In this work we present a methodology able to use harmonized PET/CT imaging in dose painting by number (DPBN) approach by means of a robust and accurate treatment planning system. Image processing ...and treatment planning were performed by using a Matlab-based platform, called CARMEN, in which a full Monte Carlo simulation is included. Linear programming formulation was developed for a voxel-by-voxel robust optimization and a specific direct aperture optimization was designed for an efficient adaptive radiotherapy implementation. DPBN approach with our methodology was tested to reduce the uncertainties associated with both, the absolute value and the relative value of the information in the functional image. For the same H&N case, a single robust treatment was planned for dose prescription maps corresponding to standardized uptake value distributions from two different image reconstruction protocols: One to fulfill EARL accreditation for harmonization of 18FFDG PET/CT image, and the other one to use the highest available spatial resolution. Also, a robust treatment was planned to fulfill dose prescription maps corresponding to both approaches, the dose painting by contour based on volumes and our voxel-by-voxel DPBN. Adaptive planning was also carried out to check the suitability of our proposal. Different plans showed robustness to cover a range of scenarios for implementation of harmonizing strategies by using the highest available resolution. Also, robustness associated to discretization level of dose prescription according to the use of contours or numbers was achieved. All plans showed excellent quality index histogram and quality factors below 2%. Efficient solution for adaptive radiotherapy based directly on changes in functional image was obtained. We proved that by using voxel-by-voxel DPBN approach it is possible to overcome typical drawbacks linked to PET/CT images, providing to the clinical specialist confidence enough for routinely implementation of functional imaging for personalized radiotherapy.
Radiotherapy of liver metastases is commonly being performed with photon-beam based stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). The high risk for radiation-induced liver disease (RILD) is a limiting ...factor in these treatments. The use of proton-beam based SBRT could potentially improve the sparing of the healthy part of the liver. The aim of this study was to use estimations of normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) to identify liver-metastases patients that could benefit from being treated with intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT), based on the reduction of the risk for RILD.
Ten liver metastases patients, previously treated with photon-beam based SBRT, were retrospectively planned with IMPT. A CTV-based robust optimisation (accounting for setup and range uncertainties), combined with a PTV-based conventional optimisation, was performed. A robustness criterion was defined for the CTV (V
> 98% for at least 10 of the 12 simulated scenarios). The NTCP was estimated for different endpoints using the Lyman-Kutcher-Burman model. The ΔNTCP (NTCP
- NTCP
) for RILD was registered for each patient. The patients for which the NTCP (RILD) < 5% were also identified. A generic relative biological effectiveness of 1.1 was assumed for the proton beams.
For all patients, the objectives set for the PTV and the robustness criterion set for the CTV were fulfilled with the IMPT plans. An improved sparing of the healthy part of the liver, right kidney, lungs, spinal cord and the skin was achieved with the IMPT plans, compared to the SBRT plans. Mean liver doses larger than the threshold value of 32 Gy led to NTCP values for RILD exceeding 5% (7 patients with SBRT and 3 patients with the IMPT plans). ΔNTCP values (RILD) ranging between - 98% and - 17% (7 patients) and between 0 and 2% (3 patients), were calculated.
In this study, liver metastases patients that could benefit from being treated with IMPT, based on the NTCP reductions, were identified. The clinical implementation of such a model-based approach to select liver metastases patients to proton therapy needs to be made with caution while considering the uncertainties involved in the NTCP estimations.
The purpose of this work is to present useful recommendations for the use of
FFDG-PET/CT imaging in radiotherapy planning and monitoring under different versions of EARL accreditation for ...harmonization of PET devices. A proof-of-concept experiment designed on an anthropomorphic phantom was carried out to establish the most suitable interpolation methods of the PET images in the different steps of the planning procedure. Based on PET/CT images obtained by using these optimal interpolations for the old EARL accreditation (EARL1) and for the new one (EARL2), the treatment plannings of representative actual clinical cases were calculated, and the clinical implications of the resulting differences were analyzed. As expected, EARL2 provided smaller volumes with higher resolution than EARL1. The increase in the size of the reconstructed volumes with EARL1 accreditation caused high doses in the organs at risk and in the regions adjacent to the target volumes. EARL2 accreditation allowed an improvement in the accuracy of the PET imaging precision, allowing more personalized radiotherapy. This work provides recommendations for those centers that intend to benefit from the new accreditation, EARL2, and can help build confidence of those that must continue working under the EARL1 accreditation.
