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Evaluating the impact of a rigid and a deformable registration method of pre-treatment images for hypoxia-based dose painting

Authors :
Lazzeroni, M.
Ureba, A.
Rosenberg, Viktor
Schäfer, H.
Rühle, A.
Baltas, D.
Toma-Dasu, I.
Grosu, A. L.
Lazzeroni, M.
Ureba, A.
Rosenberg, Viktor
Schäfer, H.
Rühle, A.
Baltas, D.
Toma-Dasu, I.
Grosu, A. L.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: To assess the impact of rigid and deformable image registration methods (RIR, DIR) on the outcome of a hypoxia-based dose painting strategy. Materials and methods: Thirty head and neck cancer patients were imaged with [18F]FMISO-PET/CT before radiotherapy. [18F]FMISO-PET/CT images were registered to the planning-CT by RIR or DIR. The [18F]FMISO uptake was converted into oxygen partial pressure (pO2) maps. Hypoxic Target Volumes were contoured on pO2 maps for the deformed (HTVdef) and non-deformed (HTV) cases. A dose escalation strategy by contours, aiming at 95 % tumour control probability (TCP), was applied. HTVs were characterised based on geometry-related metrics, the underlying pO2 distribution, and the dose boost level. A dosimetric and radiobiological evaluation of selected treatment plans made considering RIR and DIR was performed. Moreover, the TCP of the RIR dose distribution was evaluated when considering the deformed [18F]FMISO-PET image as an indicator of the actual target radiosensitivity to determine the potential impact of an unalignment. Results: Statistically significant differences were found between HTV and HTVdef for volume-based metrics and underlying pO2 distribution. Eight out of nine treatment plans for HTV and HTVdef showed differences on the level 10 %/3 mm on a gamma analysis. The TCP difference, however, between RIR and the case when the RIR dose distribution was used with the deformed radiosensitivity map was below 2 pp. Conclusions: Although the choice of the CTplan-to-PET registration method pre-treatment impacts the HTV localisation and morphology and the corresponding dose distribution, it negligibly affects the TCP in the proposed dose escalation strategy by contours.<br />QC 20240531

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457579157
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.ejmp.2024.103376