Medical College of Wisconsin
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Characterization and management of interfractional anatomic changes for pancreatic cancer radiotherapy. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2012 Jul 01;83(3):e423-9

Date

03/23/2012

Pubmed ID

22436785

DOI

10.1016/j.ijrobp.2011.12.073

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84862815717 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   99 Citations

Abstract

PURPOSE: To quantitatively characterize interfractional anatomic variations in pancreatic cancer radiotherapy (RT) and to study dosimetric advantages for using an online adaptive replanning scheme to account for these variations.

METHODS AND MATERIALS: Targets and organs at risk (OAR) were delineated by autosegmentation based on daily computed tomography (CT) images acquired using a respiration-gated in-room CT during daily image-guided RT (IGRT) for 10 pancreatic cancer patients. Various parameters, including the maximum overlap ratio (MOR) between the volumes based on planning and daily CTs for a structure, while the overlapping volumes were maximized, were used to quantify the interfractional organ deformation with the intrafractional variations largely excluded. An online adaptive RT (ART) was applied to these daily CTs. To evaluate the dosimetric benefits of ART, the dose distributions from the online ART were compared to those from the repositioning in the current standard IGRT practice.

RESULTS: The interfractional anatomic variations, particularly the organ deformation, are significant during pancreas irradiation. For the patients studied, the average MORs of all daily CTs were 80.2%, 61.7%, and 72.2% for pancreatic head, duodenum, and stomach, respectively. The online ART leads to improved dosimetric plan with better target coverage and/or OAR sparing than IGRT repositioning. For the patients studied, the mean V(50.4 Gy) (volume covered by 50.4 Gy) for the duodenum was reduced from 43.4% for IGRT to 15.6% for the online ART scheme.

CONCLUSIONS: The online adaptive RT scheme can effectively account for the significant interfractional anatomic variations observed in pancreas irradiation. The dosimetric advantages with the online ART may enable safe dose escalation in radiation therapy for pancreatic cancer.

Author List

Liu F, Erickson B, Peng C, Li XA

Author

Beth A. Erickson MD Professor in the Radiation Oncology department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Algorithms
Duodenum
Humans
Kidney
Liver
Movement
Organs at Risk
Pancreas
Pancreatic Neoplasms
Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted
Radiotherapy, Image-Guided
Respiration
Retrospective Studies
Stomach
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Tumor Burden