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Prediction of the location and size of the stomach using patient characteristics for retrospective radiation dose estimation following radiotherapy.

Authors :
Lamart S
Imran R
Simon SL
Doi K
Morton LM
Curtis RE
Lee C
Drozdovitch V
Maass-Moreno R
Chen CC
Whatley M
Miller DL
Pacak K
Lee C
Source :
Physics in medicine and biology [Phys Med Biol] 2013 Dec 21; Vol. 58 (24), pp. 8739-53. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Dec 04.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Following cancer radiotherapy, reconstruction of doses to organs, other than the target organ, is of interest for retrospective health risk studies. Reliable estimation of doses to organs that may be partially within or fully outside the treatment field requires reliable knowledge of the location and size of the organs, e.g., the stomach, which is at risk from abdominal irradiation. The stomach location and size are known to be highly variable between individuals, but have been little studied. Moreover, for treatments conducted years ago, medical images of patients are usually not available in medical records to locate the stomach. In light of the poor information available to locate the stomach in historical dose reconstructions, the purpose of this work was to investigate the variability of stomach location and size among adult male patients and to develop prediction models for the stomach location and size using predictor variables generally available in medical records of radiotherapy patients treated in the past. To collect data on stomach size and position, we segmented the contours of the stomach and of the skeleton on contemporary computed tomography (CT) images for 30 male patients in supine position. The location and size of the stomach was found to depend on body mass index (BMI), ponderal index (PI), and age. For example, the anteroposterior dimension of the stomach was found to increase with increasing BMI (≈0.25 cm kg(-1) m(2)) whereas its craniocaudal dimension decreased with increasing PI (≈-3.3 cm kg(-1) m(3)) and its transverse dimension increased with increasing PI (≈2.5 cm kg(-1) m(3)). Using the prediction models, we generated three-dimensional computational stomach models from a deformable hybrid phantom for three patients of different BMI. Based on a typical radiotherapy treatment, we simulated radiotherapy treatments on the predicted stomach models and on the CT images of the corresponding patients. Those dose calculations demonstrated good agreement between predicted and actual stomachs compared with doses derived from a reference model of the body that might be used in the absence of individual CT scan data.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1361-6560
Volume :
58
Issue :
24
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physics in medicine and biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24301086
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/58/24/8739