Cargando…

Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy

Purpose Magnetic resonance imaging-guided radiation therapy (MRgRT) requires patient positioning within the MR bore and prolonged MR imaging during delivery, both of which are new in radiation oncology. Patient tolerance of MRgRT was prospectively evaluated using patient-reported outcome questionnai...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tetar, Shyama, Bruynzeel, Anna, Bakker, Roosje, Jeulink, Marloes, Slotman, Ben J., Oei, Swie, Haasbeek, Cornelis, De Jong, Karel, Senan, Suresh, Lagerwaard, Frank
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5922504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29719739
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2236
_version_ 1783318207429345280
author Tetar, Shyama
Bruynzeel, Anna
Bakker, Roosje
Jeulink, Marloes
Slotman, Ben J.
Oei, Swie
Haasbeek, Cornelis
De Jong, Karel
Senan, Suresh
Lagerwaard, Frank
author_facet Tetar, Shyama
Bruynzeel, Anna
Bakker, Roosje
Jeulink, Marloes
Slotman, Ben J.
Oei, Swie
Haasbeek, Cornelis
De Jong, Karel
Senan, Suresh
Lagerwaard, Frank
author_sort Tetar, Shyama
collection PubMed
description Purpose Magnetic resonance imaging-guided radiation therapy (MRgRT) requires patient positioning within the MR bore and prolonged MR imaging during delivery, both of which are new in radiation oncology. Patient tolerance of MRgRT was prospectively evaluated using patient-reported outcome questionnaires (PRO-Q). Methods Our MRgRT procedure involves daily high-resolution MR scanning, limited re-contouring, daily plan re-optimization, quality assurance (QA), and gated delivery. Patients with claustrophobia are excluded. Mean fraction duration was 45 and 60 minutes for stereotactic treatments during free-breathing and breath-hold, respectively. Patient-controlled video-feedback was used for breath-hold delivery. PRO-Qs collected in the first 150 patients treated included questions on MR-related complaints and also evaluated aspects of active participation. Results Almost one-third of patients (29%) scored at least one PRO-Q item on MR-related complaints as ‘moderate’ or ‘very much’, with noise, feeling cold, and paresthesia being the most frequently scored in this way. Considerable anxiety was reported by 5%, but no medication was required for this in any patient. Patient participation in video feedback for breath-hold delivery was appreciated by the majority of patients, all of whom completed the procedure. Only 5% of patients considered treatment duration to be unacceptably long. Conclusion Despite the lengthy MRgRT procedure, outcomes of PRO-Q indicate that it was well-tolerated by patients.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5922504
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Cureus
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-59225042018-05-01 Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy Tetar, Shyama Bruynzeel, Anna Bakker, Roosje Jeulink, Marloes Slotman, Ben J. Oei, Swie Haasbeek, Cornelis De Jong, Karel Senan, Suresh Lagerwaard, Frank Cureus Radiation Oncology Purpose Magnetic resonance imaging-guided radiation therapy (MRgRT) requires patient positioning within the MR bore and prolonged MR imaging during delivery, both of which are new in radiation oncology. Patient tolerance of MRgRT was prospectively evaluated using patient-reported outcome questionnaires (PRO-Q). Methods Our MRgRT procedure involves daily high-resolution MR scanning, limited re-contouring, daily plan re-optimization, quality assurance (QA), and gated delivery. Patients with claustrophobia are excluded. Mean fraction duration was 45 and 60 minutes for stereotactic treatments during free-breathing and breath-hold, respectively. Patient-controlled video-feedback was used for breath-hold delivery. PRO-Qs collected in the first 150 patients treated included questions on MR-related complaints and also evaluated aspects of active participation. Results Almost one-third of patients (29%) scored at least one PRO-Q item on MR-related complaints as ‘moderate’ or ‘very much’, with noise, feeling cold, and paresthesia being the most frequently scored in this way. Considerable anxiety was reported by 5%, but no medication was required for this in any patient. Patient participation in video feedback for breath-hold delivery was appreciated by the majority of patients, all of whom completed the procedure. Only 5% of patients considered treatment duration to be unacceptably long. Conclusion Despite the lengthy MRgRT procedure, outcomes of PRO-Q indicate that it was well-tolerated by patients. Cureus 2018-02-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5922504/ /pubmed/29719739 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2236 Text en Copyright © 2018, Tetar et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Radiation Oncology
Tetar, Shyama
Bruynzeel, Anna
Bakker, Roosje
Jeulink, Marloes
Slotman, Ben J.
Oei, Swie
Haasbeek, Cornelis
De Jong, Karel
Senan, Suresh
Lagerwaard, Frank
Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy
title Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy
title_full Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy
title_fullStr Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy
title_short Patient-reported Outcome Measurements on the Tolerance of Magnetic Resonance Imaging-guided Radiation Therapy
title_sort patient-reported outcome measurements on the tolerance of magnetic resonance imaging-guided radiation therapy
topic Radiation Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5922504/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29719739
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.2236
work_keys_str_mv AT tetarshyama patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT bruynzeelanna patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT bakkerroosje patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT jeulinkmarloes patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT slotmanbenj patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT oeiswie patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT haasbeekcornelis patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT dejongkarel patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT senansuresh patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy
AT lagerwaardfrank patientreportedoutcomemeasurementsonthetoleranceofmagneticresonanceimagingguidedradiationtherapy