Back to Search Start Over

Demonstration of real-time positron emission tomography biology-guided radiotherapy delivery to targets.

Authors :
Oderinde OM
Narayanan M
Olcott P
Voronenko Y
Burns J
Xu S
Shao L
Feghali KAA
Shirvani SM
Surucu M
Kuduvalli G
Source :
Medical physics [Med Phys] 2024 Aug; Vol. 51 (8), pp. 5672-5681. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 07.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Biology-guided radiotherapy (BgRT) is a novel technology that uses positron emission tomography (PET) data to direct radiotherapy delivery in real-time. BgRT enables the precise delivery of radiation doses based on the PET signals emanating from PET-avid tumors on the fly. In this way, BgRT uniquely utilizes radiotracer uptake as a biological beacon for controlling and adjusting dose delivery in real-time to account for target motion.<br />Purpose: To demonstrate using real-time PET for BgRT delivery on the RefleXion X1 radiotherapy machine. The X1 radiotherapy machine is a rotating ring-gantry radiotherapy system that generates a nominal 6MV photon beam, PET, and computed tomography (CT) components. The system utilizes emitted photons from PET-avid targets to deliver effective radiation beamlets or pulses to the tumor in real-time.<br />Methods: This study demonstrated a real-time PET BgRT delivery experiment under three scenarios. These scenarios included BgRT delivering to (S <subscript>1</subscript> ) a static target in a homogeneous and heterogeneous environment, (S <subscript>2</subscript> ) a static target with a hot avoidance structure and partial PET-avid target, and (S <subscript>3</subscript> ) a moving target. The first step was to create stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) and BgRT plans (offline PET data supported) using RefleXion's custom-built treatment planning system (TPS). Additionally, to create a BgRT plan using PET-guided delivery, the targets were filled with 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG), which represents a tumor/target, that is, PET-avid. The background materials were created in the insert with homogeneous water medium (for S <subscript>1</subscript> ) and heterogeneous water with styrofoam mesh medium. A heterogeneous background medium simulated soft tissue surrounding the tumor. The treatment plan was then delivered to the experimental setups using a pre-commercial version of the X1 machine. As a final step, the dosimetric accuracy for S <subscript>1</subscript> and S <subscript>2</subscript> was assessed using the ArcCheck analysis tool-the gamma criteria of 3%/3 mm. For S <subscript>3</subscript> , the delivery dose was quantified using EBT-XD radiochromic film. The accuracy criteria were based on coverage, where 100% of the clinical target volume (CTV) receives at least 97% of the prescription dose, and the maximum dose in the CTV was ≤130% of the maximum planned dose (97 % ≤ CTV ≤ 130%).<br />Results: For the S1, both SBRT and BgRT deliveries had gamma pass rates greater than 95% (SBRT range: 96.9%-100%, BgRT range: 95.2%-98.9%), while in S <subscript>2</subscript> , the gamma pass rate was 98% for SBRT and between 95.2% and 98.9% for BgRT plan delivering. For S <subscript>3</subscript> , both SBRT and BgRT motion deliveries met CTV dose coverage requirements, with BgRT plans delivering a very high dose to the target. The CTV dose ranges were (a) SBRT:100.4%-120.4%, and (b) BgRT: 121.3%-139.9%.<br />Conclusions: This phantom-based study demonstrated that PET signals from PET-avid tumors can be utilized to direct real-time dose delivery to the tumor accurately, which is comparable to the dosimetric accuracy of SBRT. Furthermore, BgRT delivered a PET-signal controlled dose to the moving target, equivalent to the dose distribution to the static target. A future study will compare the performance of BgRT with conventional image-guided radiotherapy.<br /> (© 2024 The Authors. Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2473-4209
Volume :
51
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Medical physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38452277
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mp.16999