HDR brachytherapy combined with
3D conformal versus IMRT in
left-sided breast cancer patients
including internal mammary chain:
Comparative analysis of
dosimetric and technical
parameters
Rajesh Ashok Kinhikar,1 Sudesh Sharad Deshpande,1 Umesh Mahantshetty,2 Rajiv Sarin,2 Shyam Kishore Shrivastava,2 and Deepak Dattatraya Deshpande1
Department of Medical Physics,1 Department of Radiation Oncology, 2
Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai 400012
Indiarkinhikar@rediffmail.comReceived 16 July 2004; accepted: 13 April 2005
Treatment of the internal mammary chain (IMC) with radiation therapy (RT) for patients with breast cancer remains a controversial issue. Different treatment techniques have been proposed, including oblique electrons, electron-photon combination, and partially wide tangents (PWTs). However, the residual heart dose can remain significant mainly for left-sided lesions. With PWTs and intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), respiratory movement and errors in IMC localization remain a problem. The goal of this paper is to evaluate the impact of IMC brachytherapy (IMCBT) combined with 3D conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT) planning on heart, lung, and contralateral breast doses compared with IMRT. All plans including IMCBT plus 3DCRT were done on PLATO; IMRT plans were generated using the Cadplan-Helios inverse treatment-planning software module with the "sliding window" technique. Dose-volume histograms (DVHs) were calculated for all volumes of interest. Conformity and homogeneity index was also calculated for the planning target volume (PTV). Dose distribution in the surrounding normal tissue was evaluated. The mean conformity of the PTV was found to be 1.06 with IMCBT plus 3DCRT and 1.12 with IMRT. The mean homogeneity (HI95/ 107) was found to be 1.4 with IMCBT plus 3DCRT and 3.32 with IMRT. Using the IMCBT plus 3DCRT technique, the mean dose to the heart, contralateral breast, ipsilateral lung, and contralateral lung decreased with values of 32%, 6.76%, 20% and 5.52%, respectively, compared with IMRT. This novel technique of IMCBT plus 3DCRT can potentially reduce the dose to the heart and lungs. In addition, it rivals IMRT because of its unique advantages in localization, obviating the need for respiratory gating and maximum sparing of heart and other structures.
PACS numbers: 87.53.Jw, 87.53.Kn, 87.53.Mr, 87.53, 87.53.Tf
Key words: breast cancer, internal mammary chain, high dose rate, 3D conformal radiotherapy, intensity-modulated radiotherapy, dose-volume histogram
I. INTRODUCTION
Planning radiotherapy (RT) to the breast and
regional nodes is challenging. Treatment of the internal mammary
chain (IMC) with RT for patients with breast cancer remains a
controversial issue. The role of IMC radiation is being evaluated in
patients who are at high risk for IMC micrometastasis, that is,
locally advanced breast cancer, with medial quadrant/central tumors
>3 cm. It remains technically challenging to identify and
irradiate the IMC homogeneously, while sparing organs at risk
(OARs), such as heart, lungs, contralateral breast, and skin.(1) Identification of internal mammary
vessel is the best method for IMC localization.
Several techniques have been
investigated to treat the IMC.(2) The
conventional approach involves both electron and photon fields, with
a mixture of electron and photon beams typically being used to treat
the IMC.(3,4) To minimize the dose to
the heart, some practitioners advocate the use of an abutting
oblique electron field over the parasternal area to treat IMC.(5) Planning studies(6) reveal a high-dose region of the order
of 10% to 20% and a dose variability of up to 40%. Instead of
treating the entire IMC, the use of partially wide tangents (PWTs)
or wide split tangents has been described to cover the breast and
superior IMC with a block placed to shield part of the heart.(6)
In
recent years, great advances have been made in the delivery of RT
with photons, intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) being
among the most promising techniques. Intensity-modulated radiation
therapy can result in homogenous dose distributions within complex
target volumes while simultaneously sparing neighboring normal
tissue. The use of IMRT for irradiation of the breast alone, without
the regional nodes, has been described in the literature.(7-11) Comparative planning studies have
also been described using segmented IMRT versus non-IMRT in the left
breast and internal mammary lymph nodes elsewhere.(12-16)
There
is no consensus over optimal IMCRT techniques because various
techniques, such as electron-photon, PWTs, and IMRT, differ in terms
of dose to the IMC, heart, lungs, and breast. With PWTs and IMRT,
respiratory movement, and errors in IMC localization remain a
problem. Respiratory motion studies indicate that the heart moves
away from the chest wall with deep inspiration.(17) Simple maneuvers, such as holding one's
breath at deep inspiration during part of breast radiation, have
been used to improve treatment efficacy.(18) Preliminary studies from several
institutions have shown that it is possible to control patient
breathing during RT delivery.(19)
However, the magnitude of this benefit on treatment efficacy and the
logistics of incorporating breath hold on a large scale have not yet
been established. There could be the risk of underdosing IMC due to
inaccurate localization/respiratory
movement.