•Repeated PET imaging of hypoxia may be pivotal in radiotherapy outcome prediction.•Oxygen partial pressure maps can be non-linearly derived from radiotracer uptake.•The hypoxic target volume ...evolution in extension and severity can be determined.•The first two treatment week parameters have potential for outcome prediction.•Information may be used for treatment adaptation personalised strategies.
Longitudinal Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with hypoxia-specific radiotracers allows monitoring the time evolution of regions of increased radioresistance and may become fundamental in determining the radiochemotherapy outcome in Head-and-Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma (HNSCC). The aim of this study was to investigate the evolution of the hypoxic target volume on oxygen partial pressure maps (pO2-HTV) derived from 18FMISO-PET images acquired before and during radiochemotherapy and to uncover correlations between extent and severity of hypoxia and treatment outcome.
18FMISO-PET/CT images were acquired at three time points (before treatment start, in weeks two and five) for twenty-eight HNSCC patients treated with radiochemotherapy. The images were converted into pO2 maps and corresponding pO2-HTVs (pO2-HTV1, pO2-HTV2, pO2-HTV3) were contoured at 10 mmHg. Different parameters describing the pO2-HTV time evolution were considered, such as the percent and absolute difference between the pO2-HTVs (%HTVi,j and HTVi-HTVj with i,j = 1, 2, 3, respectively) and the slope of the linear regression curve fitting the pO2-HTVs in time. Correlations were sought between the pO2-HTV evolution parameters and loco-regional recurrence (LRR) using the Receiver Operating Characteristic method.
The Area Under the Curve values for %HTV1,2, HTV1-HTV2, HTV1-HTV3 and the slope of the pO2-HTV linear regression curve were 0.75 (p = 0.04), 0.73 (p = 0.02), 0.73 (p = 0.02) and 0.75 (p = 0.007), respectively. Other parameter combinations were not statistically significant.
The pO2-HTV evolution during radiochemotherapy showed predictive value for LRR. The changes in the tumour hypoxia during the first two treatment weeks may be used for adaptive personalized treatment approaches.
The purpose of this study was to present a Monte-Carlo (MC)-based optimization procedure to improve conventional treatment plans for accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) using modulated ...electron beams alone or combined with modulated photon beams, to be delivered by a single collimation device, i.e. a photon multi-leaf collimator (xMLC) already installed in a standard hospital. Five left-sided breast cases were retrospectively planned using modulated photon and/or electron beams with an in-house treatment planning system (TPS), called CARMEN, and based on MC simulations. For comparison, the same cases were also planned by a PINNACLE TPS using conventional inverse intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). Normal tissue complication probability for pericarditis, pneumonitis and breast fibrosis was calculated. CARMEN plans showed similar acceptable planning target volume (PTV) coverage as conventional IMRT plans with 90% of PTV volume covered by the prescribed dose (D(p)). Heart and ipsilateral lung receiving 5% D(p) and 15% D(p), respectively, was 3.2-3.6 times lower for CARMEN plans. Ipsilateral breast receiving 50% D(p) and 100% D(p) was an average of 1.4-1.7 times lower for CARMEN plans. Skin and whole body low-dose volume was also reduced. Modulated photon and/or electron beams planned by the CARMEN TPS improve APBI treatments by increasing normal tissue sparing maintaining the same PTV coverage achieved by other techniques. The use of the xMLC, already installed in the linac, to collimate photon and electron beams favors the clinical implementation of APBI with the highest efficiency.
Radiation therapy is among the main treatment options offered as a non-surgical solution in the treatment of cancer. This technology-driven treatment modality has evolved significantly over the past ...few decades, aiming to improve the therapeutic ratio and local tumour control. Modern external beam radiotherapy such as intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), intensity modulated arc therapy (IMAT) or volumetric arc therapy (VMAT), and intensity modulated proton therapy (IMPT) approaches modulate intensity to deliver precisely the radiation doses required to specific areas within the tumour, and to spare nearby organs Citation1,Citation2. The use of these techniques in combination with image-guided techniques and multimodality imaging has provided more accurate radiotherapy allowing for a reduction of long-term adverse effects Citation3. Nowadays, most treatment planning systems (TPS) integrate imaging information for the diagnosis, planning, and delivery process, offering tools for image registration and fusion, dose calculation, and optimisation, among others.
