ITV, mid-ventilation, gating or couch tracking - A comparison of respiratory motion-management techniques based on 4D dose calculations
Stefanie Ehrbar, Alexander Jöhl, Adrianna Tartas, Luisa Sabrina Stark, Oliver Riesterer, Stephan Klöck, Matthias Guckenberger, Stephanie Tanadini-Lang
2017
PURPOSE: Respiratory motion-management techniques (MMT) aim to ensure tumor dose coverage while sparing lung tissue. Dynamic treatment-couch tracking of the moving tumor is a promising new MMT and was compared to the internal-target-volume (ITV) concept, the mid-ventilation (MidV) principle and the gating approach in a planning study based on 4D dose calculations. METHODS: For twenty patients with lung lesions, planning target volumes (PTV) were adapted to the MMT and stereotactic body
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... apy treatments were prepared with the 65%-isodose enclosing the PTV. For tracking, three concepts for target volume definition were considered: Including the gross tumor volume of one phase (single-phase tracking), including deformations between phases (multi-phase tracking) and additionally including tracking latencies of a couch tracking system (reliable couch tracking). The accumulated tumor and lung doses were estimated with 4D dose calculations based on 4D-CT datasets and deformable image registration. RESULTS: Single-phase tracking showed the lowest ipsilateral lung Dmean (median: 3.3Gy), followed by multi-phase tracking, gating, reliable couch tracking, MidV and ITV concepts (3.6, 3.8, 4.1, 4.3 and 4.8Gy). The 4D dose calculations showed the MidV and single-phase tracking overestimated the target mean dose (-2.3% and -1.3%), while it was slightly underestimated by the other MMT (<+1%). CONCLUSION: The ITV concept ensures tumor coverage, but exposes the lung tissue to a higher dose. The MidV, gating and tracking concepts were shown to reduce the lung dose. Neglecting non-translational changes of the tumor in the target volume definition for tracking results in a slightly reduced target coverage. The slightly inferior dose coverage for MidV should be considered when applying this technique clinically. Abstract Purpose: Respiratory motion-management techniques (MMT) aim to ensure tumor dose coverage while sparing lung tissue. Dynamic treatment-couch tracking of the moving tumor is a promising new MMT and was compared to the internal-target-volume (ITV) concept, the mid-ventilation (MidV) principle and the gating approach in a planning study based on 4D dose calculations. Methods: For twenty patients with lung lesions, planning target volumes (PTV) were adapted to the MMT and stereotactic body radiotherapy treatments were prepared with the 65%-isodose enclosing the PTV. For tracking, three concepts for target volume definition were considered: Including the gross tumor volume of one phase (single-phase tracking), including deformations between phases multiphase tracking) and additionally including tracking latencies of a couch tracking system (reliable couch tracking). The accumulated tumor and lung doses were estimated with 4D dose calculations based on 4D-CT datasets and deformable image registration. Results: Single-phase tracking showed the lowest ipsilateral lung Dmean (median: 3.3 Gy), followed by multi-phase tracking, gating, reliable couch tracking, MidV and ITV concept (3.6, 3.8, 4.1, 4.3 and 4.8 Gy). The 4D dose calculations showed the MidV and single-phase tracking overestimated the target Dmean (-2.3% and -1.3%), while it was slightly underestimated by the other MMT (<+1%). Conclusion: The ITV concept ensures tumor coverage, but exposes the lung tissue to a higher dose. The MidV, gating and tracking concept were shown to reduce the lung dose. Neglecting nontranslational changes of the tumor in the target volume definition for tracking results in a slightly reduced target coverage. The slightly inferior dose coverage for MidV should be considered when applying this technique clinically.
doi:10.5167/uzh-142064
fatcat:hqknrjiidjgfdn46bxumden5lu