Postoperative breast radiotherapy using image registration of initial PET-CT before NAC
Kenshiro Shiraishi,
Japan
PO-1210
Abstract
Postoperative breast radiotherapy using image registration of initial PET-CT before NAC
Authors: Kenshiro Shiraishi1, Shinobu Kumagai2, Ryuzo Uehara2, Kanako Kitazumi3, Takashi Chikamatsu4
1Teikyo University, Department of Radiology, Tokyo, Japan; 2Teikyo University, Central Radiology Division, Tokyo, Japan; 3Teikyo University, Graduate School of Medical care and technology, Tokyo, Japan; 4Teikyo University, Nuclear Medicine, Tokyo, Japan
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Purpose or Objective
Radiation treatment planning (RTP) is based on the
clinical stage at diagnosis and the pathological stage after surgery in
postoperative radiotherapy for patients with breast cancer who undergo
neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC). However, adopting initial PET-CT images for RTP
is challenging because of image registration inconsistency due to different
acquisition conditions. We compared relevant clinical parameters in between
patients who underwent PET-CT under the same conditions as those at the RTP
(group A) and those who did not (group B).
Material and Methods
Dose-volume histogram parameters of targets and
organs at risk were evaluated for thirty consecutive cases from May 2019 to
November 2020, in which PET-CT imaging was performed under the same postural
conditions as for radiotherapy (flat panel on the patient back and both upper
arms raised, group A), and thirty consecutive cases before then (group B).
Regions of interests were generally set according to the RTOG contouring
guideline, with appropriate individual modifications. All primary tumors and
lymph node metastases considered to be positive at initial PET-CT before NAC
were included in the target with ANACONDA deformable image registration
technique. Prescribed doses were 50 Gy in 25 fractions or 42.56 Gy in 16 fractions.
Results
Both groups were well-balanced in age, BMI,
laterality, clinical/pathological T stages, and pathological N stage without
significant difference in clinical N stage. Among the targets, favorable
coverages in CTVs and PTVs were observed in the group A, and statistically
significant improvement was seen especially in CTV and PTV of axillary lymph
nodes. Such advantage was not observed for supraclavicular nodes or internal mammary
nodes. We did not find any meaningful difference in sparing the risk organs
such as lung, heart, LAD, oesophagus, trachea, thyroid gland, or spinal cord
within two groups.
Conclusion
RTP by using PET-CT under the same conditions as
treatment planning CT can improve the coverage of targets, affected axillary
lymph nodes at diagnosis, in particular. Proposed “direct fusion” approach can
contribute to avoid insufficient axillary management due to ostensible downstaging
after NAC.