Feasibility assessment of inspiration breath-hold motion management for tumor tracking during cone-beam computed tomography for setup and radiotherapy in Veterinary Medicine: A pilot study.

IF 1.3 2区 农林科学 Q2 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-15 DOI:10.1111/vru.13412
Keiko Murakami, Nicholas Rancilio, Lisa Foster
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Radiotherapy (RT) for lung or liver tumors can be challenging due to respiration-induced organ motion (RIOM). There are some methodological solutions to minimize RIOM. We explored a new approach to evaluate the feasibility and reproducibility of RIOM during RT with five total client-owned tumor-bearing animals using a remote-triggered breath-hold ventilator under general anesthesia during image acquisition and RT. There was one stereotactic body radiotherapy, one conventionally fractionated definitive intent, and three conventionally fractionated palliative intent RT cases. Based on repeated cone beam CT, there were no treatment table shifts required prior to initiating beam on. No clinically significant complications such as hypotension occurred during anesthesia. This technique appeared to be safe in this group of patients and was easily clinically implemented and highly reproducible. More complete follow-up data and larger studies are needed to evaluate clinical outcomes with this breath-hold ventilator technique in veterinary RT.

用于兽医学中设置和放射治疗的锥形束计算机断层扫描过程中肿瘤跟踪的吸气憋气运动管理的可行性评估:试点研究。
由于呼吸引起的器官运动(RIOM),肺部或肝部肿瘤的放射治疗(RT)具有挑战性。有一些方法可以最大限度地减少 RIOM。我们探索了一种新方法来评估RT期间RIOM的可行性和可重复性,在图像采集和RT期间,在全身麻醉下使用遥控触发的屏气呼吸机对五只客户自养的肿瘤动物进行RT。其中有一例立体定向体放射治疗、一例常规分次确定性治疗和三例常规分次姑息性治疗。根据锥形束 CT 的重复检查结果,在开始射线照射之前,治疗台无需移动。麻醉过程中未出现低血压等有临床意义的并发症。这项技术在这组患者中似乎是安全的,而且易于临床应用,可重复性高。需要更完整的随访数据和更大规模的研究来评估这种屏气呼吸器技术在兽医 RT 中的临床效果。
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来源期刊
Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound
Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
17.60%
发文量
133
审稿时长
8-16 weeks
期刊介绍: Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound is a bimonthly, international, peer-reviewed, research journal devoted to the fields of veterinary diagnostic imaging and radiation oncology. Established in 1958, it is owned by the American College of Veterinary Radiology and is also the official journal for six affiliate veterinary organizations. Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound is represented on the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, World Association of Medical Editors, and Committee on Publication Ethics. The mission of Veterinary Radiology & Ultrasound is to serve as a leading resource for high quality articles that advance scientific knowledge and standards of clinical practice in the areas of veterinary diagnostic radiology, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, ultrasonography, nuclear imaging, radiation oncology, and interventional radiology. Manuscript types include original investigations, imaging diagnosis reports, review articles, editorials and letters to the Editor. Acceptance criteria include originality, significance, quality, reader interest, composition and adherence to author guidelines.
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