34 research outputs found

    Dose-escalated salvage radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy in high risk prostate cancer patients without hormone therapy: outcome, prognostic factors and late toxicity

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    Purpose: Evaluation of dose escalated salvage radiotherapy (SRT) in patients after radical prostatectomy (RP) who had never received antihormonal therapy. To investigate prognostic factors of the outcome of SRT and to analyze which patient subsets benefit most from dose escalation. Materials and methods: Between 2002 and 2008, 76 patients were treated in three different dose-groups: an earlier cohort treated with 66 Gy irrespective of pre-RT-characteristics and two later cohorts treated with 70 Gy or 75 Gy depending on pre-RT-characteristics. Biochemical-relapse-free-survival (bRFS), clinical-relapse-free-survival (cRFS) and late toxicity were evaluated. Results: Four-year bRFS and cRFS were 62.5% and 85%. Gleason score <8, positive surgical resection margin (PSRM) and low PSA (<= 0.5 ng/ml) before SRT resulted in higher bRFS. Analysis of the whole group showed no clear dose-outcome relationship. Patients with PSRM, however, had improved bRFS when escalating >66 Gy. While >70 Gy did not improve the overall results, 4-year bRFS for patients with manifest local recurrence in the high-dose group was still comparable to those without manifest local recurrences. No grade 4 and minimal grade 3 gastrointestinal and urinary toxicity were observed. Conclusions: Dose-escalated SRT achieves high biochemical control. The data strongly support the application of at least 70 Gy rather than 66 Gy. They do not prove positive effects of doses >70 Gy but do not disprove them as these doses were only applied to an unfavorable patients selection

    Tangential beam IMRT versus tangential beam 3D-CRT of the chest wall in postmastectomy breast cancer patients: A dosimetric comparison

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>This study evaluates the dose distribution of reversed planned tangential beam intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) compared to standard wedged tangential beam three-dimensionally planned conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) of the chest wall in unselected postmastectomy breast cancer patients</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>For 20 unselected subsequent postmastectomy breast cancer patients tangential beam IMRT and tangential beam 3D-CRT plans were generated for the radiotherapy of the chest wall. The prescribed dose was 50 Gy in 25 fractions. Dose-volume histograms were evaluated for the PTV and organs at risk. Parameters of the dose distribution were compared using the Wilcoxon matched pairs test.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Tangential beam IMRT statistically significantly reduced the ipsilateral mean lung dose by an average of 21% (1129 cGy versus 1437 cGy). In all patients treated on the left side, the heart volume encompassed by the 70% isodose line (V70%; 35 Gy) was reduced by an average of 43% (5.7% versus 10.6%), and the mean heart dose by an average of 20% (704 cGy versus 877 cGy). The PTV showed a significantly better conformity index with IMRT; the homogeneity index was not significantly different.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Tangential beam IMRT significantly reduced the dose-volume of the ipsilateral lung and heart in unselected postmastectomy breast cancer patients.</p

    SU‐GG‐T‐551: VMAT Compared to 3D‐RT and Step and Shoot IMRT for Anal Cancer Pelvis Treatment

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    Purpose: The shielding of organs at risk (OAR) like testis, small bowel and bladder increases the complexity of a treatment for anal cancer. The new rotation therapy volumetric intensity modulated arc therapy (VMAT) may have the potential to reduce the treatment time while producing a comparable dose distribution as the intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). Method and Materials: CT datasets of 8 patients with anal cancer from our department formed the basis of this study. The routinely applied refined 3D‐Treatment Plan (Masterplan, Theranostic) was compared to a 9 beam step and shoot IMRT (Corvus 6.3, Nomos) and a VMAT plan with 2 rotations generated with ERGO++ 1.6 by Elekta. All three treatment planning systems used the identical CT datasets and the same OAR's. To compare these three techniques, the dose volume histograms (DVH) of PTV and OAR's as well as the total treatment time (TTT) were used. The homogeneity index (HI) and the conformality index (CI) calculated as suggested by the RTOG guidelines were analysed. Results: VMAT provided the best PTV coverage as indicated by the following metrics (isodose as percentage of prescription dose (PD) encompassing 95% of the PTV / percentage of tissue outside the PTV encompassed by 95% of PD). For 3D‐RT the mean values were (94.7±0.6% / 5.4±1.5%), for IMRT (89.8±1% / 0.7±2.6%) and for VMAT (93.7±1% / 2.9±1.3%). The mean CI and HI over all 8 patients was (2.00±0.17, 1.06±0.01) for 3D‐RT, for IMRT (1.56±0.16, 1.15±0.02) and for VMAT (1.71±0.13, 1.09±0.03). The TTT for 3D‐RT (220 seconds) was much shorter than for IMRT (557 seconds). The estimated TTT of the VMAT technique is 180 seconds. Conclusion: The new VMAT technique provides excellent treatment planes with highest conformality and homogeneity. The short treatment delivery time together with low primary monitor units is the most important advantage. © 2008, American Association of Physicists in Medicine. All rights reserved

