The dosimetric effect of
inhomogeneity correction
in dynamic conformal arc
stereotactic body radiation
therapy for lung tumors
Brian Kavanagh, Meisong Ding, Tracey Schefter, Kelly Stuhr, and Francis Newman
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado, U.S.A.
Brian.Kavanagh@uchsc.eduReceived 17 January 2006; accepted 7 March 2006
For patients treated with lung stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) using dynamic conformal arcs, the influence of inhomogeneity correction (IC) on normal tissue and tumor dosimetry was studied. For the same numbers of monitor units, the planning target volume equivalent uniform doses calculated without path-length IC were lower than those calculated with IC (mean difference 18%, range 1% to 34%; p < 0.0001). Normal lung dose differences were of the same magnitude in the opposite direction. In reports of SBRT, it will be helpful to maintain clear communication about the type of IC used to avoid future uncertainties about true normal tissue tolerance and tumor dose-response relationships.
PACS numbers: 87.50.Gi, 87.53.Bn, 87.53.Kn
Key words: stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT), inhomogeneity correction, lung tumors, equivalent uniform dose
I. INTRODUCTION
Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is the administration of high doses of radiation in a hypofractionated schedule, with the goal of eradicating one or more extracranial tumors. The American Society of Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology and the American College of Radiology have published guidelines for the overall process of SBRT,(1) but there is no universal standard method of tissue inhomogeneity correction (IC) for SBRT. Because SBRT may be given using a variety of techniques, there is reason to question how influential IC is for any given method of treatment. Furthermore, since large fractions are used, systematic discrepancies have greater biological impact for SBRT than conventionally fractionated radiation therapy given the expected nonlinear impact on biologically equivalent dose. IC-related dose discrepancies could emerge for any application of SBRT, depending on the amount of tissue inhomogeneity within the volumes through which the beams transit. However, the issue is particularly relevant for lung SBRT, where beams frequently pass through extensive regions of low-density lung parenchyma. Here, we evaluate the impact of IC on the dosimetry of SBRT for lung tumors treated in a prospective Phase I trial of SBRT for lung metastases using dynamic conformal arcs.
II. METHODS
The protocol was approved by the Institutional
Review Board, and clinical details are reported elsewhere.(2) Key eligibility criteria included one to
three lung metastases from a solid tumor and maximum cumulative
tumor diameter <7 cm. Twelve patients enrolled. Eight patients
had more than one lung lesion, for a total of 21 tumors treated.
Patients were immobilized during simulation and treatment using a
custom body mold, and respiratory control was achieved using a
breath-holding technique or abdominal compression. Each gross tumor
volume (GTV) was expanded 5 mm to 7 mm radially and 10 mm to 15 mm
cranio-caudally to create a planning tumor volume (PTV). The
planning CT scanner used for all patients analyzed had been
calibrated previously and was not recalibrated at any time during
the course of the study. Intravenous contrast material was not used
for any of the planning scans, since the lesions to be treated were
peripheral nodules that were readily separable from mediastinal
structures. All patients had had recent diagnostic CT scans with
contrast prior to the planning CT scan, but never on the same day,
so no residual contrast material was ever noted on the planning CT
scans.
All treatment was given
using dynamic conformal arcs planned with dedicated software
(BrainScan®; BrainLAB AG). The software has a built-in path-length
correction IC algorithm, and doses given to patients were calculated
using this algorithm. The 21 GTVs ranged from 0.53 cm3 to 39.8 cm3,
and the PTVs ranged from 6.4 cm3 to 123
cm3. Dose escalation proceeded
smoothly, and the PTV dose was escalated safely from 48 Gy to 60
Gy/3 fractions.
To evaluate the
path-length IC algorithm used, ionization chamber measurements were
taken in an inhomogeneous lung phantom (Fig. 1). A multiple dynamic
conformal arc plan was used to simulate a typical SBRT treatment.
