Feasibility of MR-guided stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy of lymph node oligometastases
Vikneswary Batumalai,
Australia
MO-0649
Abstract
Feasibility of MR-guided stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy of lymph node oligometastases
Authors: Vikneswary Batumalai1, David Crawford1, Claire Pagulayan1, Louise Hogan1, Urszula Jelen1, Conrad Loo1, Nicole Dunkerley1, Maddison Picton1, Lori Geddes1, Stacy Alvares1, Sandy Sampaio1, Monique Heinke1, Tania Twentyman1, Michael Jameson1, Jeremy de Leon1
1GenesisCare, Radiation Oncology, Sydney, Australia
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Purpose or Objective
Stereotactic
body radiotherapy (SBRT) is an effective treatment for oligometastatic disease.
However, target proximity to organs at risk (OARs) within the pelvis may limit
safe delivery of an ablative dose. Magnetic resonance (MR)- guided adaptive
radiotherapy (MRgART) may improve the therapeutic ratio. This study assessed
the feasibility of MRgART for pelvic lymph node oligometastases.
Material and Methods
Nine
patients with pelvic lymph node oligometastases were treated with MRgART. Eight
patients had single pelvic lymph node metastases, and one patient had three pelvic
lymph node metastases. Plans were prescribed to 30-40 Gy in 3-5 fractions with the
goal of 95% planning target volume (PTV) to receive 100% of the prescribed dose,
subject to strict OAR constraints. Daily real-time adaptive plans were created.
Treatment times, dosimetric comparisons and acute toxicity were prospectively
recorded. Acute toxicity was reported according to Common Terminology Criteria
for Adverse Events v.5 acute toxicity (within 3 months after the end of
treatment).
Results
A
total of 37 fractions (adapted plans) were delivered to 9 patients. Pre-treatment
plans met the all the OAR criteria for all patients, while PTV dose criteria
were met for 7 patients. 34/37 adapted plans met all OARS criteria while 29/37
adapted plans met PTV dose criteria. Violations were primarily caused by
surrounding OARs overlapping or adjacent to the PTV. Mean session duration (patient
setup, adaptive plan creation and treatment delivery) was 43.5 minutes and well
tolerated by all patients. Eight patients had complete data on acute toxicity
at 3-month follow-up, only 1 patient experienced grade 1 acute toxicity related
treatment.
Conclusion
SBRT
for pelvic lymph node oligometastases using MRgART is feasible based on dose
criteria, plan quality metrics, treatment session duration and acute toxicity. Follow-up
is awaited to allow evaluation of late toxicity and patient reported outcomes.