Reproducibility of the lung anatomy under active breathing coordinator control: Dosimetric consequences for scanned proton treatments

被引:9
作者
den Otter, Lydia A. [1 ]
Kaza, Evangelia [2 ,3 ]
Kierkels, Roel G. J. [1 ]
Meijers, Arturs [1 ]
Ubbels, Fred J. F. [1 ]
Leach, Martin O. [2 ,3 ]
Collins, David J. [2 ,3 ]
Langendijk, Johannes A. [1 ]
Knopf, Antje-Christin [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Groningen, Univ Med Ctr Groningen, Dept Radiat Oncol, NL-9713 GZ Groningen, Netherlands
[2] Inst Canc Res, CR UK Canc Imaging Ctr, London SW7 3RP, England
[3] Royal Marsden Hosp, London SW7 3RP, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
active breathing coordinator control; interfraction reproducibility; intrafraction reproducibility; nonsmall-cell lung cancer; pencil beam scanning; MOTION MITIGATION; TUMOR TRACKING; UNCERTAINTIES; THERAPY; OPTIMIZATION; BEAMS; RANGE; SETUP; ABC;
D O I
10.1002/mp.13195
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose The treatment of moving targets with scanned proton beams is challenging. For motion mitigation, an Active Breathing Coordinator (ABC) can be used to assist breath-holding. The delivery of pencil beam scanning fields often exceeds feasible breath-hold durations, requiring high breath-hold reproducibility. We evaluated the robustness of scanned proton therapy against anatomical uncertainties when treating nonsmall-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients during ABC controlled breath-hold. Methods Four subsequent MRIs of five healthy volunteers (3 male, 2 female, age: 25-58, BMI: 19-29) were acquired under ABC controlled breath-hold during two simulated treatment fractions, providing both intrafractional and interfractional information about breath-hold reproducibility. Deformation vector fields between these MRIs were used to deform CTs of five NSCLC patients. Per patient, four or five cases with different tumor locations were modeled, simulating a total of 23 NSCLC patients. Robustly optimized (3 and 5 mm setup uncertainty respectively and 3% density perturbation) intensity-modulated proton plans (IMPT) were created and split into subplans of 20 s duration (assumed breath-hold duration). A fully fractionated treatment was recalculated on the deformed CTs. For each treatment fraction the deformed CTs representing multiple breath-hold geometries were alternated to simulate repeated ABC breath-holding during irradiation. Also a worst-case scenario was simulated by recalculating the complete treatment plan on the deformed CT scan showing the largest deviation with the first deformed CT scan, introducing a systematic error. Both the fractionated breath-hold scenario and worst-case scenario were dosimetrically evaluated. Results Looking at the deformation vector fields between the MRIs of the volunteers, up to 8 mm median intra- and interfraction displacements (without outliers) were found for all lung segments. The dosimetric evaluation showed a median difference in D-98% between the planned and breath-hold scenarios of -0.1 Gy (range: -4.1 Gy to 2.0 Gy). D-98% target coverage was more than 57.0 Gy for 22/23 cases. The D-1 cc of the CTV increased for 21/23 simulations, with a median difference of 0.9 Gy (range: -0.3 to 4.6 Gy). For 14/23 simulations the increment was beyond the allowed maximum dose of 63.0 Gy, though remained under 66.0 Gy (110% of the prescribed dose of 60.0 Gy). Organs at risk doses differed little compared to the planned doses (difference in mean doses <0.9 Gy for the heart and lungs, <1.4% difference in V-35 [%] and V-20 [%] to the esophagus and lung). Conclusions When treating under ABC controlled breath-hold, robustly optimized IMPT plans show limited dosimetric consequences due to anatomical variations between repeated ABC breath-holds for most cases. Thus, the combination of robustly optimized IMPT plans and the delivery under ABC controlled breath-hold presents a safe approach for PBS lung treatments.
引用
收藏
页码:5525 / 5534
页数:10
相关论文
共 25 条
  • [1] [Anonymous], 2016, PARTICLE RADIOTHERAP, DOI [10.1007/978-81-322-2622-2, DOI 10.1007/978-81-322-2622-2]
  • [2] An in-silico comparison of proton beam and IMRT for postoperative radiotherapy in completely resected stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancer
    Berman, Abigail T.
    Teo, Boon-Keng Kevin
    Dolney, Derek
    Swisher-McClure, Samuel
    Shahnazi, Kambiz
    Both, Stefan
    Rengan, Ramesh
    [J]. RADIATION ONCOLOGY, 2013, 8
  • [3] Quantification of interplay effects of scanned particle beams and moving targets
    Bert, Christoph
    Groezinger, Sven O.
    Rietzel, Eike
    [J]. PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2008, 53 (09) : 2253 - 2265
  • [4] THE USE OF THE ACTIVE BREATHING COORDINATOR THROUGHOUT RADICAL NON SMALL-CELL LUNG CANCER (NSCLC) RADIOTHERAPY
    Brock, Juliet
    McNair, Helen A.
    Panakis, Niki
    Symonds-Tayler, Richard
    Evans, Phil M.
    Brada, Michael
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2011, 81 (02): : 369 - 375
  • [5] Dueck J, 2015, INT J RADIAT ONCOL, V53, P822
  • [6] Minimax optimization for handling range and setup uncertainties in proton therapy
    Fredriksson, Albin
    Forsgren, Anders
    Hardemark, Bjorn
    [J]. MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2011, 38 (03) : 1672 - 1684
  • [7] Motion mitigation for lung cancer patients treated with active scanning proton therapy
    Grassberger, Clemens
    Dowdell, Stephen
    Sharp, Greg
    Paganetti, Harald
    [J]. MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2015, 42 (05) : 2462 - 2469
  • [8] Limited Impact of Setup and Range Uncertainties, Breathing Motion, and Interplay Effects in Robustly Optimized Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy for Stage III Non-small Cell Lung Cancer
    Inoue, Tatsuya
    Widder, Joachim
    van Dijk, Lisanne V.
    Takegawa, Hideki
    Koizumi, Masahiko
    Takashina, Masaaki
    Usui, Keisuke
    Kurokawa, Chie
    Sugimoto, Satoru
    Saito, Anneyuko I.
    Sasai, Keisuke
    van't Veld, Aart A.
    Langendijk, Johannes A.
    Korevaar, Erik W.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2016, 96 (03): : 661 - 669
  • [9] First MRI application of an active breathing coordinator
    Kaza, E.
    Symonds-Tayler, R.
    Collins, D. J.
    McDonald, F.
    McNair, H. A.
    Scurr, E.
    Koh, D-M
    Leach, M. O.
    [J]. PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2015, 60 (04) : 1681 - 1696
  • [10] Lung volume reproducibility under ABC control and self-sustained breath-holding
    Kaza, Evangelia
    Dunlop, Alex
    Panek, Rafal
    Collins, David J.
    Orton, Matthew
    Symonds-Tayler, Richard
    McQuaid, Dualta
    Scurr, Erica
    Hansen, Vibeke
    Leach, Martin O.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED CLINICAL MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2017, 18 (02): : 154 - 162