Dose to the dorsal vagal complex is predictive of radiation induced nausea
OC-0926
Abstract
Dose to the dorsal vagal complex is predictive of radiation induced nausea
Authors: Charles Dupin1, Valentine Caspar1, Thomas Charleux1, Arnaud Beddok2, Nicolas Giraud1, Brieuc Bernard1, Maelle Martin1, Renaud Trouette1, Juliette Thariat3, Aymeri Huchet1, VĂ©ronique Vendrely1
1Bordeaux University Hospital, Department of Radiation Oncology, Bordeaux, France; 2Institut Curie, Department of Radiation Oncology, Paris, France; 3Centre Francois Baclesse, Department of Radiation Oncology, Caen, France
Show Affiliations
Hide Affiliations
Purpose or Objective
Nausea is a common
symptom in patients irradiated for brain tumors The dorsal vagal complex (DVC) located
in the brainstem (BS) has been identified as the center of nausea and vomiting.
The objective of our study was to determine a threshold dose at the DVC
inducing nausea or vomiting in patients irradiated for benign brain tumors.
Material and Methods
Between December 2017
and January 2021, 102 consecutive patients were irradiated for benign brain
tumors, with normofractionated VMAT technique, without chemotherapy, at the
Bordeaux University Hospital,. DVC delineation was performed on T1 sequences
with gadolinium injection using the reference atlas [Beddok et al. RO 2019].
Quality control of delineation was performed for the first 10 patients by 5-radiation
oncologists with Kappa index analysis. Nausea
symptoms and anti-nausea treatments were collected at each weekly consultation
during the radiotherapy treatment. Dosimetric criteria were analyzed for DVC,
CT, and brain, and compared between groups of patients with and without nausea
Results
Among 102 patients, 68
were women, median age 61.5 years. The tumors treated were mainly meningiomas
(80%) and neurinomas (17%). Regarding delineation quality control, Kappa index was 0.67 for a volume of 0.13cm3, reflecting a correct
agreement on DVC contours comparable to Beddok et al [RO 2019]. The median dose
was 54Gy [48.6-57.6Gy]. Out of 102 patients, 40 (39.2%) had nausea requiring
anti-nausea treatment for 23 (57.5%) patients Women accounted for 77%
in the nausea group and 60% in the non nausea group (p=0.06). In the group of
patients with nausea, all volumes (VxGy) of DVC and TC irradiated were significantly
higher for all parameters collected (V10-V20-V30-V40, mean, median dose) except
V50 compared to asymptomatic patients. There was no significant difference for
the brain dosimetric criteria. For patients without and with nausea, the mean
DVC dose was 8.9Gy versus 21.6Gy (p<10-4), respectively, and the
mean brainstem dose was 16.9Gy versus 27.1Gy (p<10-3). DVC mean
dose is more predictive of nausea than brainstem dose. Below a DVC mean dose of
10Gy, 22% of patients are at risk of radiation induced nausea, compared to 60%
above 10Gy (p=0.0001).
Conclusion
The mean DVC dose is
significantly associated with radiation-induced nausea. A dose constraint below
10Gy to decrease the incidence of radiation-induced nausea needs to be
validated by a prospective study.