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BladderScan Feedback Method in Predicting Bladder Filling for Prostate Radiotherapy: A Prospective Study
Author(s) -
DengYu Kuo,
ChenYang Hsu,
WeiChun Wang,
ChienJen Chen,
PeiWei Shueng
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
technology in cancer research and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1533-0346
pISSN - 1533-0338
DOI - 10.1177/1533033821995277
Subject(s) - medicine , tomotherapy , radiation therapy , prostate , nuclear medicine , prostate cancer , urology , prospective cohort study , ultrasound , radiology , surgery , cancer
Purpose: Approximately 5%–10% of men who receive prostate cancer radiotherapy will suffer from radiation cystitis. Bladder filling before the administration of radiotherapy results in lower radiation exposure to the bladder. BladderScan, an ultrasound-based bladder volume scanner, has the potential to evaluate bladder volume during radiotherapy; thus, a prospective pilot study was initiated.Methods: Eleven men receiving tomotherapy for localized prostate cancer were enrolled. The validity of BladderScan was evaluated by comparing the measurements from BladderScan with the calculated volume from megavoltage computed tomography (MVCT). With a crossover design to compare different methods in bladder filling, the radiotherapy was divided into 2 sequences. Conventional method: the patient was asked to drink water after voiding urine. The amount of water and the duration of waiting were the same as in the setting of the simulation. BladderScan feedback method: the bladder filling procedure depended on the BladderScan measurements.Results: There were 314 sets of data from 11 patients. The correlation coefficient between V BS and V CT was 0.87, where V BS is the mean volume of 3 measurements by BladderScan and V CT is the bladder volume derived from MVCT. The BladderScan feedback method resulted in a significant larger bladder volume than the conventional method, with a mean difference of 36.9 mL. When the failure was defined as V CT <80% of planned volume, the BladderScan feedback method brought about a relative reduction in the failure rate with an odds ratio of 0.44 and an absolute reduction of 9.1%.Conclusion: The accuracy of BladderScan was validated by MVCT in our study. The BladderScan feedback method can help patients fill the bladder adequately, with a larger bladder volume and a lower failure rate.

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