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A feasibility study of adaptive radiation therapy for postprostatectomy prostate cancer.

Authors :
Meyers, Sandra M.
Winter, Jeff D.
Obeidi, Yazan
Chung, Peter
Menard, Cynthia
Warde, Padraig
Fong, Heng
McPartlin, Andrew
Parameswaran, Saibishkumar
Berlin, Alejandro
Bayley, Andrew
Catton, Charles
Craig, Tim
Source :
Medical Dosimetry. Summer2024, Vol. 49 Issue 2, p150-158. 9p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Postoperative prostate radiotherapy requires large planning target volume (PTV) margins to account for motion and deformation of the prostate bed. Adaptive radiation therapy (ART) can incorporate image-guidance data to personalize PTVs that maintain coverage while reducing toxicity. We present feasibility and dosimetry results of a prospective study of postprostatectomy ART. Twenty-one patients were treated with single-adaptation ART. Conventional treatments were delivered for fractions 1 to 6 and adapted plans for the remaining 27 fractions. Clinical target volumes (CTVs) and small bowel delineated on fraction 1 to 4 CBCT were used to generate adapted PTVs and planning organ-at-risk (OAR) volumes for adapted plans. PTV volume and OAR dose were compared between ART and conventional using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Weekly CBCT were used to assess the fraction of CTV covered by PTV, CTV D99, and small bowel D 1cc. Clinical metrics were compared using a Student's t-test (p < 0.05 significant). Offline adaptive planning required 1.9 ± 0.4 days (mean ± SD). ART decreased mean adapted PTV volume 61 ± 37 cc and bladder wall D50 compared with conventional treatment (p < 0.01). The CTV was fully covered for 96% (97%) of fractions with ART (conventional). Reconstructing dose on weekly CBCT, a nonsignificant reduction in CTV D99 was observed with ART (94%) compared to conventional (96%). Reduced CTV D99 with ART was significantly correlated with large anterior-posterior rectal diameter on simulation CT. ART reduced the number of fractions exceeding our institution's small bowel D1c limit from 14% to 7%. This study has demonstrated the feasibility of offline ART for post-prostatectomy cancer. ART facilitates PTV volume reduction while maintaining reasonable CTV coverage and can reduce the dose to adjacent normal tissues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09583947
Volume :
49
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Medical Dosimetry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177036301
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meddos.2023.10.008