Virtual PTVs of 3-cm or 6-cm diameter were targeted by three arcs
with gantry rotations from 150° to 170°, 190° to 220°, and 320° to
40°, and with relative weights of 0.25, 0.25, and 0.5, respectively.
The doses given to patients (GTV equivalent uniform dose (EUD), PTV
EUD, V15%, V30% and V50%) were first calculated with path-length
IC. Here, V15%, V30%, and V50% refer to the percent of uninvolved lung
that received 15%, 30%, or 50% of the prescription dose,
respectively. The number of monitor units (MUs) per arc was
recorded. The same parameters were then recalculated with the same
MUs and arcs but without path-length IC. EUDs were calculated
according to established methods.(3,4)
The use of EUD for plan quality evaluations has been
critiqued,(5) but here EUD is simply
used as an index for comparing dose.
Fig. 1. The lung phantom used for evaluating the inhomogeneity correction algorithm. The phantom allowed dose measurement via one of several measurement access points: at the isocenter, at the tumor–lung interface, within the lung-equivalent material, and at the lung–tissue interface. Top panel: cross-sectional sketch. The depth was 40 cm. Tissuelike acrylic layers (density 1.0 g/cm3) of 4 cm thickness surround lung-equivalent polyurethane foam (0.32 g/cm3), in the center of which is a tumor-like acrylic section (1.0 g/cm3). Center panel: photograph of the phantom with the ion chamber placed in the isocenter. Lower panel: schematic representation of the dynamic conformal arcs used to simulate an SBRT treatment. |
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It should be noted that within the software used, the doses given via arcs are calculated at finite 10° intervals, where the instantaneous multileaf collimator (MLC) position is considered as if it were a static beam. However, during treatment there is continuous linear MLC position adjustment. It is possible that additional dosimetric accuracy might be achieved if smaller arc increments were used (or, ideally, some means of modeling MLC motion continuously). While there is no a priori reason to expect that the percent discrepancy between the 10° incremental beam approximation and true dose delivered via arcs is influenced by IC, a complete answer to this question is beyond the scope of the present work. There is reason to expect that any dosimetric differences from the use of smaller arc increments within the calculation would be small for a somewhat similar clinical consideration, namely, intensity-modulated arc therapy. Li and colleagues explored whether increments of 5° would add computational accuracy beyond what is achieved with 10° increments and found no significant difference.(6)
III. RESULTS
For an isocenter dose of 24 Gy, the differences in
phantom isocenter dose between measured and IC-calculated doses
were 0.3% and 2.3% for the 3-cm and 6-cm PTVs, respectively. In
lung-equivalent material, differences were 1.9% to 5.3%. At
lung-tissue interfaces the differences between measured and
calculated doses averaged 2.2% but ranged from -7% to +7%. The
variability here was likely due at least partly to steep dose
gradients.
For the same numbers of
MUs, the EUDs calculated without IC were significantly lower than
what was calculated with IC. The GTV EUD calculations differed by an
average of 15% (range 0% to 26%), and the PTV EUD calculations
differed by an average of 18% (range 1% to 34%; p < 0.0001
by the paired t-test for both comparisons). The percent
difference in PTV EUD was not correlated with the tumor volume.
Normal lung dose differences were of opposite direction to tumor
dose comparisons. The V15%,
V30%, and V50% calculated with IC were lower than
the same without IC by an average of 13%, 15%, and 18%,
respectively.
To assess the effect
of tumor location upon the IC effect, the PTV locations were
converted into equivalent locations on a representative patient's
planning CT images by maintaining the same proportionate distance
from the carina to the periphery of the lung along a line segment
oriented at the same angle in this figure as on the original images
(Fig. 2). It should be noted that differences in thoracic contours
cause slight distortion between images of the original PTV and the
assigned location in the composite representation, limiting the
analysis somewhat. Nevertheless, as shown in Fig. 2, tumors for
which there was a higher discrepancy in dose calculation with versus
without IC were located more centrally within the lung.
