| Literature DB >> 29606150 |
Donna H Murrell1, Joanna M Laba2, Abigail Erickson1, Barbara Millman1, David A Palma2, Alexander V Louie3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lung stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) is associated with low morbidity, however there is an increased risk of treatment-related toxicity in tumors directly abutting or invading the proximal bronchial tree, termed 'ultra-central' tumors. As there is no consensus regarding the optimal radiotherapy treatment regimen for these tumors, we performed a modeling study to evaluate the trade-offs between predicted toxicity and local control for commonly used high-precision dose-fractionation regimens.Entities:
Keywords: Normal tissue complication probability; Stereotactic ablative radiotherapy; Ultra-central lung tumor
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29606150 PMCID: PMC5880025 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-018-1001-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1An illustrative example of a contoured ultra-central lung tumor case. The relative locations of tumor and OAR are indicated; IGTV (red), PTV (blue), proximal bronchial tree (yellow), esophagus (green), heart (maroon), and healthy lung (cyan). Here, the PTV volume is 83.1 cm3 and 2.2 cm3 overlap with the proximal bronchial tree
Dose objectives for each fractionation regimen, based on standard linear-quadratic model biologically effective doses calculated with α/β=3
| Structure | Volume (cm3) | 5 fraction | 8 fraction | 15 fraction | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DV (Gy) | Dmax (Gy) | DV (Gy) | Dmax (Gy) | DV (Gy) | Dmax (Gy) | ||
| Trachea and ipsilateral bronchus | < 4 | 18 (3.6/fx) | 38 (7.6/fx) | 21 (2.6/fx) | 46 (5.8/fx) | 25.5 (1.7/fx) | 58.5 (3.9/fx) |
| Spinal cord | < 0.25 | 22.5 (4.5/fx) | 30 (6.0/fx) | 26.5 (3.3/fx) | 36 (4.5/fx) | 32 (2.1/fx) | 45 (3.0/fx) |
| Spinal cord | < 1.2 | 13.5 (2.7/fx) | 15.5 (1.9/fx) | 18 (1.2/fx) | |||
| Esophagus | < 5 | 27.5 (5.5/fx) | 35 (7.0/fx) | 32.5 (4.1/fx) | 42 (5.3/fx) | 41 (2.7/fx) | 53 (3.5/fx) |
| Ipsilateral brachial plexus | < 3 | 30 (6.0/fx) | 32 (6.4/fx) | 36 (4.5/fx) | 38.5 (4.8/fx) | 45 (3.0/fx) | 48 (3.2/fx) |
| Heart/pericardium | < 15 | 32 (6.4/fx) | 38 (7.6/fx) | 38.5 (4.8/fx) | 46 (5.8/fx) | 48 (3.2/fx) | 58 (3.9/fx) |
| Great vessels | < 10 | 47 (9.4/fx) | 53 (10.6/fx) | 57.5 (7.2/fx) | 65 (8.1/fx) | 74 (4.9/fx) | 84 (5.6/fx) |
| Skin | < 10 | 30 (6.0/fx) | 32 (6.4/fx) | 36 (4.5/fx) | 38.5 (4.8/fx) | 45 (3.0/fx) | 48 (3.2/fx) |
| Lung (right and left) | 1500 | 12.5 (2.5/fx) | 14 (1.8/fx) | 16.5 (1.1/fx) | |||
| Lung (right and left) | 1000 | 13.5 (2.7//fx) | 15.5 (1.9/fx) | 18 (1.2/fx) | |||
D allowable dose to the volume, D maximum point dose, fx fraction
Doses received by the proximal bronchial tree across competing treatment plans
| parameter | PTV coverage prioritized | OAR constraints prioritized | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 Gy in 5 | 60 Gy in 8 | 60 Gy in 15 | 50 Gy in 5 | 60 Gy in 8 | 60 Gy in 15 | |