Recently, a study was
designed at our center to treat IMC with high dose rate (HDR)
brachytherapy.(20) During breast
surgery, the medial end of ipsilateral second intercostals space was
dissected, and internal mammary vessels (IMVs) were identified. The
IMV (artery/vein) was looped, and with the principle of venesection,
a 6F sterilized nylon tube (closed tip) was inserted to the fifth
intercostal space, and the proximal open end of the catheter was
brought out of the skin through a small incision in the first
intercostal space. High dose rate brachytherapy gives inhomogenous
dose distributions, resulting in sharp dose falloffs a few
centimeters away from the implant, reducing the dose to the heart
and adjacent lung. The IMV is routinely sacrificed for coronary
bypass surgery, so IMV is dispensable. Hence, we propose this novel
technique of IMV catheterization for IMCBT. Although high dose rates
have been in clinical use with interstitial breast implants for
several years, to our knowledge, HDRs have never been used in the
treatment of IMC. Furthermore, no formal comparison of HDR with
other treatment modalities for this indication has been published so
far.
In the present study,
investigations were done through comparative treatment planning to
identify the potential improvements that could result from the use
of IMC brachytherapy (IMCBT) plus 3DCRT for the treatment of IMC and
left-sided breast over IMRT. Therefore, the goal of this study was
to evaluate the impact of IMCBT plus 3DCRT planning on heart, lung,
and contralateral breast doses compared with IMRT.
II. METHODS AND MATERIALS
The CT datasets from five patients with left-sided breast tumors were used for comparison of different RT techniques. Orthogonal X-rays were taken on the Ximatron simulator (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA), and CT scans were obtained on CT-Simulator (Somatom emotion, Siemens Medical Inc, Germany) to identify IMV. The scans included the entire lung in 8-mm thick CT slices and extended approximately from the midclavicle to the upper abdomen. All the images were then transferred via DICOM to the PLATO treatment-planning system (Nucletron Pvt Ltd, the Netherlands) for IMC brachytherapy plus 3DCRT planning and Cadplan (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA) 3D treatment-planning system for IMRT planning. The clinical target volume was defined as the ipsilateral intact breast and internal mammary nodal chain. The planning target volume (PTV) was defined as the clinical target volume plus a 5-mm isotropic margin (except in the superficial direction, which was set to 0 mm) to account for setup uncertainties and patient movement. The OARs defined in all the contours were contralateral breast, heart, coronary region (antrolateral 2 cm2 of heart on axial CT scan), and lungs. To ensure that the volumes for a given patient were delineated in an identical fashion between the PLATO and Cadplan, contours were compared between the systems on a slice-byslice basis.
A. Treatment techniques
A.1 IMCBT combined with 3DCRT
IMCBT planning was done on PLATO-Brachytherapy
(v14.1.3). The catheter was reconstructed on each CT image. The
target was only IMC. The average treatment length was 7 cm. The
dosimetry was carried out with Ir192
stepping source. The step size used was 2.5 mm. The optimization was
done on dose points and geometry. A total dose of 34 Gy in 10
fractions over 5 days (6 h apart) was delivered with microselectron
HDR (Nucletron Pvt Ltd., the Netherlands), prescribed at 1 cm
off-axis (irradiating a cylinder with a diameter of 2
cm).
All patients later received
3DCRT to the left breast. The same CT dataset of a patient with
left-sided breast cancer provided for HDR brachytherapy was used for
3DCRT planning on PLATO (RTS v2.5.1). Two (nearly) parallel, opposed
medial and lateral tangential beams were used with 6-MV photon and
15° wedges. The wedge angles and the weights of the two tangential
beams were optimized to obtain a homogeneous dose distribution in
the central plane. The gantry angles were optimized manually to
minimize the beam divergence along the dorsal beam edge to reduce
irradiation of the heart and lungs. The isocenter was localized
automatically to the PTV's center of mass. An isotropic margin of 7
mm around the PTV was used to define the field size and field shape
(as seen from the beam's-eye view) to account for the beam penumbra.
