Jonathan J Wyatt, Stephen Hedley, Neil Richmond, Serena West, Rachel L Brooks-Pearson, Tracy Wintle, Rachel A Pearson
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objectives: Magnetic Resonance (MR)-only radiotherapy has been clinically implemented but its dose impact has not been assessed in clinical practice. This study evaluated the volume and dose differences between patients treated with CT-only, MR-CT fusion or MR-only prostate radiotherapy pathways.
Methods: 454 patients from a single centre were treated using MR-only (n = 96), CT-only (n = 248) or MR-CT (n = 110) pathways. Patients were selected for different pathways based solely on geographic location and treatment date. Patients were contoured by the same group of delineators and were planned for 60 Gy in 20 fractions by an automated planning algorithm. Clinical Target Volume (CTV), bladder, penile bulb and rectum volumes and clinical dose constraints were compared with Kurshkal-Wallis tests, adjusted for multiple testing with a p<0.05 significance level.
Results: Median MR-only CTVs were 5 cm3 smaller than CT-only (p=0.004). Penile bulb Dmean was 12.0 Gy (CT-only), 9.1 Gy (MR-CT) and 5.9 Gy (MR-only, p<0.001), with 79.0%, 90.9% and 95.8% of patients within constraint. Rectum D2 cm3 was 57.4 Gy (CT-only), 57.6 Gy (MR-CT) and 56.5 Gy (MR-only, p<0.001), with 35.1%, 20.9% and 56.2% of patients within rectum V60 Gy constraint.
Conclusions: The MR-only pathway produced significant reductions 13% in CTV volume, 51% penile bulb Dmean and 2% rectum D2 cm3 compared to CT-only.
Advances in knowledge: The dose benefit from MR-only has been assessed in clinical practice, demonstrating significant reductions in penile bulb and rectum doses compared to both CT-only and MR-CT pathways. This suggests the MR-only pathway is required to provide the full benefit of MR contouring to reduce toxicities from prostate radiotherapy.
期刊介绍:
BJR is the international research journal of the British Institute of Radiology and is the oldest scientific journal in the field of radiology and related sciences.
Dating back to 1896, BJR’s history is radiology’s history, and the journal has featured some landmark papers such as the first description of Computed Tomography "Computerized transverse axial tomography" by Godfrey Hounsfield in 1973. A valuable historical resource, the complete BJR archive has been digitized from 1896.
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- ISSN: 0007-1285
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