| Dmax (Gy) | 60.1 (52.3–72.9) | 70.1 (63.8–78.1) | 60.8 (57.0–62.8) | 36.9 (31.5–38.0) | 44.7 (38.4–48.2) | 57.6 (56.2–58.4) |
| D2% (Gy) | 50.0 (43.9–57.0) | 58.7 (48.6–68.8) | 55.8 (47.4–61.3) | 26.8 (20.8–31.0) | 35.0 (25.0–54.6) | 47.9 (29.9–56.9) |
| D0.1cc (Gy) | 56.7 (51.1–66.7) | 66.4 (57.4–75.2) | 59.6 (56.4–62.0) | 32.0 (26.8–34.7) | 38.9 (32.2–42.0) | 55.8 (51.2–57.5) |
| D1cc (Gy) | 47.2 (41.5–55.0) | 55.2 (44.7–66.0) | 53.1 (44.2–60.9) | 25.4 (19.6–30.6) | 30.9 (23.5–36.9) | 47.4 (38.5–56.4) |
| D2cc (Gy) | 38.1 (27.7–49.8) | 44.2 (27.7–59.8) | 43.9 (30.1–59.9) | 20.3 (16.4–25.2) | 24.9 (19.4–30.4) | 36.0 (29.3–45.3) |
| D3cc (Gy) | 31.3 (8.3–45.7) | 36.5 (8.3–54.9) | 34.9 (17.1–58.6) | 16.5 (6.4–20.1) | 20.3 (7.6–24.3) | 25.8 (13.0–29.7) |
Cells are presented as the average (range) values
Fig. 2Dose-volume relationships in 2 Gy per fraction for competing dose-fractionation regimens, based on α/β =3 for OAR and α/β = 10 for tumor. Data are graphed at 50 cGy resolution and are expressed as the median (PTV) or average (OAR) fractional volumes to illustrate the relative differences in PTV coverage and OAR sparing between the treatment plans
Radiobiological modeling results for tumor control probability and normal tissue complication probability across competing dose-fractionation regimens
| Outcome | PTV coverage prioritized | OAR constraints prioritized | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 Gy in 5 | 60 Gy in 8 | 60 Gy in 15 | 50 Gy in 5 | 60 Gy in 8 | 60 Gy in 15 | |
| tumor control | 92.9 (89.7–99.1) | 92.4 (84.7–95.3) | 52.0 (48.3–55.7) | 60.3 (31.5–80.1) | 65.7 (39.2–81.4) | 47.8 (41.0–53.3) |
| acute esophagitis ≥ grade 2 | 1.18 (0.45–3.98) | 1.05 (0.44–2.44) | 0.86 (0.42–1.85) | 0.72 (0.34–1.35) | 0.77 (0.39–1.40) | 0.72 (0.42–1.49) |
| symptomatic pneumonitis (all grades) | 4.30 (1.79–11.6) | 4.09 (1.90–11.1) | 3.68 (1.53–13.8) | 3.44 (2.24–8.03) | 3.45 (1.75–8.08) | 2.97 (1.54–6.84) |
| pericarditis or pericardial effusion | 0.01 (0.00–0.08) | 0.00 (0.00–0.00) | 0.00 (0.00–0.00) | 0.00 (0.00–0.00) | 0.00 (0.00–0.00) | 0.00 (0.00–0.00) |
| proximal bronchial tree toxicity (grade 4 or 5) | 49.7 (15.0–70.0a) | 42.7 (5.0–70.0a) | 4.0 (0.0–10.0) | 0.0 (0.0–0.0) | 0.0 (0.00–0.0) | 1.3 (0.0–5.0) |
| uncomplicated tumor control | 46.7 (27.6–77.6) | 53.5 (25.4–90.4) | 49.9 (44.6–54.0) | 60.3 (31.5–80.1) | 65.7 (39.2–81.4) | 47.2 (41.0–52.8) |
Cells are average (range) tumor control probability or normal tissue complication probability (%). a4 cases had an EQD2 greater than the range presented by Cannon et al and it is therefore likely that their risk is greater than 70%
Fig. 3Relationship between likelihood of proximal bronchial tree injury and the tumor overlap volume. The risk of grade 4 or 5 toxicity to the proximal bronchial tree based on D1cc vs. PTV overlap volume with the proximal bronchial tree for plans that prioritize PTV coverage