z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Dosimetric comparison of distal esophageal carcinoma plans for patients treated with small‐spot intensity‐modulated proton versus volumetric‐modulated arc therapies
Author(s) -
Liu Chenbin,
Bhangoo Ronik S.,
Sio Terence T.,
Yu Nathan Y.,
Shan Jie,
Chiang Jennifer S.,
Ding Julia X.,
Rule William G.,
Korte Shawn,
Lara Pedro,
Ding Xiaoning,
Bues Martin,
Hu Yanle,
DeWees Todd,
Ashman Jonathan B.,
Liu Wei
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of applied clinical medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.83
H-Index - 48
ISSN - 1526-9914
DOI - 10.1002/acm2.12623
Subject(s) - medicine , proton therapy , nuclear medicine , carcinoma , radiation therapy , esophageal cancer , radiology , cancer
Background Esophageal carcinoma is the eighth most common cancer in the world. Volumetric‐modulated arc therapy (VMAT) is widely used to treat distal esophageal carcinoma due to high conformality to the target and good sparing of organs at risk (OAR). It is not clear if small‐spot intensity‐modulated proton therapy (IMPT) demonstrates a dosimetric advantage over VMAT. In this study, we compared dosimetric performance of VMAT and small‐spot IMPT for distal esophageal carcinoma in terms of plan quality, plan robustness, and interplay effects. Methods 35 distal esophageal carcinoma patients were retrospectively reviewed; 19 patients received small‐spot IMPT and the remaining 16 of them received VMAT. Both plans were generated by delivering prescription doses to clinical target volumes (CTVs) on phase‐averaged 4D‐CT's. The dose‐volume‐histogram (DVH) band method was used to quantify plan robustness. Software was developed to evaluate interplay effects with randomized starting phases for each field per fraction. DVH indices were compared using Wilcoxon rank‐sum test. For fair comparison, all the treatment plans were normalized to have the same CTV high D 95% in the nominal scenario relative to the prescription dose. Results In the nominal scenario, small‐spot IMPT delivered statistically significantly lower liver D mean and V 30Gy[RBE] , lung D mean , heart D mean compared with VMAT. CTV high dose homogeneity and protection of other OARs were comparable between the two treatments. In terms of plan robustness, the IMPT and VMAT plans were comparable for kidney V 18Gy[RBE] , liver V 30Gy[RBE] , stomach V 45Gy[RBE] , lung D mean , V 5Gy[RBE] , and V 20Gy[RBE] , cord D max and D 0.03 c m 3, liver D mean , heart V 20Gy[RBE] , and V 30Gy[RBE] , but IMPT was significantly worse for CTV high D 95% , D 2 c m 3, and D 5% ‐D 95% , CTV low D 95% , heart D mean , and V 40Gy[RBE] , requiring careful and experienced adjustments during the planning process and robustness considerations. The small‐spot IMPT plans still met the standard clinical requirements after interplay effects were considered. Conclusions Small‐spot IMPT decreases doses to heart, liver, and total lung compared to VMAT as well as achieves clinically acceptable plan robustness. Our study supports the use of small‐spot IMPT for the treatment of distal esophageal carcinoma.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here