Dosimetric impact of intrafraction motion and interfraction changes in dose-escalated prostate SBRT
PO-1891
Abstract
Dosimetric impact of intrafraction motion and interfraction changes in dose-escalated prostate SBRT
Authors: Denis Panizza1, Valeria Faccenda1, Martina Camilla Daniotti1, Sara Trivellato1, Paolo Caricato1, Raffaella Lucchini2, Stefano Arcangeli3, Elena De Ponti1
1ASST Monza, Medical Physics Department, Monza, Italy; 2University of Milan Bicocca, School of Medicine and Surgery, Milan, Italy; 3School of Medicine and Surgery, University of Milan Bicocca, Milan, Italy
Show Affiliations
Hide Affiliations
Purpose or Objective
The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of intrafraction prostate motion and interfraction anatomical changes on dose metrics and the effect of beam gating and motion correction in dose-escalated linac-based SBRT.
Material and Methods
Thirteen patients (56 fractions) with organ-confined prostate cancer underwent dose-escalated FFF-VMAT SBRT. Accurate patient setup was ensured by CBCT and real-time 3D prostate motion data were obtained using a novel electromagnetic tracking device. Treatment was interrupted when the signals exceeded a 2 mm threshold in any of the three spatial directions and couch position was corrected unless the offset was transient. Prostate trajectories with and without beam gating and motion correction events were reconstructed and analyzed. Rectum and bladder volumes on each daily CBCT were recorded and compared with volumes at simulation. The prostate motion observed for each fraction was incorporated into the patient original treatment plan with an isocenter shift method. Actually delivered treatments were then simulated by recalculating the reconstructed motion-encoded plan on deformed CTs reflecting the patient CBCT-anatomy of the day. Non-gated treatments were also recomputed using the prostate motion data assuming that no interventions have occurred.
Results
Treatment interruptions because of target motion trespassing the predefined threshold occurred in 25 fractions (45%). Rectum and bladder volume changes were relevant in most patients. The mean relative dose differences between actually delivered and planned treatments were -3.0% [-18.5 – 2.8] for CTV D99% and -2.6% [-17.8 – 1.0] for PTV D95% over all 56 fractions. However, the median cumulative CTV coverage with 93% of the prescribed dose turned out to be satisfactory. Urethra sparing was slightly degraded and a mean favourable underexposition of rectum and bladder was seen in all but two dose metrics: the maximum dose to rectum mucosa and the bladder D40%. Nevertheless, only 2 major deviations in rectum mucosa D0.035cc were observed at the end of the treatment. The greatest contribution to target missing and OARs doses came from the interfraction anatomical variations, while intrafraction prostate motion marginally contributed in gated treatments. In non-gated treatments, an additional 2.4 – 2.8% to target dose deficit would have occurred on average and the bladder would have further deteriorated by 3.1 – 11.6%.
Conclusion
The implemented motion management strategy and the strict patient preparation regimen, along with current PTV margins, robustness of original treatment plans, and fast FFF beam delivery, ensured no significant degradations of dose metrics due to both intrafraction motion and interfraction anatomical changes. Non-gated treatments would have resulted in larger target dose deficits and bladder overdoses in some fractions. Thus, continuous monitoring, beam gating and motion correction are recommended to safely deliver dose-escalated prostate SBRT.