Multileaf collimators (MLCs) projecting the leaf width of 5 mm at
isocenter automatically shape the beam aperture. Three-dimensional
dose distribution was calculated with a grid space between 3.0 mm
and 3.5 mm. The optimum universal wedges (15°/30°) were used. The
planning system uses a convolution-based pencil-beam model(21) with the equivalent tissue-air ratio
method(22) for inhomogeneity
corrections. The dose distribution was normalized to 100% at the
isocenter in the central plane. The final plan was evaluated,
ensuring a 95% isodose coverage of the PTV. A total dose of 50 Gy (2
Gy/fraction, 5 days/week) for 5 weeks was prescribed at the
isocenter.
The final and approved
IMCBT and 3DCRT plans were loaded to the PLATO EVAL 2.9. The
radiobiological corrections were applied in the radiobiology model
available in the PLATO. The weight factor function is designed to
mutually weight doses delivered by the RTS and BPS modalities for
all dose fractions. A weight factor of one was considered for
external beam as well as HDR brachytherapy. The value for α / β for the tumor was taken as 10. Symbol τ1/2 is the half lifetime of repair in the
range 0.1 h to 10 h, and the value 0.5 was entered. Cumulative DVH
was calculated for PTV and OARs. The volumes of the PTV and OARs
were determined by a random sampling technique (PLATO EVAL 2.9).
A.2 IMRT planning
In addition to the IMCBT plus 3DCRT technique, inversely planned IMRT was performed with the "sliding window" technique on the same CT dataset. Intensity-modulated radiation therapy plans were generated using the Cadplan-Helios inverse treatment-planning software module. Treatment planning was carried out for irradiation with 6-MV photon beams formed by a MLC with a leaf width of 5 mm at the isocenter. For IMRT, five beams with gantry angles 30°, 75°, 125°, 290°, and 345° were used. The IMC was enclosed in the left breast and was set as a PTV. The goals of inverse treatment planning were optimum dose homogeneity within the target and minimal integral dose to OARs at the same time. Cumulative DVH was calculated for PTV and OARs. The tangential IMRT plans were also carried out.
B. Evaluation and analysis
B.1 For PTV
After the calculation of the 3D dose distribution, isodose contours were displayed in all axial, frontal, and sagittal planes. Dose-volume histograms were calculated for all volumes of interest. The mean dose of the cumulative DVH of the target volume (i.e., breast and IMC) in IMRT was used to evaluate dose distribution. Conformity (23) and homogeneity(24) for the PTV was calculated. Conformity index (CI) was defined as the ratio of prescription isodose volume to the target volume. Lower CI values correlate with better conformity. Homogeneity index (HI 95/107) was defined as the percentage of the PTV with a dose higher than 95% and lower than 107% of the prescribed dose.
B.2 For OARs
The mean dose was noted. In addition, the volume receiving more than 10 Gy, 30 Gy, and 45 Gy was noted.
III. RESULTS
A. For PTV
Figure 1 shows the isodose distribution in the axial plane for IMCBT and 3DCRT in PLATO EVAL module. The contribution from both the external and brachytherapy is displayed. Internal mammary chain was the target for brachytherapy, while the left breast was the target for external. Internal mammary chain was treated with HDR, while the left breast was treated with two parallel-opposed conformal tangential 6-MV photon beams with 15° wedges. Figure 2 shows the integral DVH for heart, lungs, coronary, and left IMC for IMCBT and 3DCRT with PLATO. Figure 3 shows the integral DVH for PTV and IMC for IMCBT and 3DCRT with PLATO. Internal mammary chain, as well as the left breast, was covered with the 95% isodose. Figure 4 shows the isodose distribution in the axial plane for IMRT in Cadplan. The isodose washes of 90%, 95%, and 108% are shown. The PTV here was the IMC included in the left breast. Five coplanar beams were placed with 6-MV photons. Figure 5 shows the DVH for PTV, heart and both lungs for IMRT in Cadplan.
