| Literature DB >> 35454816 |
Samuel L Mulder1, Jolien Heukelom2, Brigid A McDonald1, Lisanne Van Dijk2, Kareem A Wahid1, Keith Sanders1, Travis C Salzillo1, Mehdi Hemmati3, Andrew Schaefer3, Clifton D Fuller1.
Abstract
MR-linac devices offer the potential for advancements in radiotherapy (RT) treatment of head and neck cancer (HNC) by using daily MR imaging performed at the time and setup of treatment delivery. This article aims to present a review of current adaptive RT (ART) methods on MR-Linac devices directed towards the sparing of organs at risk (OAR) and a view of future adaptive techniques seeking to improve the therapeutic ratio. This ratio expresses the relationship between the probability of tumor control and the probability of normal tissue damage and is thus an important conceptual metric of success in the sparing of OARs. Increasing spatial conformity of dose distributions to target volume and OARs is an initial step in achieving therapeutic improvements, followed by the use of imaging and clinical biomarkers to inform the clinical decision-making process in an ART paradigm. Pre-clinical and clinical findings support the incorporation of biomarkers into ART protocols and investment into further research to explore imaging biomarkers by taking advantage of the daily MR imaging workflow. A coherent understanding of this road map for RT in HNC is critical for directing future research efforts related to sparing OARs using image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT).Entities:
Keywords: MR-guided; MRI; OAR; adaptive radiotherapy; head and neck cancer; normal tissue; quantitative imaging
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454816 PMCID: PMC9028510 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14081909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Figure 1Demonstration of ART intents and relative dosimetric on OARs and tumor. This example shows the initial treatment plan on CT and simulated adapted plans on an MR-linac image for a patient with primary stage T3N2 human papilloma virus positive squamous cell carcinoma of the base of tongue prescribed 70 Gy in 33 fractions. In silico simulated adapted plans were generated with the various ART intents on the MR-linac image from fraction 22. Graphs show dose volume histograms for the gross target volume (GTV) (green), ipsilateral parotid gland (blue), and contralateral parotid gland (red) with solid lines for the adaptive plan and dotted lines for the reference plan. In the column showing the DVH parameters relative to the reference plan, mean dose was used for the parotid glands and D95% for the PTV. For the ARTReduco plan, reduced GTV and PTVs were artificially created by applying a uniform reduction of 1cm in all directions for each structure.
Figure 2Typologies of ART implementation. (A): fixed interval approach; (B): ‘triggered’ ART; (C): serial ART; (D): cascade ART. Figure and copyright permissions obtained from Heukelom and Fuller [37].