Evaluating pharyngeal constrictors for adaptive radiotherapy intervention to reduce dysphagia
PD-0404
Abstract
Evaluating pharyngeal constrictors for adaptive radiotherapy intervention to reduce dysphagia
Authors: Owen Paetkau1, Sarah Weppler1, Jaime Kwok2, Harvey Quon2, Wendy Smith1
1Tom Baker Cancer Center, Medical Physics, Calgary, Canada; 2Tom Baker Cancer Center, Radiation Oncology, Calgary, Canada
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Purpose or Objective
This study
evaluates pharyngeal constrictors as a target for adaptive radiotherapy (ART)
in head and neck cancer treatment to reduce patient reported dysphagia. Suitable
ART targets exhibit anatomical changes resulting in systematic dose changes
larger than 5% throughout treatment.
Material and Methods
A dataset
of 66 oropharyngeal or nasopharyngeal patients treated with curative
chemo-radiotherapy (70Gy in 33 fractions; 34 with dysphagia and 32 without)
were retrospectively studied. A summary
score greater than 40 on the MD Anderson Dysphagia Inventory survey identified patients
with moderate-to-severe dysphagia. Weekly cone beam CT (CBCT) and patient-reported
outcomes at one-year post-RT were collected. We propagated the dose and
clinical contours to weekly CBCTs using Velocity, Version 3.2.02. Dose accumulation
was performed by weighting dose-volume histogram metrics by time between CBCTs.
The pharyngeal constrictor mean volume and dose were calculated for each
available CBCT.
Results
Pre-treatment
factors such as alcohol intake, smoking history and P16 status were not
statistically significant between asymptomatic and dysphagia groups
(p>0.1775). The pharyngeal constrictor volume increased over treatment for both
asymptomatic (1.60±1.54cc) and dysphagia groups (1.42±1.82cc). No changes in accumulated mean dose larger than 5% to the
pharyngeal constrictors were observed (Figure 1). The maximum accumulated mean dose
exhibited by the dysphagia and asymptomatic groups were 103.9% and 103.3%
respectively with some inter-fraction variability amongst patients.
A 10-patient
subset analysis examined pharyngeal constrictor isotropic margin expansions (±1mm, ±3mm) to evaluate nearby dose
gradients. A 3mm expansion margin was chosen to replicate the largest
pharyngeal constrictor thickness change observed in the literature. The
expansion structure D1% metrics were not significantly different from the
original plan (p>0.204). No points fell outside of the 5% error with the
margin expansions (Figure 2). In the patients examined, the pharyngeal
constrictors are not adjacent to the high dose region.
Figure 1. Left is the ratio of fraction-to-planned
mean dose while right is the ratio of accumulated–to-planned mean dose for each
patient. No patients exceeded an accumulated mean dose of 105%.
Figure
2. Expansion and
original D1% dose plotted for the ±1mm and ±3mm expansions
added to the pharyngeal constrictors of a 10-patient subset. There are no
dosimetric changes larger than 5% and hence no large dose gradients near the
original structures.
Conclusion
No patients
in this study indicated pharyngeal constrictor mean accumulated dose changes sufficient
(>5%) to suggest adaptive radiation therapy as an intervention to reduce patient
reported dysphagia.