Fig. 1. Isodose distribution in the axial plane for IMCBT plus 3DCRT with PLATO. Internal mammary chain was treated with HDR brachytherapy irradiating the 2-cm cylinder; the left breast was treated with two tangential conformal 6-MV photons with 15° wedges. The combined dose distribution has been taken from the PLATO EVAL module. |
||
Fig. 2. The cumulative DVH for the right lung, left lung, heart, coronary, and IMC for IMCBT plus 3DCRT from PLATO. Significant dose reduction of the organs at risks is seen. |
||
Fig. 3. The cumulative DVH for target and IMC for IMCBT plus 3DCRT with PLATO |
||
Fig. 4. The isodose distribution in axial plane for IMRT with Cadplan. The typical IMRT plan shows five coplanar 6- MV photon beams. The PTV includes left breast and IMC. The distribution shows 95% to 108% isodose lines around the PTV. |
||
Fig. 5. The cumulative DVH for PTV and the OARs for IMRT with Cadplan |
||
The mean dose with IMCBT and 3DCRT to PTV was 100.5%. The mean dose with IMRT to PTV was 102.8%. The mean conformity of the PTV was found to be 1.06 with IMCBT and 3DCRT, and 1.12 with IMRT. The mean homogeneity (HI 95/107) was 3.32 with IMRT versus 1.4 with IMCBT and 3DCRT.
B. For OARs
Table 1 shows mean doses and the volumes of the OARs receiving more than 10 Gy, 30 Gy, and 45 Gy, respectively, for plans with IMCBT and 3DCRT versus five fields IMRT. Table 2 shows the mean doses and the volumes of the OARs receiving more than 10 Gy, 30 Gy, and 45 Gy, respectively, for plans with IMCBT and 3DCRT versus tangential IMRT. To summarize, the IMCBT plus 3DCRT technique significantly reduces the doses to heart, both lungs, and contralateral breast. The mean dose to the coronary region was 21.1 Gy with IMCBT plus 3DCRT as compared to 38.52 Gy with IMRT.
Table 1. Average (over 5 patients) mean doses and the volumes of organs at risk receiving more than 10 Gy, 30 Gy, and 45 Gy. The range of the mean dose is shown in square brackets, and the range of standard deviation is also shown in parentheses. |
Table 2. Average (over 5 patients) mean doses and the volumes of organs at risk receiving more than 10 Gy, 30 Gy, and 45 Gy. The range of the mean dose is shown in square brackets, and the range of standard deviation is shown in parentheses. |
IV. DISCUSSION
In the present study we compared the IMCBT
technique combined with 3DCRT and IMRT for multiple beams of
left-sided breast and the IMC. We emphasize that two different
treatment-planning systems were used, since brachytherapy
calculation is not available in our Cadplan system. Both planning
systems gave comparable volumes (<2% variation) and dose
distributions. Both systems used a pencil-beam algorithm for dose
calculation. For inhomogeneity correction, PLATO used equivalent
tissue air ratio, while Cadplan used modified Batho. PLATO and
Cadplan used dose grids of 3.5 mm and 5 mm,
respectively.
Each plan was studied
carefully with IMCBT and 3DCRT before implementing it for clinical
purposes. One of the important aspects of HDR brachytherapy planning
is the rapid dose fall-off at a few centimeters around the implant.
Here, the DVH is calculated with respect to implant geometry. The
organ-based DVH could not be calculated at a larger distance from
the implant since there will be a high dose around the catheter and
a negligible dose at a distance of a few centimeters. When IMC
brachytherapy is combined with the 3DCRT, the dose contribution to
the contralateral breast and lung is primarily from the 3DCRT alone.
There is a negligible contribution from HDR to these critical organs
since they are quite far from the implant geometry and the
target.
If the PTV includes only
the breast, then the technique typically consists of two tangential
fields placed medially and laterally to the breast. This field
arrangement attempts to minimize the amount of underlying normal
tissue irradiated. However, if the PTV also includes the IMC lymph
node, then simple tangential fields usually do not offer the best
solution. The inclusion of IMC creates an irregular concave volume
difficult to irradiate adequately without delivering a significant
dose to the heart, particularly in left-sided breast cancer
patients.
Because of the need to
match the electron-photon components, this technique usually
provides poor target dose homogeneity. This dosimetric compromise is
commonly accepted, however, to take advantage of the reduced dose to
the ipsilateral lung and heart with the use of the electron field.
But the reduction in heart dose can only be obtained at the expense
of increased dose inhomogeneity, particularly along the match line
between the medial tangential photon field and the abutting electron
field. The main disadvantage of this technique is the significantly
increased complexity of treatment planning and
delivery.
Anatomically, the
majority of the IMC lymph nodes lie superiorly, between the first
and third intercostal spaces. With the oblique electron technique,
the use of electrons minimizes the dose to the deeper structures,
particularly heart and lungs. However, treatment planning and the
delivery of the electron is more complicated. The junction between
the photon and electron match line as well as the use of the
anterior parasternal fields to irradiate the IMC contribute to
increased dose inhomogeneity. In addition, the IMC depth determines
the electron energy used, and this may limit its effectiveness in
treating very deep IMC. The PWT technique improves dose homogeneity
by avoiding field matching between the tangential and IMC fields.
