Impact of Esophageal Motion on Dosimetry and Toxicity With Thoracic Radiation Therapy.

TitleImpact of Esophageal Motion on Dosimetry and Toxicity With Thoracic Radiation Therapy.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsGao, Hao, Chris R. Kelsey, John Boyle, Tianyi Xie, Suzanne Catalano, Xiaofei Wang, and Fang-Fang Yin
JournalTechnol Cancer Res Treat
Volume18
Pagination1533033819849073
Date Published2019 Jan-Dec
ISSN1533-0338
KeywordsEsophagus, Female, Four-Dimensional Computed Tomography, Humans, Lung Neoplasms, Male, Motion, Organs at Risk, Radiometry, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Radiotherapy, Image-Guided, Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated
Abstract

PURPOSE: To investigate the impact of intra- and inter-fractional esophageal motion on dosimetry and observed toxicity in a phase I dose escalation study of accelerated radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy for locally advanced lung cancer.METHODS AND MATERIALS: Patients underwent computed tomography imaging for radiotherapy treatment planning (CT1 and 4DCT1) and at 2 weeks (CT2 and 4DCT2) and 5 weeks (CT3 and 4DCT3) after initiating treatment. Each computed tomography scan consisted of 10-phase 4DCTs in addition to a static free-breathing or breath-hold computed tomography. The esophagus was independently contoured on all computed tomographies and 4DCTs. Both CT2 and CT3 were rigidly registered with CT1 and doses were recalculated using the original intensity-modulated radiation therapy plan based on CT1 to assess the impact of interfractional motion on esophageal dosimetry. Similarly, 4DCT1 data sets were rigidly registered with CT1 to assess the impact of intrafractional motion. The motion was characterized based on the statistical analysis of slice-by-slice center shifts (after registration) for the upper, middle, and lower esophageal regions, respectively. For the dosimetric analysis, the following quantities were calculated and assessed for correlation with toxicity grade: the percent volumes of esophagus that received at least 20 Gy (V20) and 60 Gy (V60), maximum esophageal dose, equivalent uniform dose, and normal tissue complication probability.RESULTS: The interfractional center shifts were 4.4 ± 1.7 mm, 5.5 ± 2.0 mm and 4.9 ± 2.1 mm for the upper, middle, and lower esophageal regions, respectively, while the intrafractional center shifts were 0.6 ± 0.4 mm, 0.7 ± 0.7 mm, and 0.9 ± 0.7 mm, respectively. The mean V60 (and corresponding normal tissue complication probability) values estimated from the interfractional motion analysis were 7.8% (10%), 4.6% (7.5%), 7.5% (8.6%), and 31% (26%) for grade 0, grade 1, grade 2, and grade 3 toxicities, respectively.CONCLUSIONS: Interfractional esophageal motion is significantly larger than intrafractional motion. The mean values of V60 and corresponding normal tissue complication probability, incorporating interfractional esophageal motion, correlated positively with esophageal toxicity grade.

DOI10.1177/1533033819849073
Alternate JournalTechnol Cancer Res Treat
Original PublicationImpact of esophageal motion on dosimetry and toxicity with thoracic radiation therapy.
PubMed ID31130076
PubMed Central IDPMC6537299