Fig. 2. Coronal (left) and axial (right) composite locations of planning target volumes treated. Those marked with an X are lesions for which recalculation of the equivalent uniform dose without inhomogeneous correction (IC) differed by more than 15% from the value obtained with IC; for those marked with an O, the difference was less than 15%. See Results section for additional explanation. |
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IV. DISCUSSION
Results of the present study illustrate that during
dynamic conformal arc SBRT for lung tumors, there are notable and
significant differences in both tumor and normal lung dosimetry
between calculations made with IC and those made without IC. The
mean difference between GTV and PTV EUDs calculated with IC versus
without IC exceeded the difference noted between doses calculated
using the pencil beam (PB) algorithm applied and doses measured in a
lung phantom.
The fact that IC
tended to make a larger PTV dose difference for a more centrally
located lesion, as shown in Fig. 2, is plausible when it is
considered that for central lesions, a greater volume of lung tissue
is traversed by the beam. The observation that the use of IC had an
effect on normal lung dosimetric parameters that was opposite the
effect upon PTV doses is likewise believable: the IC algorithm
provides a more realistic assumption of reduced absorption within
lung tissue, whereas without IC there is an assumption of radiation
dose absorption within lung tissue at the same rate as surrounding
solid tissue.
The intent of this
study was not necessarily to favor the particular IC algorithm used.
A PB algorithm was used because it was included in the
manufacturer's standard software package. Numerous investigators
have compared PB with other methods of IC. Specifically with regard
to SBRT, Haedinger and colleagues compared a PB and a collapsed cone
algorithm.(7) To achieve the same
reference PTV dose using multiple non-coplanar or arcing 6-MV beams,
the MUs required were within 2% with either algorithm; however,
differences averaged over 8% for 18MV beams. For three example cases
where Monte Carlo calculations were performed, the PB-based
calculations were not as close to the Monte Carlo results as the
collapsed cone-based calculations.
The RTOG trial of SBRT for
medically inoperable primary non-small-cell lung cancer (RTOG-0236)
stipulates that doses should be calculated without tissue IC,
although there are plans to collect both IC-corrected and
non-IC-corrected dose distributions for further analysis. IC was not
applied in the Indiana University trial that formed the basis of the
RTOG study.(8) There are two points of
special importance here. First, the observation by the Indiana
University group of a tendency toward higher complications for
centrally located lesions might be at least partly due to the very
high true doses given for the nominal doses prescribed. Second, the
true doses given in the RTOG study will likely be substantially
higher than the nominal prescription doses.
The concerns raised here regarding
IC evoke the spirited debate between Papanikolaou and Klein:
published over five years ago, the participants considered the
question of whether IC should be used routinely during treatment
planning for conventionally fractionated lung cancer
radiotherapy.(9) At issue was not
whether the application of IC provided a more accurate
representation of the dose delivered-a matter on which the debaters
agreed-but rather when IC should best be implemented universally.
Papanikolaou and Klein concurred that clear physicist-physician
communication would be critically important and that one of the key
challenges would be the need to revisit notions of normal tissue
tolerance and tumor dose-response relationships with a more refined
description of the dosimetry involved.
Given that SBRT is still in its
early phase of development, there remains an opportunity to avoid
the need to reanalyze dosimetric uncertainties later if adequate use
of IC is applied from the start. Regarding institutional reports of
lung SBRT techniques and clinical outcomes, it is particularly
important to report whether or not IC was used in dose calculation
and the method of IC used, if applicable. Otherwise,
interinstitutional outcome comparisons will be flawed due to the
possibly large uncertainty in true doses given. SBRT is an emerging
treatment paradigm that involves an overall intensification of the
radiation dose given in a very compact schedule. Physicists charged
with establishing new SBRT programs must consider how the IC
algorithm to be used compares to what others have used to ensure
safety and consistent quality of treatment, regardless of which
method of SBRT is selected.
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