Technology in Cancer Research & Treatment (May 2021)

Evaluation of IGRT-Induced Imaging Doses and Secondary Cancer Risk for SBRT Early Lung Cancer Patients In Silico Study

  • Yan-Hua Duan ME,
  • Heng-Le Gu MS,
  • Xiao-Hui Yang BS,
  • Hua Chen ME,
  • Hao Wang MS,
  • Yan Shao MS,
  • Xiao-Yang Li MD,
  • Ai-Hui Feng MS,
  • Yan-Chen Ying MS,
  • Xiao-Long Fu PhD,
  • Kui Ma,
  • Tao Zhou,
  • Zhi-Yong Xu PhD

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/15330338211016472
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20

Abstract

Read online

Objectives: This study performed dosimetry studies and secondary cancer risk assessments on using electronic portal imaging device (EPID) and cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) as image guided tools for the early lung cancer patients treated with SBRT. Methods: The imaging doses from MV-EPID and kV-CBCT of the Edge accelerator were retrospectively added to sixty-one SBRT treatment plans of early lung cancer patients. The MV-EPID imaging dose (6MV Photon beam) was calculated in Pinnacle TPS, and the kV-CBCT imaging dose was simulated and calculated by modeling of the kV energy beam in TPS using Pinnacle automatic modeling program. Three types of plans, namely Plan EPID , Plan CBCT and Plan origin , were generated with incorporating doses of EPID, CBCT and no imaging, respectively, for analysis. The effects of imaging doses on dose-volume-histogram (DVH) and plan quality were analyzed, and the excess absolute risk (EAR) of secondary cancer for ipsilateral lung was evaluated. Results: The regions that received less than 50 cGy were significantly impacted by the imaging doses, while the isodose lines greater than 1000 cGy were barely changed. The DVH values of ipsilateral lung increased the most in Plan EPID , followed by Plan CBCT . Compared to Plan origin on the average, the estimated EAR of ipsilateral lung in Plan EPID increased by 3.43%, while the corresponding EAR increase in Plan CBCT was much smaller (about 0.4%). Considering only the contribution of the imaging dose, the EAR values for the ipsilateral lung due to the MV-EPID dose in 5 years,10 years and 15 years were 1.49 cases, 2.09 cases and 2.88 cases per 10 4 PY respectively, and those due to the kV-CBCT dose were about 9 times lower, correspondingly. Conclusions: The imaging doses produced by MV-EPID and kV-CBCT had little effects on the target dose coverage. The secondary cancer risk caused by MV-EPID dose is more than 8.5 times that of kV-CBCT.