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Direction modulated brachytherapy (DMBT) for treatment of cervical cancer: A planning study with 192 Ir, 60 Co, and 169 Yb HDR sources.
- Source :
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Medical physics [Med Phys] 2017 Dec; Vol. 44 (12), pp. 6538-6547. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Oct 23. - Publication Year :
- 2017
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Abstract
- Purpose: To evaluate plan quality of a novel MRI-compatible direction modulated brachytherapy (DMBT) tandem applicator using <superscript>192</superscript> Ir, <superscript>60</superscript> Co, and <superscript>169</superscript> Yb HDR brachytherapy sources, for various cervical cancer high-risk clinical target volumes (CTV <subscript>HR</subscript> ).<br />Materials and Methods: The novel DMBT tandem applicator has six peripheral grooves of 1.3-mm diameter along a 5.4-mm thick nonmagnetic tungsten alloy rod. Monte Carlo (MC) simulations were used to benchmark the dosimetric parameters of the <superscript>192</superscript> Ir, <superscript>60</superscript> Co, and <superscript>169</superscript> Yb HDR sources in a water phantom against the literature data. 45 clinical cases that were treated using conventional tandem-and-ring applicators with <superscript>192</superscript> Ir source ( <superscript>192</superscript> Ir-T&R) were selected consecutively from intErnational MRI-guided BRAchytherapy in CErvical cancer (EMBRACE) trial. Then, for each clinical case, 3D dose distribution of each source inside the DMBT and conventional applicators were calculated and imported onto an in-house developed inverse planning optimization code to generate optimal plans. All plans generated by the DMBT tandem-and-ring (DMBT T&R) from all three sources were compared to the respective <superscript>192</superscript> Ir-T&R plans. For consistency, all plans were normalized to the same CTV <subscript>HR</subscript> D90 achieved in clinical plans. The D <subscript>2 cm3</subscript> for organs at risk (OAR) such as bladder, rectum, and sigmoid, and D90, D98, D10, V100, and V200 for CTV <subscript>HR</subscript> were calculated.<br />Results: In general, plan quality significantly improved when a conventional tandem (Con.T) is replaced with the DMBT tandem. The target coverage metrics were similar across <superscript>192</superscript> Ir-T&R and DMBT T&R plans with all three sources (P > 0.093). <superscript>60</superscript> Co-DMBT T&R generated greater hot spots and less dose homogeneity in the target volumes compared with the <superscript>192</superscript> Ir- and <superscript>169</superscript> Yb-DMBT T&R plans. Mean OAR doses in the DMBT T&R plans were significantly smaller (P < 0.0084) than the <superscript>192</superscript> Ir-T&R plans. Mean bladder D <subscript>2 cm3</subscript> was reduced by 4.07%, 4.15%, and 5.13%, for the <superscript>192</superscript> Ir-, <superscript>60</superscript> Co-, and <superscript>169</superscript> Yb-DMBT T&R plans respectively. Mean rectum (sigmoid) D <subscript>2 cm3</subscript> was reduced by 3.17% (3.63%), 2.57% (3.96%), and 4.65% (4.34%) for the <superscript>192</superscript> Ir-, <superscript>60</superscript> Co-, and <superscript>169</superscript> Yb-DMBT T&R plans respectively. The DMBT T&R plans with the <superscript>169</superscript> Yb source generally resulted in the greatest OAR sparing when the CTV <subscript>HR</subscript> were larger and irregular in shape, while for smaller and regularly shaped CTV <subscript>HR</subscript> (<30 cm <superscript>3</superscript> ), OAR sparing between the sources were comparable.<br />Conclusions: The DMBT tandem provides a promising alternative to the Con.T design with significant improvement in the plan quality for various target volumes. The DMBT T&R plans generated with the three sources of varying energies generated superior plans compared to the conventional T&R applicators. Plans generated with the <superscript>169</superscript> Yb-DMBT T&R produced best results for larger and irregularly shaped CTV <subscript>HR</subscript> in terms of OAR sparing. Thus, this study suggests that the combination of the DMBT tandem applicator with varying energy sources can work synergistically to generate improved plans for cervical cancer brachytherapy.<br /> (© 2017 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)
- Subjects :
- Cobalt Radioisotopes adverse effects
Female
Humans
Iridium Radioisotopes adverse effects
Monte Carlo Method
Organs at Risk radiation effects
Radioisotopes adverse effects
Ytterbium adverse effects
Brachytherapy adverse effects
Cobalt Radioisotopes therapeutic use
Iridium Radioisotopes therapeutic use
Radioisotopes therapeutic use
Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms radiotherapy
Ytterbium therapeutic use
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 2473-4209
- Volume :
- 44
- Issue :
- 12
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Medical physics
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 28940520
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mp.12598