| Literature DB >> 33816247 |
Simon Boeke1, David Mönnich2, Janita E van Timmeren3, Panagiotis Balermpas3.
Abstract
Based on the development of new hybrid machines consisting of an MRI and a linear accelerator, magnetic resonance image guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) has revolutionized the field of adaptive treatment in recent years. Although an increasing number of studies have been published, investigating technical and clinical aspects of this technique for various indications, utilizations of MRgRT for adaptive treatment of head and neck cancer (HNC) remains in its infancy. Yet, the possible benefits of this novel technology for HNC patients, allowing for better soft-tissue delineation, intra- and interfractional treatment monitoring and more frequent plan adaptations appear more than obvious. At the same time, new technical, clinical, and logistic challenges emerge. The purpose of this article is to summarize and discuss the rationale, recent developments, and future perspectives of this promising radiotherapy modality for treating HNC.Entities:
Keywords: IGRT (Image Guided Radiation Therapy); MR-guidance; MRI; adaptive radiotherapy; head and neck (H&N) cancer; salivary gland; xerostoma
Year: 2021 PMID: 33816247 PMCID: PMC8017313 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2021.616156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1(A) Example of volume changes and migration of parotid glands during the course of fractionated radiotherapy at an 0.35 T MR-Linac or a large base of tongue carcinoma between treatment start (left image) and beginning of the 7th treatment week - boost (right image). Left and right parotid glands are delineated in orange and violet respectively and the gross tumor volume in blue. The volume of the left and right parotid glands decreased by 8.2 cc and 10.0 cc, respectively. The inter-parotids distance changed from 11.0 cm to 10.3 cm. (B) Example of a post treatment analysis for a patient treated for a hypopharyngeal carcinoma with 70 Gy in 35 fractions. Parotid glands were contoured for each daily MRI during the course of fractionated radiotherapy at a 1.5 T MR-Linac and propagated to the T2w planning MRI, with the total plan DVH for each daily delivered plan in the upper right corner, showing the variance in actual delivered dose depending on volume of the parotid gland. Averaged Dmean of the anatomically corrected and daily adapted plans was 24.4 Gy and 16.5 Gy for the left and right parotid glands, respectively. The Dmean of the reference plan was 25.9 Gy for the left and 16.7 Gy for the right parotid gland. Baseline volume was 31.0 ccm for the right and 34.5 ccm for the left parotid gland. Mean volume (range) during treatment was 30.3 ccm (29.5–32.1) and 31.4 ccm (29.1–34.7). The example was presented as a poster at the congresses of DEGRO and AIRO 2019 by Monica lo Russo, MD (20).
Overview of published and ongoing studies on MR-linac-based adaptive radiotherapy for head and neck cancer.
| First Author/PI | Year | Study design | Platform | Total patientsn | Timepoints of analysis/adaptation | Aim | Main finding/study endpoint | Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raghavan ( | 2016 | Retrospective analysis | 0.35 T MRI-guided tri-cobalt 60 | 6 | Weekly | Quantify volume changes of parotid glands and GTV | Volume decrease of 31.3% (ipsilateral) and 21.8% (contralateral) and center of mass mitigation with increased dose compared to the reference plan; | Possibility of underestimation of dose to the parotid glands without adaptation regarding in increased risk of xerostomia |
| Chen ( | 2017 | Prospective institutional registry | 0.35 T MRI-guided tri-cobalt 60 | 12 | No pre-planned adaptation | Feasibility of MRg-SBRT in recurrent HNC | MRg-SBRT feasible, early toxicity within expected range | Due to MR-guidance potential to reduce margins |
| Chen ( | 2018 | Prospective institutional registry | 0.35 T MRI-guided tri-cobalt 60 | 18 | No pre-planned adaptation | Feasibility of MRgRT in HNC | MRgRT feasible in primary treatment of HNC | Non-randomized data reporting feasibility of MRgRT in HNC with toxicity in expected range |
| Mohamed ( | 2018 | Prospective planning study | Offline MRI | 5 | Weeks 2, 4, 6 | Adapative RT regarding GTV shrinkage in HPV+ OPC and impact on dose to OAR | GTV shrinkage of up to 100% in primary and 80% in LN; adaptive MRgRT lowers NTCP for Dysphagia and PEG dependency, no change in mean dose to parotid glands | Structured adaptive MRgRT for low risk HPV+ OPC may decrease risk for Dysphagia/PEG dependency |
| Bahig ( | 2018 | Prospective two-stage Phase II trial | Offline MRI and Unity | 15 + 60 | Weekly adaptation | Adaptive RT for GTV shrinkage in HPV+ OPC with dose reduction | LRC at 6 month | Trial aiming to show safe dose reduction with adaptive MRgRT for shrinking GTV in low risk HPV+ OPC |
| Balermpas ( | 2019 | Prospective phase II trial | MRIdian | 44 | Weekly adaptation | Reduce incidence of Xerostomia | n.a. | Prospective study trying to show the potential benefit of adaptive MRgRT to reduce Xerostomia in HNC; finding new prognostic imaging biomarkers |
Figure 2Patient positioning for MR-Linac based treatment for head and neck cancer in the two commercially available systems.