Radiation Oncology (Jan 2023)
CT ventilation image-guided helical Tomotherapy at sparing functional lungs for locally advanced lung cancer: analysis of dose-function metrics and the impact on pulmonary toxicity
Abstract
Abstract Purpose CT ventilation image (CTVI)-guided radiotherapy that selectively avoids irradiating highly-functional lung regions has potential to reduce pulmonary toxicity. Considering Helical TomoTherapy (HT) has higher modulation capabilities, we investigated the capability and characteristic of HT at sparing functional lungs for locally advanced lung cancer. Methods and materials Pretreatment 4DCT scans were carried out for 17 patients. Local lung volume expansion (or contraction) during inspiration is related to the volume change at a given lung voxel and is used as a surrogate for ventilation. The ventilation maps were generated from two sets of CT images (peak-exhale and peak-inhale) by deformable registration and a Jacobian-based algorithm. Each ventilation map was normalized to percentile images. Six plans were designed for each patient: one anatomical plan without ventilation map and five functional plans incorporating ventilation map which designed to spare varying degrees of high-functional lungs that were defined as the top 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, and 50% of the percentile ventilation ranges, respectively. The dosimetric and evaluation factors were recorded regarding planning target volume (PTV) and other organs at risk (OARs), with particular attention to the dose delivered to total lung and functional lungs. An established dose-function-based normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) model was used to estimate risk of radiation pneumonitis (RP) for each scenario. Results Patients were divided into a benefit group (8 patients) and a non-benefit group (9 patients) based on whether the RP-risk of functional plan was lower than that of anatomical plan. The distance between high-ventilated region and PTV, as well as tumor volume had significant differences between the two groups (P 0.05) but at the cost of increased dose received by OARs. Conclusion Ventilation image-guided HT plans can reduce the dose received by highly-functional lung regions with a range up to top 50% ventilated area. The spatial distribution of ventilation and tumor size were critical factors to better select patients who could benefit from the functional plan.
Keywords