408

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Med Biol        ISSN: 0031-9155            Impact factor:   3.609


  2 in total

1.  Comparison of predictive performance for toxicity by accumulative dose of DVH parameter addition and DIR addition for cervical cancer patients.

Authors:  Yuya Miyasaka; Noriyuki Kadoya; Rei Umezawa; Yoshiki Takayama; Kengo Ito; Takaya Yamamoto; Shohei Tanaka; Suguru Dobashi; Ken Takeda; Kenji Nemoto; Takeo Iwai; Keiichi Jingu
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2021-01-01       Impact factor: 2.724

2.  High dose-rate tandem and ovoid brachytherapy in cervical cancer: dosimetric predictors of adverse events.

Authors:  Kara D Romano; Colin Hill; Daniel M Trifiletti; M Sean Peach; Bethany J Horton; Neil Shah; Dylan Campbell; Bruce Libby; Timothy N Showalter
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2018-07-16       Impact factor: 3.481

  2 in total

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