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Article
Planning Evaluation of Radiotherapy for Complex Lung Cancer Cases Using Helical Tomotherapy
Physics in Medicine and Biology
  • Tomas Kron, London Regional Cancer Centre, London, ON
  • Grigor Grigorov, London Regional Cancer Centre, London, ON
  • Edward Yu, University of Western Ontario
  • Slav Yartsev, University of Western Ontario
  • Jeff Z. Chen, University of Western Ontario
  • Eugene Wong, University of Western Ontario
  • George Rodrigues, University of Western Ontario
  • Kris Trenka, London Regional Cancer Centre, London, ON
  • Terry Coad, London Regional Cancer Centre, London, ON
  • Glenn Bauman, University of Western Ontario
  • Jake Van Dyk, University of Western Ontario
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-21-2004
Abstract

Lung cancer treatment is one of the most challenging fields in radiotherapy. The aim of the present study was to investigate what role helical tomotherapy (HT), a novel approach to the delivery of highly conformal dose distributions using intensity-modulated radiation fan beams, can play in difficult cases with large target volumes typical for many of these patients. Tomotherapy plans were developed for 15 patients with stage III inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer. While not necessarily clinically indicated, elective nodal irradiation was included for all cases to create the most challenging scenarios with large target volumes. A 2 cm margin was used around the gross tumour volume (GTV) to generate primary planning target volume (PTV2) and 1 cm margin around elective nodes for secondary planning target volume (PTV1) resulting in PTV1 volumes larger than 1000 cm3 in 13 of the 15 patients. Tomotherapy plans were created using an inverse treatment planning system (TomoTherapy Inc.) based on superposition/convolution dose calculation for a fan beam thickness of 25 mm and a pitch factor between 0.3 and 0.8. For comparison, plans were created using an intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) approach planned on a commercial treatment planning system (TheraplanPlus, Nucletron). Tomotherapy delivery times for the large target volumes were estimated to be between 4 and 19 min. Using a prescribed dose of 60 Gy to PTV2 and 46 Gy to PTV1, the mean lung dose was 23.8+/-4.6 Gy. A 'dose quality factor' was introduced to correlate the plan outcome with patient specific parameters. A good correlation was found between the quality of the HT plans and the IMRT plans with HT being slightly better in most cases. The overlap between lung and PTV was found to be a good indicator of plan quality for HT. The mean lung dose was found to increase by approximately 0.9 Gy per percent overlap volume. Helical tomotherapy planning resulted in highly conformal dose distributions. It allowed easy achievement of two different dose levels in the target simultaneously. As the overlap between PTV and lung volume is a major predictor of mean lung dose, future work will be directed to control of margins. Work is underway to investigate the possibility of breath-hold techniques for tomotherapy delivery to facilitate this aim.

Notes
Published in: Phys. Med. Biol., 49, 3675-3690. doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/49/16/014
Citation Information
Tomas Kron, Grigor Grigorov, Edward Yu, Slav Yartsev, et al.. "Planning Evaluation of Radiotherapy for Complex Lung Cancer Cases Using Helical Tomotherapy" Physics in Medicine and Biology Vol. 49 Iss. 16 (2004) p. 3675 - 3690
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/edward_yu/137/