| Literature DB >> 31477141 |
S Lautenschlaeger1, G Iancu2, V Flatten2,3, K Baumann2,3, M Thiemer2, C Dumke2, K Zink2,3, H Hauswald2,4,5, D Vordermark6, C Mauz-Körholz7,8, R Engenhart-Cabillic2,5, F Eberle2,5.
Abstract
Radiotherapy is frequently used in the therapy of lymphoma. Since lymphoma, for example Hodgkin's disease, frequently affect rather young patients, the induction of secondary cancer or other long-term adverse effects after irradiation are important issues to deal with. Especially for mediastinal manifestations numerous organs and substructures at risk play a role. The heart, its coronary vessels and cardiac valves, the lungs, the thyroid and, for female patients, the breast tissue are only the most important organs at risk. In this study we investigated if proton-radiotherapy might reduce the dose delivered to the organs at risk and thus minimize the therapy-associated toxicity.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31477141 PMCID: PMC6721251 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-019-1360-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Target Volumes (PTV) for each of the ten included patients. Besides a mediastinal involvement some target volumes encompass axillary level III, supraclavicular or cervical lymphatic tissues as well
Fig. 2Schematics of the calculated proton- and IMRT plans. Full rotation, anterior half rotation and two non-coplanar 45° tilted quarter rotations have been benchmarked against the proton-plans
Fig. 3PTV-DVH, PTV-homogeneity- and -conformity-indices calculated according ICRU83 [51]
Fig. 4Mean-DVHs for the PTV and the organs at risk for the different planning-modalities. The protons feature, except for the thyroid, a superior sparing of organs at risk while PTV coverage of all plans is comparable
Fig. 5Mean dose and standard error for different photons or proton plans and for all delineated organs at risk. P values were calculated for mean dose, comparing proton and photon planning approaches. P values were given if significance has been reached. (*➔p = < 0.05; **➔p < 0.01; ***➔p < 0.001)
Fig. 6a Areas in which the VMAT / IMRT plans will deliver more dose to organs at risk or the body compartment. b Areas in which the proton plan delivers more dose to organs at risk or the body compartment compared to the VMAT / IMRT plant
Fig. 7Comparison of the mean dose to organs at risk for upper, lower or combined upper and lower mediastinal radiotherapy treatment. Five patients had combined upper and lower mediastinal disease, 3 patients only lower and 2 only upper mediastinal disease
Fig. 8V10 and mean body dose for the body compartment between the fourth cerebral and the first lumbar vertebrae. As well median (line) as mean (square) doses are lower by the factor of 2–3 when comparing photon-RT-techniques with the proton-RT-technique. (Statistics: Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA with pairwise comparisons. Significance p = 0.025 for difference in V10 protons versus Full-ARC- RT, p = 0.017 for mean-dose protons versus FullArc-RT and p < 0.001 for protons versus Half-ARC-RT)
Estimation of excess risk for long term adverse effects for organs at risk. The lungs, the breast tissue, the heard and the thyroid were evaluated