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Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Radiotherapy is a mainstay in the treatment of pediatric ependymoma. It requires precise dose application and optimal protection of organs at risk to minimize long-term sequelae. Compared to photon radiation treatment, proton therapy often achieves even better results regarding targe...

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Autores principales: Wickert, Ricarda, Tessonnier, Thomas, Deng, Maximilian, Adeberg, Sebastian, Seidensaal, Katharina, Hoeltgen, Line, Debus, Jürgen, Herfarth, Klaus, Harrabi, Semi B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9736041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36497348
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14235865
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author Wickert, Ricarda
Tessonnier, Thomas
Deng, Maximilian
Adeberg, Sebastian
Seidensaal, Katharina
Hoeltgen, Line
Debus, Jürgen
Herfarth, Klaus
Harrabi, Semi B.
author_facet Wickert, Ricarda
Tessonnier, Thomas
Deng, Maximilian
Adeberg, Sebastian
Seidensaal, Katharina
Hoeltgen, Line
Debus, Jürgen
Herfarth, Klaus
Harrabi, Semi B.
author_sort Wickert, Ricarda
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Radiotherapy is a mainstay in the treatment of pediatric ependymoma. It requires precise dose application and optimal protection of organs at risk to minimize long-term sequelae. Compared to photon radiation treatment, proton therapy often achieves even better results regarding target coverage and organ-sparing. Due to their physical properties, helium ions could even further reduce side effects, providing better protection of healthy tissue despite similar target coverage. The present study reports the first in-depth dosimetric assessment of scanned helium ion plans compared to both state-of the art scanned protons and intensity modulated radiotherapy. Furthermore, the rationale and potential benefit of helium ions is substantiated by normal tissue complication probability analyses. ABSTRACT: Ependymomas are the third most-frequent pediatric brain tumors. To prevent local recurrence, the resection site should be irradiated. Compared to photon radiation treatment, proton therapy often achieves even better results regarding target coverage and organ-sparing. Due to their physical properties, helium ions could further reduce side effects, providing better protection of healthy tissue despite similar target coverage. In our in silico study, 15 pediatric ependymoma patients were considered. All patients underwent adjuvant radiotherapeutic treatment with active-scanned protons at Heidelberg Ion Beam Therapy Center (HIT). Both helium ion and highly conformal IMRT plans were calculated to evaluate the potential dosimetric advantage of ion beam therapy compared to the current state-of-the-art photon-based treatments. To estimate the potential clinical benefit of helium ions, normal tissue complication probabilities (NTCP) were calculated. Target coverage was comparable in all three modalities. As expected, the integral dose absorbed by healthy brain tissue could be significantly reduced with protons by up to −48% vs. IMRT. Even compared to actively scanned protons, relative dose reductions for critical neuronal structures of up to another −39% were achieved when using helium ions. The dose distribution of helium ions is significantly superior when compared to proton therapy and IMRT due to the improved sparing of OAR. In fact, previous studies could clearly demonstrate that the dosimetric advantage of protons translates into a measurable clinical benefit for pediatric patients with brain tumors. Given the dose–response relationship of critical organs at risk combined with NTCP calculation, the results of our study provide a strong rationale that the use of helium ions has the potential to even further reduce the risk for treatment related sequelae.
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spelling pubmed-97360412022-12-11 Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma Wickert, Ricarda Tessonnier, Thomas Deng, Maximilian Adeberg, Sebastian Seidensaal, Katharina Hoeltgen, Line Debus, Jürgen Herfarth, Klaus Harrabi, Semi B. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Radiotherapy is a mainstay in the treatment of pediatric ependymoma. It requires precise dose application and optimal protection of organs at risk to minimize long-term sequelae. Compared to photon radiation treatment, proton therapy often achieves even better results regarding target coverage and organ-sparing. Due to their physical properties, helium ions could even further reduce side effects, providing better protection of healthy tissue despite similar target coverage. The present study reports the first in-depth dosimetric assessment of scanned helium ion plans compared to both state-of the art scanned protons and intensity modulated radiotherapy. Furthermore, the rationale and potential benefit of helium ions is substantiated by normal tissue complication probability analyses. ABSTRACT: Ependymomas are the third most-frequent pediatric brain tumors. To prevent local recurrence, the resection site should be irradiated. Compared to photon radiation treatment, proton therapy often achieves even better results regarding target coverage and organ-sparing. Due to their physical properties, helium ions could further reduce side effects, providing better protection of healthy tissue despite similar target coverage. In our in silico study, 15 pediatric ependymoma patients were considered. All patients underwent adjuvant radiotherapeutic treatment with active-scanned protons at Heidelberg Ion Beam Therapy Center (HIT). Both helium ion and highly conformal IMRT plans were calculated to evaluate the potential dosimetric advantage of ion beam therapy compared to the current state-of-the-art photon-based treatments. To estimate the potential clinical benefit of helium ions, normal tissue complication probabilities (NTCP) were calculated. Target coverage was comparable in all three modalities. As expected, the integral dose absorbed by healthy brain tissue could be significantly reduced with protons by up to −48% vs. IMRT. Even compared to actively scanned protons, relative dose reductions for critical neuronal structures of up to another −39% were achieved when using helium ions. The dose distribution of helium ions is significantly superior when compared to proton therapy and IMRT due to the improved sparing of OAR. In fact, previous studies could clearly demonstrate that the dosimetric advantage of protons translates into a measurable clinical benefit for pediatric patients with brain tumors. Given the dose–response relationship of critical organs at risk combined with NTCP calculation, the results of our study provide a strong rationale that the use of helium ions has the potential to even further reduce the risk for treatment related sequelae. MDPI 2022-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9736041/ /pubmed/36497348 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14235865 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wickert, Ricarda
Tessonnier, Thomas
Deng, Maximilian
Adeberg, Sebastian
Seidensaal, Katharina
Hoeltgen, Line
Debus, Jürgen
Herfarth, Klaus
Harrabi, Semi B.
Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma
title Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma
title_full Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma
title_fullStr Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma
title_full_unstemmed Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma
title_short Radiotherapy with Helium Ions Has the Potential to Improve Both Endocrine and Neurocognitive Outcome in Pediatric Patients with Ependymoma
title_sort radiotherapy with helium ions has the potential to improve both endocrine and neurocognitive outcome in pediatric patients with ependymoma
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9736041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36497348
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14235865
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