However, the residual heart dose can remain significant mainly for
left-sided lesions. Therefore, the need for technical improvements
in RT delivery is obvious.
We have
also planned the tangential IMRT to dosimetrically compare the organ
doses with five-field IMRT. The tangential IMRT plan has certainly
reduced the doses to the critical organs. The wide split tangent
technique can give better coverage of the breast but significantly
overdoses the IMC. Although it is the simplest to plan and
implement, the higher risk of complications suggests, at the very
least, caution in its use. Moreover, to obtain complete target
coverage with tangential fields, it is unavoidable to irradiate part
of the ipsilateral lung. The dose to the lung should be as low as
possible, to prevent radiation pneumonitis and late fibrosis.(25) Dose analysis of the ipsilateral lung
showed that the mean dose decreased from 24.3 Gy with IMRT to 4.86
Gy with IMCBT combined with 3DCRT. Consequently, the probability for
inducing radiation pneumonitis was decreased for the IMCBT combined
with 3DCRT technique.
A further
impressive result of our present technique is the reduction of high
dose area of a substantial cardiac volume containing major parts of
the coronary vessels and the conducting system. IMCBT plus 3DCRT has
the potential to overcome this limitation in treating deep IMC. It
offered the best compromise between the two competing interests of
the PTV (breast and IMC) and OARs. It was able to maintain low dose
values for heart, both lungs, and contralateral
breast.
The use of IMRT, however,
requires significant resources and extensive quality assurance; it
can also be time-consuming to plan, verify, and deliver compared
with other techniques. The IMRT plan was generated using a
standardized set of parameters. At present, we do not offer IMRT to
any patients with breast cancer when the IMC should be integrated
into the target volume. There are several studies comparing
irradiation of the left breast and IMC using conventional techniques
with step-and-shoot IMRT. We have used the dynamic MLC "sliding
window" technique for IMRT planning
here.
Greater dose inhomogeneity in
IMCBT combined with 3DCRT plan was caused by over-dosage as opposed
to underdosage. This is obvious because there is a high dose with
brachytherapy around IMC irradiating a 2-cm diameter. This high-dose
region is very close to the left breast, which is then treated with
3DCRT. But the percentage of overdose is only 2.17%, not very
significant.
Another important
concern over delivery of IMRT is the anticipated increased integral
dose and volume of unspecified tissue receiving a low dose of
radiation. It should be mentioned that the mean dose to both lungs,
contralateral breast, and the integral dose to the whole body is
increased by multibeam IMRT. The number of monitor units (MUs) to be
delivered also increases in IMRT compared with 3DCRT. Total MUs
delivered with IMRT ranged from 800 MUs to 900 MUs, compared with
250 MUs with 3DCRT. Before widespread application of inversely
planned IMRT in breast cancer, the effect of low doses to an
enlarged part of normal tissue should be evaluated in controlled
clinical studies. The most sensitive structure for stochastic damage
in the treated volume is the lung tissue. Here, IMRT delivers
comparatively higher mean dose values. For the ipsilateral lung, an
increase of the mean dose from 4.86 Gy to 24.3 Gy was obtained with
IMRT.
One of the important aspects
is the time required for the treatment planning and execution of
IMRT. This also should be considered in the day-to-day machine
workload. On average, it took 10 h to 15 h for IMRT planning, 4 h to
5 h for quality assurance, 10 min for patient setup with
immobilization, and 20 to 25 min for the treatment. Most of the IMRT
fields were split due to the limitation of the MLC carriage. IMCBT
and 3DCRT planning took a maximum of 10 min and 30 min,
respectively. It took 10 min each for IMCBT and 3DCRT actual
treatment.
V. CONCLUSIONS
The presented technique is safe, simple, and clinically feasible. Breast cancer patients could be irradiated with IMCBT combined with 3DCRT, thus reducing the dose to the heart and lungs, which is proposed as standard for this category of patients. IMCBT combined with 3DCRT gives satisfying dose distribution. This novel technique can potentially rival IMRT because of its unique advantages in localization, obviating the need for respiratory gating and maximum sparing of heart and other structures. Moreover, there is an increase in integral dose to the entire normal tissue with the application of IMRT. Internal mammary chain irradiation with the simple and safe technique of intra-operative catheter placement could be an attractive alternative that not only ensures high dose to subcentimeter IMC nodes, but also confers maximum cardiac sparing.
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