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Cleaning the dose falloff in lung SBRT plan
Author(s) -
Desai Dharmin,
Narayanasamy Ganesh,
Bimali Milan,
Cordrey Ivan,
Elasmar Hisham,
Srinivasan Senthamizhchelvan,
Johnson Ellis Lee
Publication year - 2021
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/acm2.13113
Subject(s) - nuclear medicine , wilcoxon signed rank test , medicine , lung , mathematics , mann–whitney u test
Purpose To investigate a planning technique that can possibly reduce low‐to‐intermediate dose spillage (measured by R50%, D2cm values) in lung SBRT plans. Materials and Methods Dose falloff outside the target was studied retrospectively in 102 SBRT VMAT plans of lung tumor. Plans having R50% and/or D2cm higher than recommended tolerances in RTOG protocols 0813 and 0915 were replanned with new optimization constraints using novel shell structures and novel constraints. Violations in the RTOG R50% value can be rectified with a dose constraint to a novel shell structure (“OptiForR50”). The construction of structure OptiForR50% and the novel optimization criteria translate the RTOG goals for R50% into direct inputs for the optimizer. Violations in the D2cm can be rectified using constraints on a 0.5 cm thick shell structure with inner surface 2cm from the PTV surface. Wilcoxon signed‐rank test was used to compare differences in dose conformity, volume of hot spots, R50%, D2cm of the target in addition to the OAR doses. A two‐sided P ‐value of 0.05 was used to assess statistical significance. Results Among 102 lung SBRT plans with PTV sizes ranging from 5 to 179 cc, 32 plans with violations in R50% or D2cm were reoptimized. The mean reduction in R50% (4.68 vs 3.89) and D2cm (56.49 vs 52.51) was statistically significant both having P  < 0.01. Target conformity index, volume of 105% isodose contour outside PTV, normal lung V20, and mean dose to heart and aorta were significantly lowered with P  < 0.05. Conclusion The novel planning methodology using multiple shells including the novel OptiForR50 shell with precisely calculated dimensions and optimizer constraints lead to significantly lower values of R50% and D2cm and lower dose spillage in lung SBRT plans. All plans were successfully brought into the zone of no RTOG violations.

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