Physics and Imaging in Radiation Oncology (Apr 2024)

Intra-fractional geometric and dose/volume metric variations of magnetic resonance imaging-guided stereotactic radiotherapy of prostate bed after radical prostatectomy

  • Yu Gao,
  • Stephanie Yoon,
  • Ting Martin Ma,
  • Yingli Yang,
  • Ke Sheng,
  • Daniel A. Low,
  • Leslie Ballas,
  • Michael L. Steinberg,
  • Amar U Kishan,
  • Minsong Cao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30
p. 100573

Abstract

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Background and purpose: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)-guided Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) treatment to prostate bed after radical prostatectomy has garnered growing interests. The aim of this study is to evaluate intra-fractional anatomic and dose/volume metric variations for patients receiving this treatment. Materials and methods: Nineteen patients who received 30–34 Gy in 5 fractions on a 0.35T MR-Linac were included. Pre- and post-treatment MRIs were acquired for each fraction (total of 75 fractions). The Clinical Target Volume (CTV), bladder, rectum, and rectal wall were contoured on all images. Volumetric changes, Hausdorff distance, Mean Distance to Agreement (MDA), and Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) for each structure were calculated. Median value and Interquartile range (IQR) were recorded. Changes in target coverage and Organ at Risk (OAR) constraints were compared and evaluated using Wilcoxon rank sum tests at a significant level of 0.05. Results: Bladder had the largest volumetric changes, with a median volume increase of 48.9 % (IQR 28.9–76.8 %) and a median MDA of 5.1 mm (IQR 3.4–7.1 mm). Intra-fractional CTV volume remained stable with a median volume change of 1.2 % (0.0–4.8 %). DSC was 0.97 (IQR 0.94–0.99). For the dose/volume metrics, there were no statistically significant changes observed except for an increase in bladder hotspot and a decrease of bladder V32.5 Gy and mean dose. The CTV V95% changed from 99.9 % (IQR 98.8–100 %) to 99.6 % (IQR 93.9–100 %). Conclusion: Despite intra-fractional variations of OARs, CTV coverage remained stable during MRI-guided SBRT treatments for the prostate bed.

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