| Literature DB >> 32850318 |
Maureen L Groot Koerkamp1, Jeanine E Vasmel1, Nicola S Russell2, Simona F Shaitelman3, Carmel N Anandadas4, Adam Currey5, Danny Vesprini6, Brian M Keller6, Chiara De-Colle7, Kathy Han8, Lior Z Braunstein9, Faisal Mahmood10,11, Ebbe L Lorenzen10, Marielle E P Philippens1, Helena M Verkooijen12, Jan J W Lagendijk1, Antonetta C Houweling1, H J G Desiree van den Bongard1, Anna M Kirby13.
Abstract
Current research in radiotherapy (RT) for breast cancer is evaluating neoadjuvant as opposed to adjuvant partial breast irradiation (PBI) with the aim of reducing the volume of breast tissue irradiated and therefore the risk of late treatment-related toxicity. The development of magnetic resonance (MR)-guided RT, including dedicated MR-guided RT systems [hybrid machines combining an MR scanner with a linear accelerator (MR-linac) or 60Co sources], could potentially reduce the irradiated volume even further by improving tumour visibility before and during each RT treatment. In this position paper, we discuss MR guidance in relation to each step of the breast RT planning and treatment pathway, focusing on the application of MR-guided RT to neoadjuvant PBI.Entities:
Keywords: MR-guided radiotherapy; MR-linac; breast cancer; hybrid machine; magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); neoadjuvant radiation therapy; partial breast irradiation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32850318 PMCID: PMC7399349 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.01107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Overview of challenges for the implementation of MR-guided radiotherapy on a hybrid machine for breast cancer patients.
| Patient positioning inside the MR bore | Prone: breast deformation on tableramya and fitting of receiver coil ( | Development of a thinner coil or a dedicated MR-linac breast coil |
| Supine: difficulties fitting arms inside bore in standard RT position | Use a minimal or no inclined wedge support, move arms closer together above the head | |
| Deformation of body contour by receiver coil | Disturbed body contour | Use coil bridges to support the coil ( |
| Body contour visibility in prone position | With dedicated prone breast coil, body contour and OARs not visible further away from coil | Use an additional coil placed on top of the patient |
| Electron stream effect | Irradiation dose outside the treatment field in an inferior-to-superior direction ( | Include chin, arm, and abdominal region in the simulation plan |
| Breathing and cardiac motion during scanning | Motion artefacts | Use a 3D sequence, signal averaging, and left–right phase encoding in protocol design, or use triggering or breath-hold for acquisition |
| Surgical clip and/or marker visualization on MRI | Magnetic field distortion and artefacts impeding contouring of target volume ( | 1. Use or develop markers or clips with smaller artefacts |
| Geometric accuracy (gradient nonlinearities) in combination with lateral target volumes | Reduced geometric accuracy, increasing with distance from isocenter | 1. Use distortion correction software on scanner |
| Geometric accuracy (magnetic field inhomogeneities and patient-induced distortions) | Reduced geometric accuracy, especially near tissue–air interfaces | 1. Use high bandwidth acquisition |
| Electron return effect | Possible skin dose, chest wall, or lung dose increase (dose increase at tissue–air interfaces) | Pay attention to skin, chest wall, and lung dose constraints in planning, carefully choose beam setup (e.g., use enough beams) |
| Electron stream effect | Irradiation dose outside the treatment field in an inferior-to-superior direction ( | Use of bolus material to shield irradiation outside of field |
| Missing electron density information in MR-only workflow | Inaccurate dose calculation without correct electron density assignments | Development of methods for synthetic CT generation from MRI |
| High-density treatment couch material | Unpredictable dose effects by daily replanning | Avoid beam angles passing through the treatment couch edges |
| Irradiation through coil | No irradiation through MR receiver coils, only through dedicated hybrid machine coils. Dedicated prone breast coil cannot be used | 1. Try to fit the dedicated MR-linac coil on top of prone patient (only for smaller patients) |
| Fixed treatment couch | Interfractional changes in position cannot be corrected by moving the treatment couch | Use online plan adaptation strategies to account for interfractional changes in anatomy |
| Motion during treatment | Geographical miss during treatment or increased PTV margins | Use online gating or tracking when available, e.g., only beam-on when the target volume is within pre-specified boundaries |
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; MR, magnetic resonance; OAR, organ at risk; PTV, planning target volume; CT, computed tomography; RT, radiotherapy.
Figure 1Supine patient setup for MRI simulation. In this setup, a 5-degree inclined wedge is used. Height-adjustable coil bridges are used as support for the anterior receiver coil to prevent deformation of the body contour.
Figure 2Patient and receiver coil positioning in prone position, including challenges in this position. The images show three different patients. (A) No space for the receiver coil on the back of the patient if the breast hangs freely without touching the scanner table; (B) the receiver coil fits above the patient while also the breast hangs freely; (C) when the receiver coil is fitted in the MRI bore above the patient, the breast touches the table top and is deformed. Light blue shapes represent the receiver coils (horizontal: receiver coil array; vertical: single flex coil). SNR, signal-to-noise ratio.
Figure 3Imaging of a primary breast tumour on CT (A,D), (contrast-enhanced) MRI (B,E), and CBCT (C,F) scans indicating the difference in tumour visibility (inside the red circle) between these modalities in two different patients (A–C and D–F). (D–F) The marker inserted in the tumour medial in the left breast is observed as a void on MRI (indicated by the red circles).
Overview of recommended MR sequences and commercial online availability for clinical breast cancer treatment on hybrid machines.
| T1-weighted with fat suppression ( | + Differentiation between glandular breast tissue and seroma | Not available | Not available |
| T1-weighted without fat suppression ( | + Best visualization of surgical clips | 3D T1-weighted FFE | 3D T2/T1-weighted TRUFI |
| T2-weighted with or without fat suppression ( | + Visualization of lumpectomy cavity and seromaramya + Differentiation between glandular breast tissue and seroma | 3D T2-weighted TSE without fat suppression | 3D T2/T1-weighted TRUFI |
| DWI ( | + Differentiation between malignant and benign tissue in case of irradical resection ramya – Susceptible to geometric distortions | Not available | Not available |
| T1-weighted contrast-enhanced with fat suppression ( | + Visualization of tumour and tumour spiculae ramya – Injection of and irradiation with contrast agent | No standard contrast injection available | No standard contrast injection available |
| T2-weighted with or without fat suppression ( | + Differentiation between tumour and post-biopsy changes | 3D T2 TSE without fat suppression | 3D T2/T1-weighted TRUFI |
| DWI ( | + Differentiation between malignant and benign tissue ramya – Susceptible to geometric distortions | Not available | Not available |
TSE, turbo spin echo (fast spin echo); FFE, fast field echo (spoiled gradient echo); TRUFI, true fast imaging with steady state precession (balanced steady state free precession).
Not available in online treatment setting. Acquiring DWI and MR sequences with fat suppression is possible offline—outside online treatment setting mode.
This table does not provide an exhaustive overview of all imaging possibilities but only refers to MR sequences mentioned in this article and currently commercially available imaging options.
Figure 4Simulation of a single fraction neoadjuvant PBI treatment plan (ABLATIVE trial approach, 1 × 20 Gy to GTV) for the 1.5-T MR-linac. The calculated dose distribution shows the electron stream effect in air resulting in dose outside of the treatment field in both cranial and caudal directions. Scale is set to 100% reference dose = 20 Gy.