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Effect of intra-fraction motion on the accumulated dose for free-breathing MR-guided stereotactic body radiation therapy of renal-cell carcinoma.

Authors :
Stemkens B
Glitzner M
Kontaxis C
de Senneville BD
Prins FM
Crijns SPM
Kerkmeijer LGW
Lagendijk JJW
van den Berg CAT
Tijssen RHN
Source :
Physics in medicine and biology [Phys Med Biol] 2017 Sep 01; Vol. 62 (18), pp. 7407-7424. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Sep 01.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) has shown great promise in increasing local control rates for renal-cell carcinoma (RCC). Characterized by steep dose gradients and high fraction doses, these hypo-fractionated treatments are, however, prone to dosimetric errors as a result of variations in intra-fraction respiratory-induced motion, such as drifts and amplitude alterations. This may lead to significant variations in the deposited dose. This study aims to develop a method for calculating the accumulated dose for MRI-guided SBRT of RCC in the presence of intra-fraction respiratory variations and determine the effect of such variations on the deposited dose. For this, RCC SBRT treatments were simulated while the underlying anatomy was moving, based on motion information from three motion models with increasing complexity: (1) STATIC, in which static anatomy was assumed, (2) AVG-RESP, in which 4D-MRI phase-volumes were time-weighted, and (3) PCA, a method that generates 3D volumes with sufficient spatio-temporal resolution to capture respiration and intra-fraction variations. Five RCC patients and two volunteers were included and treatments delivery was simulated, using motion derived from subject-specific MR imaging. Motion was most accurately estimated using the PCA method with root-mean-squared errors of 2.7, 2.4, 1.0 mm for STATIC, AVG-RESP and PCA, respectively. The heterogeneous patient group demonstrated relatively large dosimetric differences between the STATIC and AVG-RESP, and the PCA reconstructed dose maps, with hotspots up to [Formula: see text] of the D99 and an underdosed GTV in three out of the five patients. This shows the potential importance of including intra-fraction motion variations in dose calculations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1361-6560
Volume :
62
Issue :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physics in medicine and biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28771144
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/aa83f7