The use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans alone for radiotherapy treatment planning (MR-only planning) has been highlighted as one method of improving patient outcomes. Recent technological advances have meant that introducing MR-only planning to the clinic is now becoming a reality, with several specialist radiotherapy clinics treating patients with this technique. As such, substantial efforts are being made to introduce this technique into wide-spread clinical implementation.
A systematic review of publications investigating the clinical implementation of pelvic MR-only radiotherapy treatment planning was undertaken following the PRISMA guidelines. The Medline, Embase, Scopus, Science Direct, CINAHL and Web of Science databases were searched (timespan: all years to 2nd January 2019). Twenty six articles met the inclusion criteria. The studies were grouped into the following categories: 1. MR acquisition and synthetic-CT generation verification, 2. MR distortion quantification and phantom development, 3. Clinical validation of patient treatment positioning in an MR-only workflow and 4. MR-only commissioning processes.
Key conclusions from this review are: i) MR-only planning has been clinically implemented for prostate cancer treatments; ii) A substantial amount of work remains to translate MR-only planning into wide spread clinical implementation for all pelvic sites; iii) MR scanner distortions are no longer a barrier to MR-only planning; however they must be managed appropriately; iv) MR-only based patient positioning verification shows promise, however limited evidence is reported in the literature and further investigation is required; and v) a number of MR-only commissioning processes have been reported which can aid centres as they undertake local commissioning, however this needs to be formalised in guidance from national bodies