Proton Grid Therapy: A Proof-of-Concept Study Henry, Thomas; Ureba, Ana; Valdman, Alexander ...
Technology in cancer research & treatment,
12/2017, Letnik:
16, Številka:
6
Journal Article
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In this work, we studied the possibility of merging proton therapy with grid therapy. We hypothesized that patients with larger targets containing solid tumor growth could benefit from being treated ...with this method, proton grid therapy. We performed treatment planning for 2 patients with abdominal cancer with the suggested proton grid therapy technique. The proton beam arrays were cross-fired over the target volume. Circular or rectangular beam element shapes (building up the beam grids) were evaluated in the planning. An optimization was performed to calculate the fluence from each beam grid element. The optimization objectives were set to create a homogeneous dose inside the target volume with the constraint of maintaining the grid structure of the dose distribution in the surrounding tissue. The proton beam elements constituting the grid remained narrow and parallel down to large depths in the tissue. The calculation results showed that it is possible to produce target doses ranging between 100% and 130% of the prescribed dose by cross-firing beam grids, incident from 4 directions. A sensitivity test showed that a small rotation or translation of one of the used grids, due to setup errors, had only a limited influence on the dose distribution produced in the target, if 4 beam arrays were used for the irradiation. Proton grid therapy is technically feasible at proton therapy centers equipped with spot scanning systems using existing tools. By cross-firing the proton beam grids, a low tissue dose in between the paths of the elemental beams can be maintained down to the vicinity of a deep-seated target. With proton grid therapy, it is possible to produce a dose distribution inside the target volume of similar uniformity as can be created with current clinical methods.
Solid tumours may present hypoxic sub-regions of increased radioresistance. Hypoxia quantification requires of clinically implementable, non-invasive and reproducible techniques as positron emission ...tomography (PET). PET-based dose painting strategies aiming at targeting those sub-regions may be limited by the resolution gap between the PET imaging resolution and the smaller scale at which hypoxia occurs. The ultimate benefit of the usage of dose painting may be reached if the planned dose distribution can be performed and delivered consistently. This study aimed at assessing the feasibility of two PET-based dose painting strategies using two beam qualities (photon or proton beams) in terms of tumour control probability (TCP), accounting for underlying oxygen distribution at sub-millimetre scale.A tumour oxygenation model at submillimetre scale was created consisting of three regions with different oxygen partial pressure distributions, being hypoxia decreasing from core to periphery. A published relationship between uptake and oxygen partial pressure was used and a PET image of the tumour was simulated. The fundamental effects that limit the PET camera resolution were considered by processing the uptake distribution with a Gaussian 3D filter and re-binning to a PET image voxel size of 2 mm. Prescription doses to overcome tumour hypoxia were calculated based on the processed images, and planned using robust optimisation.Normal tissue complication probabilities and TCPs after the delivery of the planned doses were calculated for the nominal plan and the lowest bounds of the dose volume histograms resulting from the robust scenarios planned, taking into account the underlying oxygenation at submillimetre scale. Results were presented for the two beam qualities and the two dose painting strategies: by contours (DPBC) and by using a voxel grouping-based approach (DPBOX).In the studied case, DPBOX outperforms DPBC with respect to TCP regardless the beam quality, although both dose painting strategy plans demonstrated robust target coverage.
Purpose
Tumor hypoxia, often found in nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC), implies an increased resistance to radiotherapy. Pretreatment assessment of tumor oxygenation is, therefore, warranted in ...these patients, as functional imaging of hypoxia could be used as a basis for dose painting. This study aimed at investigating the feasibility of using a method for calculating the dose required in hypoxic subvolumes segmented on 18F‐HX4 positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of NSCLC.
