Assessing the dosimetric impact of intrafraction prostate motion in dose-escalated linac-based SBRT
PO-1715
Abstract
Assessing the dosimetric impact of intrafraction prostate motion in dose-escalated linac-based SBRT
Authors: Valeria Faccenda1,2, Denis Panizza1,3, Martina Camilla Daniotti4, Sara Trivellato1, Paolo Caricato1,2, Raffaella Lucchini3,5, Stefano Arcangeli3,5, Elena De Ponti1,3
1ASST Monza, Medical Physics Department, Monza, Italy; 2University of Milan, Department of Physics, Milan, Italy; 3University of Milan Bicocca, School of Medicine and Surgery, Milan, Italy; 4University of Milan Bicocca, Department of Physics, Milan, Italy; 5ASST Monza, Radiation Oncology Department, Monza, Italy
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Purpose or Objective
The
aim of this study was to investigate the impact of intrafraction prostate motion
on dose metrics and the effect of beam gating and motion correction in dose-escalated
linac-based SBRT.
Material and Methods
A total of 56 fractions from 13 patients treated with dose-escalated
SBRT using VMAT technique with FFF arcs, were examined. Real-time 3D prostate
motion data were acquired using a novel electromagnetic tracking device. Beam
delivery was interrupted whenever the prostate trespassed a 2-mm safety
tolerance in any of the three spatial directions and table couch position
corrected unless the offset was transient. Prostate trajectories with and
without beam gating and motion correction events were reconstructed and analyzed
with in-house C++ code. Both actually delivered treatments (case A) and
non-gated treatments (case B) were simulated by incorporating the observed
prostate motion for each fraction into the patient original treatment plan with
an isocenter shift method. The total dose of each patient was then estimated by
accumulating the motion inclusive dose distributions recalculated with Monaco Monte
Carlo TPS from all fractions. Target and organs at risk (OARs) parameters were derived
from reconstructed DVHs and compared to planned values. In addition, all
dosimetric parameters were compared with protocol dose constraints.
Results
Average values of mean prostate
displacements in case A were -0.2 mm [-1.5 – 0.8], 0.1 mm [-1.4 – 1.5], and -0.3
mm [-1.7 – 1.4] in lateral, longitudinal, and vertical directions,
respectively. The same values in case B were -0.3 mm [-3.1 – 0.8], 0.0 mm [-4.2
– 3.7], and -0.6 mm [-3.5 – 1.9]. Degradations in CTV and PTV coverage relative
to planned dose were generally limited. Mean relative dose differences were -0.1%
[-1.8 – 1.0] for CTVD99% and -0.2% [-1.6 – 0.7] for PTVD95% in case A, and
-1.2% [-8.8 – 0.8] and -1.2% [-5.9 – 0.7] in case B. Urethra planning organ at
risk volume (uPRV) was slightly degraded after taking motion into account, with
larger than 1% differences in uPRVD10% observed only for 1 patient in case B. Rectum
and bladder dosimetric parameters showed major variations between reconstructed
and original plans, with a favourable underexposition of rectum and an undesirable
overdose to bladder. Nevertheless, no protocol dose constraints violations were
observed for bladder due to posterior displacement of the prostate.
Conclusion
Current
CTV to PTV margins, robustness of original treatment plans, and fast FFF beams delivery
do not result in significant degradation of dose metrics for target and OARs
due to intrafraction prostate motion in both cases. Anyway, beam gating and motion
correction ensured superior results and are recommended to use in dose-escalated
prostate SBRT. The dosimetric impact of daily anatomy will be also explored in
future studies.