85 research outputs found

    Veränderungen der Mikrostruktur des Gehirns bei Kontaktsport-Athleten

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    Veränderungen der Mikrostruktur des Gehirns bei Kontaktsport-Athleten

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    Stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation: competitor or adjunct to catheter ablation?

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    Cardiology and Radiation Oncology working together—a new ‘STAR’ on the horizon? Until recently, most cardiologists associated radiation exposure to the heart with potential adverse effects, such as pericarditis, late coronary artery disease or potential damage to cardiac implantable devices. The landmark publication of 2017 reporting a case series of just five patients with recurrent ventricular tachycardia (VT) treated with stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation (STAR) changed this perception and introduced a new area for both cardiac electrophysiology and radiation oncology

    Neuroanatomical changes seen in MRI in patients with cerebral metastasized breast cancer after radiotherapy

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    Purpose: To quantify neuroanatomical changes using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with cerebral metastasized breast cancer after brain radiotherapy (RT). Methods: Fifteen patients with breast cancer with brain metastases who underwent whole brain RT (WBR), radiosurgery (RS), and/or hypofractionated stereotactic treatment (STX) were examined at four time points (TPs). A total of 48 MRIs were available: prior to RT (TP1), 5–8 months after RT (TP2), 9–11 months after RT (TP3), and >20 months after RT (TP4). Using automatic segmentation, 25 subcortical structures were analyzed. Patients were split into three groups: STX (receiving STX and RS), RS (receiving RS only), and WBR (receiving WBR at least once). After testing for a normal distribution for all values using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, a two-sided paired t test was used to analyze volumetric changes. For those values that were not normally distributed, the nonparametric Mann-Whitney test was employed. Results: The left cerebellum white matter ( p = 0.028), the right pallidum ( p = 0.038), and the left thalamus ( p = 0.039) significantly increased at TP2 compared to TP1. The third ventricle increased at all TPs ( p = 0.034–0.046). The left choroid plexus increased at TP3 ( p = 0.037) compared to TP1. The left lateral ventricle increased at TP3 ( p = 0.012) and TP4 ( p = 0.027). Total gray matter showed a trend of volume decline in STX and WBR groups. Conclusions: These findings indicate that alterations in the volume of subcortical structures may act as a sensitive parameter when evaluating neuroanatomical changes and brain atrophy due to radiotherapy. Differences observed for patients who received STX and WBR, but not those treated with RS, need to be validated further

    Neuroanatomical changes seen in MRI in patients with cerebral metastasized breast cancer after radiotherapy

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    PURPOSE To quantify neuroanatomical changes using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with cerebral metastasized breast cancer after brain radiotherapy (RT). METHODS Fifteen patients with breast cancer with brain metastases who underwent whole brain RT (WBR), radiosurgery (RS), and/or hypofractionated stereotactic treatment (STX) were examined at four time points (TPs). A total of 48 MRIs were available: prior to RT (TP1), 5-8 months after RT (TP2), 9-11 months after RT (TP3), and >20 months after RT (TP4). Using automatic segmentation, 25 subcortical structures were analyzed. Patients were split into three groups: STX (receiving STX and RS), RS (receiving RS only), and WBR (receiving WBR at least once). After testing for a normal distribution for all values using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, a two-sided paired t test was used to analyze volumetric changes. For those values that were not normally distributed, the nonparametric Mann-Whitney test was employed. RESULTS The left cerebellum white matter (p = 0.028), the right pallidum (p = 0.038), and the left thalamus (p = 0.039) significantly increased at TP2 compared to TP1. The third ventricle increased at all TPs (p = 0.034-0.046). The left choroid plexus increased at TP3 (p = 0.037) compared to TP1. The left lateral ventricle increased at TP3 (p = 0.012) and TP4 (p = 0.027). Total gray matter showed a trend of volume decline in STX and WBR groups. CONCLUSIONS These findings indicate that alterations in the volume of subcortical structures may act as a sensitive parameter when evaluating neuroanatomical changes and brain atrophy due to radiotherapy. Differences observed for patients who received STX and WBR, but not those treated with RS, need to be validated further