Methods
Positron emission tomography imaging data based on the hypoxia tracer 18F‐HX4 of 19 NSCLC patients were included in the study. Normalized tracer uptake was converted to oxygen partial pressure (pO2) and hypoxic target volumes (HTVs) were segmented using a threshold of 10 mmHg. Uniform doses required to overcome the hypoxic resistance in the target volumes were calculated based on a previously proposed method taking into account the effect of interfraction reoxygenation, for fractionation schedules ranging from extremely hypofractionated stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) to conventionally fractionated radiotherapy.
Results
Gross target volumes ranged between 6.2 and 859.6 cm3, and the hypoxic fraction < 10 mmHg between 1.2% and 72.4%. The calculated doses for overcoming the resistance of cells in the HTVs were comparable to those currently prescribed in clinical practice as well as those previously tested in feasibility studies on dose escalation in NSCLC. Depending on the size of the HTV and the distribution of pO2, HTV doses were calculated as 43.6–48.4 Gy for a three‐fraction schedule, 51.7–57.6 Gy for five fractions, and 59.5–66.4 Gy for eight fractions. For patients in whom the HTV pO2 distribution was more favorable, a lower dose was required despite a bigger volume. Tumor control probability was lower for single‐fraction schedules, while higher levels of tumor control probability were found for schedules employing several fractions.
Conclusions
The method to account for heterogeneous and dynamic hypoxia in target volume segmentation and dose prescription based on 18F‐HX4‐PET imaging appears feasible in NSCLC patients. The distribution of oxygen partial pressure within HTV could impact the required prescribed dose more than the size of the volume.
Purpose
Radiotherapy using grids containing cm‐wide beam elements has been carried out sporadically for more than a century. During the past two decades, preclinical research on radiotherapy with ...grids containing small beam elements, 25 μm–0.7 mm wide, has been performed. Grid therapy with larger beam elements is technically easier to implement, but the normal tissue tolerance to the treatment is decreasing. In this work, a new approach in grid therapy, based on irradiations with grids containing narrow carbon‐ion beam elements was evaluated dosimetrically. The aim formulated for the suggested treatment was to obtain a uniform target dose combined with well‐defined grids in the irradiated normal tissue. The gain, obtained by crossfiring the carbon‐ion beam grids over a simulated target volume, was quantitatively evaluated.
Methods
The dose distributions produced by narrow rectangular carbon‐ion beams in a water phantom were simulated with the PHITS Monte Carlo code. The beam‐element height was set to 2.0 cm in the simulations, while the widths varied from 0.5 to 10.0 mm. A spread‐out Bragg peak (SOBP) was then created for each beam element in the grid, to cover the target volume with dose in the depth direction. The dose distributions produced by the beam‐grid irradiations were thereafter constructed by adding the dose profiles simulated for single beam elements. The variation of the valley‐to‐peak dose ratio (VPDR) with depth in water was thereafter evaluated. The separation of the beam elements inside the grids were determined for different irradiation geometries with a selection criterion.
Results
The simulated carbon‐ion beams remained narrow down to the depths of the Bragg peaks. With the formulated selection criterion, a beam‐element separation which was close to the beam‐element width was found optimal for grids containing 3.0‐mm‐wide beam elements, while a separation which was considerably larger than the beam‐element width was found advantageous for grids containing 0.5‐mm‐wide beam elements. With the single‐grid irradiation setup, the VPDRs were close to 1.0 already at a distance of several cm from the target. The valley doses given to the normal tissue at 0.5 cm distance from the target volume could be limited to less than 10% of the mean target dose if a crossfiring setup with four interlaced grids was used.
Conclusions
The dose distributions produced by grids containing 0.5‐ and 3.0‐mm wide beam elements had characteristics which could be useful for grid therapy. Grids containing mm‐wide carbon‐ion beam elements could be advantageous due to the technical ease with which these beams can be produced and delivered, despite the reduced threshold doses observed for early and late responding normal tissue for beams of millimeter width, compared to submillimetric beams. The treatment simulations showed that nearly homogeneous dose distributions could be created inside the target volumes, combined with low valley doses in the normal tissue located close to the target volume, if the carbon‐ion beam grids were crossfired in an interlaced manner with optimally selected beam‐element separations. The formulated selection criterion was found useful for the quantitative evaluation of the dose distributions produced by the different irradiation setups.