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Simulated daily plan adaptation for magnetic resonance-guided liver stereotactic body radiotherapy.

Authors :
Taylor, Edward
Lukovic, Jelena
Velec, Michael
Shessel, Andrea
Stanescu, Teodor
Dawson, Laura
Létourneau, Daniel
Lindsay, Patricia
Source :
Acta Oncologica. Feb2021, Vol. 60 Issue 2, p260-266. 7p. 1 Color Photograph, 1 Chart, 3 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Liver cancers are challenging to treat using image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) due to motion and deformation of target volumes and organs at risk (OARs), as well as difficulties in visualising liver tumours using cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) based IGRT. Liver cancer patients may thus benefit from magnetic resonance (MR)-guided daily adaptive re-planning. We evaluated the dosimetric impact of a daily plan adaptation strategy based on daily MR imaging versus CBCT-based IGRT. Ten patients were studied who were treated with CBCT-guided five-fraction stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) and underwent MR imaging before each fraction. Simulated reference plans were created on computer tomography (CT) images and adapted plans were created on the daily MR images. Two plan adaptation strategies were retrospectively simulated: (1) translational couch shifts to match liver, mimicking standard CBCT guidance and (2) daily plan adaptation based on reference plan clinical goals and daily target and OAR contours. Dose statistics were calculated for both strategies and compared. Couch shifts resulted in an average reduction in GTV D99% relative to reference plan values of 5.2 Gy (−12.5% of reference values). Daily plan adaptation reduced this to 0.8 Gy (−2.0%). For six patients who were OAR dose-limited on reference plans, couch shifts resulted in OAR dose violations in 28 out of 28 simulated fractions, respectively; no violations occurred using daily plan adaptation. No OAR dose violations occurred using either strategy for the four cases not OAR dose-limited at reference planning. MR-guided daily plan adaptation ensured OAR dose constraints were met at all simulated treatment fractions while CBCT-based IGRT resulted in a systematic over-dosing of OARs in patients whose doses were limited by OAR dose at the time of reference planning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0284186X
Volume :
60
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Acta Oncologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148751457
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186X.2020.1840625