    Longitudinal atherosclerotic changes after radio(chemo)therapy of hypopharyngeal carcinoma

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    Background Radiotherapy treatment of head and neck cancer affects local arteries and increases the risk of stroke. This study aimed at a closer characterization of this damage and its development in time with a longitudinal study set up. Methods Male patients treated between 2011 and 2016 for hypopharyngeal carcinoma were identified from the in-house clinical data base. They were included into the study if besides the planning CT at least one additional CT image was available from follow-up (13 patients) or at least two MRI scans (16 patients of which 2 were already included). All patients received radiotherapy, and chemotherapy was administered to 16 patients. The time from the beginning of radiotherapy to the last available image ranged from 2 months to 4.5 years. For six segments of the carotid arteries, the number and volume of atherosclerotic plaques were determined from the CT scans, and the intima media thickness from the MRI scans. Information on comorbid cardiovascular disease, hypertension and diabetes mellitus was retrieved from medical records. Results Total plaque volume rose from 0.25 cm3 before to 0.33 cm3 after therapy but this was not significant (p = 0.26). The mean number of plaques increased from 5.7 to 8.1 (p = 0.002), and the intima media thickened from 1.17 mm to 1.35 mm (p = 0.002). However, the mean intima media thickness practically did not change in patients with comorbid diabetes mellitus (p-value for homogeneity: 0.03). For patients without diabetes mellitus, dynamics of both plaque number and intima media thickness, was consistent with an increase until about one year after therapy and no further progression thereafter. Conclusion Our study confirmed the thickening of artery walls and the increase in the number of plaques. Results imply that definitive radiation damage to the artery walls can be determined not earlier than about one year after radiotherapy and there is no substantial deterioration thereafter. Reasons for the absence of an observable intima media thickening in patients with diabetes are unclear

    Stereotactic body radiotherapy to defer systemic therapy in patients with oligorecurrent disease

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    Background Patients who develop oligorecurrent disease may be treated with metastasis-directed stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) to defer the start of systemic therapy and delay its potential side effects. We report oncological outcomes and patterns of failure in patients with oligorecurrent disease treated with SBRT and determine which factors impact the interval to initiation of systemic therapy. Material/Methods This retrospective study included patients with oligorecurrent disease (≤5 lesions) from any solid organ malignancy, treated with SBRT to all metastases and no systemic therapy for a minimum one month after SBRT between 01/2014 and 12/2019. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to analyze overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS), and the cumulative incidence of initiation of systemic therapy was analyzed assuming death without systemic therapy as a competing risk. Univariable and multivariable analyses are used to assess predictors of the systemic therapy-free interval. Results Among 545 patients treated with SBRT for oligometastatic disease, 142 patients were treated with SBRT only for oligorecurrent disease. The most common primary tumors were lung and gastrointestinal cancer in 47 (33.1 %) and 28 (19.7 %) patients, respectively. After a median follow-up of 25 months, the median PFS and OS was 6.1 months and 48.9 months, respectively. Distant metastases were the most common first failure, and oligometastatic distant failure occured in 86 patients (60.6 %). New metastases were treated with repeat SBRT in 48 patients (33.8 %). The 1- and 2-year cumulative incidence of initiation of systemic therapy was 24.6 % and 36.8 %, respectively. In multivariable analysis, the number of previous lines of systemic therapy and the cumulative volume of metastases were significantly associated with the interval to initiation of systemic therapy. Conclusion Selected patients with oligorecurrence achieved favorable OS and low cumulative incidence of initiation of systemic therapy. Prospective studies are warranted to determine how the deferral of systemic therapy impacts OS compared with immediate systemic therapy in combination with SBRT

    Robustness of radiomic features in magnetic resonance imaging for patients with glioblastoma: Multi-center study

