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Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations

BACKGROUND: Radiotherapy in Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (HL) is currently evolving with new attempts to further reduce radiation volumes to the involved-node concept (Involved Nodes Radiation Therapy, INRT) and with the use of intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Currently, IMRT can be planned and delive...

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Autores principales: Fiandra, Christian, Filippi, Andrea Riccardo, Catuzzo, Paola, Botticella, Angela, Ciammella, Patrizia, Franco, Pierfrancesco, Borca, Valeria Casanova, Ragona, Riccardo, Tofani, Santi, Ricardi, Umberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3502518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23122028
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-717X-7-186
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author Fiandra, Christian
Filippi, Andrea Riccardo
Catuzzo, Paola
Botticella, Angela
Ciammella, Patrizia
Franco, Pierfrancesco
Borca, Valeria Casanova
Ragona, Riccardo
Tofani, Santi
Ricardi, Umberto
author_facet Fiandra, Christian
Filippi, Andrea Riccardo
Catuzzo, Paola
Botticella, Angela
Ciammella, Patrizia
Franco, Pierfrancesco
Borca, Valeria Casanova
Ragona, Riccardo
Tofani, Santi
Ricardi, Umberto
author_sort Fiandra, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Radiotherapy in Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (HL) is currently evolving with new attempts to further reduce radiation volumes to the involved-node concept (Involved Nodes Radiation Therapy, INRT) and with the use of intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Currently, IMRT can be planned and delivered with several techniques, and its role is not completely clear. We designed a planning study on a typical dataset drawn from clinical routine with the aim of comparing different IMRT solutions in terms of plan quality and treatment delivery efficiency. METHODS: A total of 10 young female patients affected with early stage mediastinal HL and treated with 30 Gy INRT after ABVD-based chemotherapy were selected from our database. Five different treatment techniques were compared: 3D-CRT, VMAT (single arc), B-VMAT (“butterfly”, multiple arcs), Helical Tomotherapy (HT) and Tomodirect (TD). Beam energy was 6 MV, and all IMRT planning solutions were optimized by inverse planning with specific dose-volume constraints on OAR (breasts, lungs, thyroid gland, coronary ostia, heart). Dose-Volume Histograms (DVHs) and Conformity Number (CN) were calculated and then compared, both for target and OAR by a statistical analysis (Wilcoxon’s Test). RESULTS: PTV coverage was reached for all plans (V(95%) ≥ 95%); highest mean CN were obtained with HT (0.77) and VMAT (0.76). B-VMAT showed intermediate CN mean values (0.67), while the lowest CN were obtained with TD (0.30) and 3D-CRT techniques (0.30). A trend of inverse correlation between higher CN and larger healthy tissues volumes receiving low radiation doses was shown for lungs and breasts. For thyroid gland and heart/coronary ostia, HT, VMAT and B-VMAT techniques allowed a better sparing in terms of both D(mean) and volumes receiving intermediate-high doses compared to 3D-CRT and TD. CONCLUSIONS: IMRT techniques showed superior target coverage and OAR sparing, with, as an expected consequence, larger volumes of healthy tissues (lungs, breasts) receiving low doses. Among the different IMRT techniques, HT and VMAT showed higher levels of conformation; B-VMAT and HT emerged as the planning solutions able to achieve the most balanced compromise between higher conformation around the target and smaller volumes of OAR exposed to lower doses (typical of 3D-CRT).
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spelling pubmed-35025182012-11-21 Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations Fiandra, Christian Filippi, Andrea Riccardo Catuzzo, Paola Botticella, Angela Ciammella, Patrizia Franco, Pierfrancesco Borca, Valeria Casanova Ragona, Riccardo Tofani, Santi Ricardi, Umberto Radiat Oncol Research BACKGROUND: Radiotherapy in Hodgkin’s Lymphoma (HL) is currently evolving with new attempts to further reduce radiation volumes to the involved-node concept (Involved Nodes Radiation Therapy, INRT) and with the use of intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Currently, IMRT can be planned and delivered with several techniques, and its role is not completely clear. We designed a planning study on a typical dataset drawn from clinical routine with the aim of comparing different IMRT solutions in terms of plan quality and treatment delivery efficiency. METHODS: A total of 10 young female patients affected with early stage mediastinal HL and treated with 30 Gy INRT after ABVD-based chemotherapy were selected from our database. Five different treatment techniques were compared: 3D-CRT, VMAT (single arc), B-VMAT (“butterfly”, multiple arcs), Helical Tomotherapy (HT) and Tomodirect (TD). Beam energy was 6 MV, and all IMRT planning solutions were optimized by inverse planning with specific dose-volume constraints on OAR (breasts, lungs, thyroid gland, coronary ostia, heart). Dose-Volume Histograms (DVHs) and Conformity Number (CN) were calculated and then compared, both for target and OAR by a statistical analysis (Wilcoxon’s Test). RESULTS: PTV coverage was reached for all plans (V(95%) ≥ 95%); highest mean CN were obtained with HT (0.77) and VMAT (0.76). B-VMAT showed intermediate CN mean values (0.67), while the lowest CN were obtained with TD (0.30) and 3D-CRT techniques (0.30). A trend of inverse correlation between higher CN and larger healthy tissues volumes receiving low radiation doses was shown for lungs and breasts. For thyroid gland and heart/coronary ostia, HT, VMAT and B-VMAT techniques allowed a better sparing in terms of both D(mean) and volumes receiving intermediate-high doses compared to 3D-CRT and TD. CONCLUSIONS: IMRT techniques showed superior target coverage and OAR sparing, with, as an expected consequence, larger volumes of healthy tissues (lungs, breasts) receiving low doses. Among the different IMRT techniques, HT and VMAT showed higher levels of conformation; B-VMAT and HT emerged as the planning solutions able to achieve the most balanced compromise between higher conformation around the target and smaller volumes of OAR exposed to lower doses (typical of 3D-CRT). BioMed Central 2012-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3502518/ /pubmed/23122028 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-717X-7-186 Text en Copyright ©2012 Fiandra et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Fiandra, Christian
Filippi, Andrea Riccardo
Catuzzo, Paola
Botticella, Angela
Ciammella, Patrizia
Franco, Pierfrancesco
Borca, Valeria Casanova
Ragona, Riccardo
Tofani, Santi
Ricardi, Umberto
Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
title Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
title_full Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
title_fullStr Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
title_full_unstemmed Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
title_short Different IMRT solutions vs. 3D-Conformal Radiotherapy in early stage Hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
title_sort different imrt solutions vs. 3d-conformal radiotherapy in early stage hodgkin’s lymphoma: dosimetric comparison and clinical considerations
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3502518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23122028
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1748-717X-7-186
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