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Patient-Specific Heart Constraint: A Tool for Optimization and Evaluation of Mean Heart Dose in Breast Cancer Patients.

Authors :
Ward R
West K
Latty D
Beldham-Collins R
Jia D
Wang W
Cross S
Gebski V
Ahern V
Stuart K
Source :
Practical radiation oncology [Pract Radiat Oncol] 2021 Mar-Apr; Vol. 11 (2), pp. e154-e162. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Oct 28.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose: Our institution introduced a patient-specific heart constraint (PSHC) and a mean heart dose (MHD) constraint of 4 Gy for all patients receiving breast radiation therapy (RT) with a simultaneous boost (SIB). This was introduced as a method to calculate the predicted MHD before optimizing IMRT fields. We sought to determine whether the introduction of a PSHC reduced MHD, while maintaining optimally dosed treatment plans.<br />Material/methods: Patients were retrospectively divided into 2 groups, pre- and postintroduction of the PSHC. The breast and SIB Planning Target Volumes (PTVs) were prescribed to 50 Gy and 57 Gy, respectively, in 25 fractions. Plans were generated using a hybrid IMRT technique, 30 Gy using an open tangential field arrangement, and 27 Gy using IMRT fields. The PSHC was calculated using MHD of open tangential field × 2. A paired t test compared PTV coverage and heart doses between cohorts (P < .05 significant).<br />Results: A total of 264 patients were included (138 pre-PSHC and 126 post-PSHC) with 137 right-sided and 127 left-sided treatments. MHD was significantly reduced across both right-sided (-0.4 Gy, P < .0001) and left-sided (-1.2 Gy, P < .0001) treatments overall. Left-sided treatments were further examined between free breathing and deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH). DIBH showed reduction in MHD, although it was not significant (-0.46 Gy, P = .34). Heart V5 Gy showed reduction in right-sided (-1%, P = .002) and left-sided (-9.2%, P < .0001) treatments overall. Left-sided free breathing showed significant reduction (-8.8%, P < .0001), and DIBH also showed significant reduction (-5.1%, P = .0034). Tumor bed doses remained above the 54.15 Gy (95% of 57 Gy) threshold for all plans.<br />Conclusion: Introduction of a PSHC can reduce MHD and V5 Gy for patients receiving whole breast RT with SIB while maintaining optimally dosed plans, with the greatest benefit shown for left-sided, free-breathing treatments.<br /> (Crown Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1879-8519
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Practical radiation oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33130033
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.prro.2020.10.005