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    Background and purpose Radiomics offers great potential in improving diagnosis and treatment for patients with glioblastoma multiforme. However, in order to implement radiomics in clinical routine, the features used for prognostic modelling need to be stable. This comprises significant challenge in multi-center studies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of different image normalization methods on MRI features robustness in multi-center study. Methods Radiomics stability was checked on magnetic resonance images of eleven patients. The images were acquired in two different hospitals using contrast-enhanced T1 sequences. The images were normalized using one of five investigated approaches including grey-level discretization, histogram matching and z-score. Then, radiomic features were extracted and features stability was evaluated using intra-class correlation coefficients. In the second part of the study, improvement in the prognostic performance of features was tested on 60 patients derived from publicly available dataset. Results Depending on the normalization scheme, the percentage of stable features varied from 3.4% to 8%. The histogram matching based on the tumor region showed the highest amount of the stable features (113/1404); while normalization using fixed bin size resulted in 48 stable features. The histogram matching also led to better prognostic value (median c-index increase of 0.065) comparing to non-normalized images. Conclusions MRI normalization plays an important role in radiomics. Appropriate normalization helps to select robust features, which can be used for prognostic modelling in multicenter studies. In our study, histogram matching based on tumor region improved both stability of radiomic features and their prognostic value

    Corrigendum to "Robustness of radiomic features in magnetic resonance imaging for patients with glioblastoma: Multi-center study" [Phys. Imaging Radiat. Oncol. 22 (2022) 131-136]

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    Background and purpose Radiomics offers great potential in improving diagnosis and treatment for patients with glioblastoma multiforme. However, in order to implement radiomics in clinical routine, the features used for prognostic modelling need to be stable. This comprises significant challenge in multi-center studies. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of different image normalization methods on MRI features robustness in multi-center study. Methods Radiomics stability was checked on magnetic resonance images of eleven patients. The images were acquired in two different hospitals using contrast-enhanced T1 sequences. The images were normalized using one of five investigated approaches including grey-level discretization, histogram matching and z-score. Then, radiomic features were extracted and features stability was evaluated using intra-class correlation coefficients. In the second part of the study, improvement in the prognostic performance of features was tested on 60 patients derived from publicly available dataset. Results Depending on the normalization scheme, the percentage of stable features varied from 3.4% to 8%. The histogram matching based on the tumor region showed the highest amount of the stable features (113/1404); while normalization using fixed bin size resulted in 48 stable features. The histogram matching also led to better prognostic value (median c-index increase of 0.065) comparing to non-normalized images. Conclusions MRI normalization plays an important role in radiomics. Appropriate normalization helps to select robust features, which can be used for prognostic modelling in multicenter studies. In our study, histogram matching based on tumor region improved both stability of radiomic features and their prognostic value

    Repeat stereotactic body radiotherapy for oligometastatic disease

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    BACKGROUND Patients with oligometastatic disease (OMD) treated with metastasis-directed definitive local therapy such as stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) are at risk of developing new metastases. Here, we compare characteristics and outcomes of patients treated with a single course and repeat SBRT. MATERIALS/METHODS OMD patients treated with SBRT to 1-5 metastases were included in this retrospective study, and classified as single course or repeat SBRT. Progression-free survival (PFS), widespread failure-free survival (WFFS), overall survival (OS), systemic therapy-free survival (STFS) and cumulative incidence of different first failures were analyzed. Patient and treatment characteristics predicting the use of repeat SBRT were investigated using univariable and multivariable logistic regression. RESULTS Among the 385 patients included, 129 and 256 received repeat or single course SBRT, respectively. The most common primary tumor and OMD state in both groups were lung cancer and metachronous oligorecurrence. Patients treated with repeat SBRT had shorter PFS (p < 0.0001), while WFFS (p = 0.47) and STFS (p = 0.22) were comparable. Distant failure, particularly with a single metastasis, was more frequently observed in repeat SBRT patients. Repeat SBRT patients had longer median OS (p = 0.01). On multivariable logistic regression, low distant metastases velocity and more previous lines of systemic therapy significantly predicted the use of repeat SBRT. CONCLUSION Despite shorter PFS and comparable WFFS and STFS, repeat SBRT patients had longer OS. The role of repeat SBRT for OMD patients warrants further prospective investigation, focussing on predictive factors to select patients that might derive a benefit
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