Toxicity of the gallbladder with stereotactic body radiotherapy for liver tumors
PO-1302
Abstract
Toxicity of the gallbladder with stereotactic body radiotherapy for liver tumors
Authors: Ahmed Gawish1, Mathias Walke1, Thomas Brunner1
1Medical Faculty University Hospital Magdeburg, University Clinic for Radiation Therapy, Magdeburg, Germany
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Purpose or Objective
The toxicity of the gallbladder from hypofractionated and stereotactic body radiation treatment is not well recognized (SBRT). In a retrospective cohort of patients with primary and metastatic liver cancers undergoing ablative-intent, we reported on gallbladder and bile system toxicity.
Material and Methods
Between 2018-2021, 55 Patients underwent SBRT of liver lesions in our department. The Patients received 56-66 Gy in 5-12 fractions. No gallbladder dose constraints were used at treatment, and gallbladder volumes and dose-volume histograms were created retrospectively. Attributable toxicity was defined as cholecystitis or perforation without preexisting gallbladder disease. Baseline factors were evaluated using Fisher exact test and the nonparametric K-sample test.
Results
The average duration of follow-up was 18.2 months (range, 3 -36 months).
The biliary system was irradiated with >20 Gy in 45 individuals. Twenty-five individuals had their gallbladders irradiated with more than 50 Gy. Only nine individuals had bile duct stenosis; all had preexisting cholelithiasis and received biliary stenting before RT.
Conclusion
We found no link between gallbladder dosage and toxicity and did not approach the maximum tolerable gallbladder dose in this radiation-treated group. To preserve the gallbladder during ablative and SBR treatments, we propose not limiting the dosage to the gross tumor volume.