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High-Dose-Rate Prostate Brachytherapy Consistently Results in High Quality Dosimetry

Authors :
Michael L. Steinberg
Mitchell Kamrava
D. Jeffrey Demanes
Pin-Chieh Wang
Sang-June Park
Oluwatosin Kayode
Evan C. White
John J. DeMarco
Source :
International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics. 85:543-548
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2013.

Abstract

Purpose We performed a dosimetry analysis to determine how well the goals for clinical target volume coverage, dose homogeneity, and normal tissue dose constraints were achieved with high-dose-rate (HDR) prostate brachytherapy. Methods and Materials Cumulative dose-volume histograms for 208 consecutively treated HDR prostate brachytherapy implants were analyzed. Planning was based on ultrasound-guided catheter insertion and postoperative CT imaging; the contoured clinical target volume (CTV) was the prostate, a small margin, and the proximal seminal vesicles. Dosimetric parameters analyzed for the CTV were D90, V90, V100, V150, and V200. Dose to the urethra, bladder, bladder balloon, and rectum were evaluated by the dose to 0.1 cm 3 , 1 cm 3 , and 2 cm 3 of each organ, expressed as a percentage of the prescribed dose. Analysis was stratified according to prostate size. Results The mean prostate ultrasound volume was 38.7 ± 13.4 cm 3 (range: 11.7-108.6 cm 3 ). The mean CTV was 75.1 ± 20.6 cm 3 (range: 33.4-156.5 cm 3 ). The mean D90 was 109.2% ± 2.6% (range: 102.3%-118.4%). Ninety-three percent of observed D90 values were between 105 and 115%. The mean V90, V100, V150, and V200 were 99.9% ± 0.05%, 99.5% ± 0.8%, 25.4% ± 4.2%, and 7.8% ± 1.4%. The mean dose to 0.1 cm 3 , 1 cm 3 , and 2 cm 3 for organs at risk were: Urethra: 107.3% ± 3.0%, 101.1% ± 14.6%, and 47.9% ± 34.8%; bladder wall: 79.5% ± 5.1%, 69.8% ± 4.9%, and 64.3% ± 5.0%; bladder balloon: 70.3% ± 6.8%, 59.1% ± 6.6%, and 52.3% ± 6.2%; rectum: 76.3% ± 2.5%, 70.2% ± 3.3%, and 66.3% ± 3.8%. There was no significant difference between D90 and V100 when stratified by prostate size. Conclusions HDR brachytherapy allows the physician to consistently achieve complete prostate target coverage and maintain normal tissue dose constraints for organs at risk over a wide range of target volumes.

Details

ISSN :
03603016
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3c0a834600cc3b99fbfd9041b7473fb7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2012.03.035