The effect of treatment position, prone or supine, on dose-volume histograms for pelvic radiotherapy in patients with rectal cancer

被引:27
作者
Drzymala, M. [1 ]
Hawkins, M. A. [1 ]
Henrys, A. J. [1 ]
Bedford, J. [1 ]
Norman, A. [2 ]
Tait, D. M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Royal Marsden Fdn NHS Trust, Dept Clin Oncol, Sutton SM2 5PT, Surrey, England
[2] Royal Marsden Fdn NHS Trust, Dept Med Stat & Comp, Sutton SM2 5PT, Surrey, England
关键词
SMALL-BOWEL DISPLACEMENT; IRRADIATED SMALL-BOWEL; BELLY BOARD DEVICE; RADIATION-THERAPY; CHEMOTHERAPY; PREVENTION; CARCINOMA; TOXICITY; EFFICACY; TRIAL;
D O I
10.1259/bjr/57848689
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
Patients undergoing radiotherapy for rectal cancer are generally treated in a prone position, with a full bladder, to reduce the volume of normal bowel in the high-dose volume. This position is difficult to maintain, and is not consistently reproducible. This study evaluates the volume of bowel and dose received in the prone and supine positions in patients undergoing pre-operative rectal cancer chemoradiation. Using CT planning, 19 consecutive patients with rectal cancer with a full bladder underwent CT scanning first in the prone position and then immediately afterwards in the supine position. The planning target volume was outlined for the prone position and transcribed to the supine scan using pre-set criteria. The bladder and small bowel were outlined in both positions. Radiotherapy was planned using three-dimensional conformal planning, and treatment was delivered using three fields with multileaf collimators in two phases: phase I, pelvis 45 Gy/25 fractions; and phase II, tumour 9 Gy/five fractions. For both positions, the volume of bowel receiving doses in 5 Gy increments from 5-45 Gy was calculated using dose-volume histograms. At 5 Gy and 10 Gy dose levels, a significantly higher volume of bowel was irradiated in the supine position (p<0.001). At 15 Gy, it was marginally significant (p=0.018). From 2045 Gy, there was no significant difference in the volume of bowel irradiated with each 5 Gy increment. This study demonstrates that the volume of bowel irradiated at doses associated with bowel toxicity in concurrent chemoradiation is not significantly higher in the supine position. This position could be adopted for patients undergoing preoperative rectal cancer chemoradiation.
引用
收藏
页码:321 / 327
页数:7
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]   Does prone positioning reduce small bowel dose in pelvic radiation with intensity-modulated radiotherapy for gynecologic cancer? [J].
Adli, M ;
Mayr, NA ;
Kaiser, HS ;
Skwarchuk, MW ;
Meeks, SL ;
Mardirossian, G ;
Paulino, AC ;
Montebello, JF ;
Gaston, RC ;
Sorosky, JI ;
Buatti, JM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2003, 57 (01) :230-238
[2]   Impact of the "belly board" device on treatment reproducibility in preoperative radiotherapy for rectal cancer [J].
Allal, AS ;
Bischof, S ;
Nouet, P .
STRAHLENTHERAPIE UND ONKOLOGIE, 2002, 178 (05) :259-262
[3]   The dose-volume relationship of acute small bowel toxicity from concurrent 5-FU-based chemotherapy and radiation therapy for rectal cancer [J].
Baglan, KL ;
Frazier, RC ;
Yan, D ;
Huang, RR ;
Martinez, AA ;
Robertson, JM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2002, 52 (01) :176-183
[4]   A randomized trial of supine vs. prone positioning in patients undergoing escalated dose conformal radiotherapy for prostate cancer [J].
Bayley, AJ ;
Catton, CN ;
Haycocks, T ;
Kelly, V ;
Alasti, H ;
Bristow, R ;
Catton, P ;
Crook, J ;
Gospodarowicz, MK ;
McLean, M ;
Milosevic, M ;
Warde, P .
RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2004, 70 (01) :37-44
[5]   THE VARIATION OF SMALL-BOWEL VOLUME WITHIN THE PELVIS BEFORE AND DURING ADJUVANT RADIATION FOR RECTAL-CANCER [J].
BRIERLEY, JD ;
CUMMINGS, BJ ;
WONG, CS ;
MCLEAN, M ;
CASHELL, A ;
MANTER, S .
RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 1994, 31 (02) :110-116
[6]  
COLE H, 1988, LANCET, V2, P1341
[7]   Efficacy of a belly board device with CT-simulation in reducing small bowel volume within pelvic irradiation fields [J].
Das, IJ ;
Lanciano, RM ;
Movsas, B ;
Kagawa, K ;
Barnes, SJ .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 1997, 39 (01) :67-76
[8]   EFFICACY OF AN ABSORBABLE MESH IN KEEPING THE SMALL BOWEL OUT OF THE HUMAN PELVIS FOLLOWING SURGERY [J].
DEVEREUX, DF ;
CHANDLER, JJ ;
EISENSTAT, T ;
ZINKIN, L .
DISEASES OF THE COLON & RECTUM, 1988, 31 (01) :17-21
[9]  
Fu Y T, 1995, Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol), V7, P188, DOI 10.1016/S0936-6555(05)80514-X
[10]   A PROSPECTIVE-STUDY OF TREATMENT TECHNIQUES TO MINIMIZE THE VOLUME OF PELVIC SMALL-BOWEL WITH REDUCTION OF ACUTE AND LATE EFFECTS ASSOCIATED WITH PELVIC IRRADIATION [J].
GALLAGHER, MJ ;
BRERETON, HD ;
ROSTOCK, RA ;
ZERO, JM ;
ZEKOSKI, DA ;
POYSS, LF ;
RICHTER, MP ;
KLIGERMAN, MM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 1986, 12 (09) :1565-1573