    Serial tomotherapy vs. MLC-IMRT (Multileaf Collimator Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy) for simultaneous boost treatment large intracerebral lesions

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    Introduction: Recent data suggest that a radiosurgery boost treatment for up to three brain metastases in addition to whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) is beneficial. Sequential treatment of multiple metastatic lesions is time-consuming and optimal normal tissue sparing is not trivial for larger metastases when separate plans are created and are only, superimposed afterwards. Sequential Tomotherapy (see image I) with noncoplanar arcs and Multi-field IMRT may streamline the process and enable easy simultaneous treatment. We compared plans for 2-3 intracerebral targets calculated with Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) based on treatment with MLC or sequential Tomotherapy using the Peacock-System (see image II). Treatment time was not to exceed 90 min on a linac with standart dose rate. MIMiC plans without treatment-time restrictions were created as a benchmark. Materials and methods: Calculations are based on a Siemens KD2 linac with a dose rate of 200 MU/min. Step-and-Shoot IMRT is performed with a standard MLC (2 x 29 leaves, 1 cm), serial Tomotherapy with the Multivane-Collimator MIMiC (NOMOS Inc. USA) (see image II). Treatment plans ore created with Corms 5.0. To create plans with good conformity we chose a noncoplanar beam- and arc geometry for each approach (IMRT 4-, MIMiC 5-couch angles). The benchmark MIMiC plans with maximally steep (lose gradients had 9 couch angles. For plan comparison reasons, 10Gy were prescribed to 90% of the PTV. Steepness of (lose gradients, homogeneity and conformity were assessed by the following parameters: Volume encompassed by certain isodoses outside the target as well as homogeneity and conformity as indicated by Homogeneity- and Conformity-Index. Results: Plans without treatment-time restrictions had slightest close to organ at risk (OAR), normal tissue and least Conformity-index. MIMiC- and MLC-IMRT based plans can be treated within the intended period of 90 mill, all plans met the required close (see Table 2). MLC based plans resulted ill higher (lose to organs at risk (OAR) (see table 1) and close to tissue outside the targets (see table 3), (is indicated by a higher CI (see image III). The HI was similar for all calculated plans (see image IV). Discussion: When treatment plans resulting in a similar treatment time were compared, serial Tomotherapy showed minor advantages over MLC based IMRT with regard to conformity, OAR sparing, and steepness of dose gradients. Both methods are inferior to serial Tomotherapy with ideal plan quality disregarding treatment efficiency. Treating multiple metastases ill less than 1 h would therefore be possible on a LINAC with high dose rate and bidirectional rotation with minor compromises oil gradient sleepless

    Improving dose homogeneity in large breasts by IMRT - Efficacy and dosimetric accuracy of different techniques

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    Purpose: Evaluation of a simplified intensity-modulated irradiation (IMRT), a three-field (MFT), and a conventional two-tangential-field technique regarding dose homogeneity, target coverage, feasibility and, for the first time, dosimetric reliability in patients with large breasts treated postoperatively for breast cancer on a low-energy linac. Material and Methods: CT datasets of ten patients with relatively large breast volumes treated for breast cancer were selected. For each patient, four treatment plans were created: low-energy conventional (C-LE), high-energy conventional (C-HE), three-field (MFT), and a two-field aperture-based IMRT technique. Apertures for the IMRT and MFT were created with the aid of a three-dimensional dose display. Dosimetric accuracy of each technique was evaluated in an anthropomorphic thorax/breast phantom. Results: The mean of planning target volumes receiving 105% of the prescribed total dose was reduced from 16.0% to 13.9% to 10.4% to 8.9% in the C-LE, C-HE, MFT, and IMRT plans, respectively. Phantom dose measurements agreed well with the calculated dose within the breast tissue. Conclusion: Aperture-based IMRT using two tangential incident beam directions, as well as a three-field technique with inverse optimization, provide a better alternative to the standard wedged tangential beams for patients with large breasts treated on low-energy linacs while maintaining the efficiency of the treatment-planning and delivery process
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