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大腿软组织肉瘤的调强放射治疗

Intensity-modulated radiotherapy for soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh.

作者信息

Hong Linda, Alektiar Kaled M, Hunt Margie, Venkatraman Ennapadam, Leibel Steven A

机构信息

Department of Medical Physics, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10021, USA.

出版信息

Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2004 Jul 1;59(3):752-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2003.11.037.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Fracture of the femur is one of the late complications of adjuvant radiotherapy for patients with soft tissue sarcomas of the thigh, who receive external beam irradiation after limb-sparing surgery. When the target volume approximates the femur, it is often inevitable that a large segment of the femur will receive full prescription dose with conventional radiation techniques. We report the dosimetric feasibility of intensity- modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) techniques to achieve adequate target coverage and bone sparing.

METHODS AND MATERIALS

Treatment planning was performed using both three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3D-CRT) and IMRT techniques for 10 patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the thigh with tumor approaching the femur. None of the patients had bony involvement. For all patients, the gross total volume (GTV) and the femur were contoured. The clinical target volume (CTV) was defined as the GTV with a 1.5-cm margin axially, except at the bone interface where the bone interface was used as CTV if the 1.5-cm axial margin extended beyond the bone interface. In the superior-inferior direction, the CTV margin placed around the GTV varied from 5 to 10 cm. The planning target volume (PTV) was defined as the CTV with 5-mm margin all around. The 3D conformal technique consisted primarily of two to three beams with wedges or partial transmission blocks as compensators. For the IMRT technique, five coplanar beams were used, chosen so as to spare much of the surrounding soft tissue and to clear the other extremity or groin areas. IMRT plans were designed to adequately treat the planning target volume and spare the femur as much as possible.

RESULTS

Dose distributions and dose-volume histograms were analyzed. PTV coverage was comparable with both IMRT and 3D-CRT plans. Dose distributions were more conformal with IMRT, however, especially for patients with large variations of contours. The volume of the femur receiving at least full prescription (63 Gy) V100 decreased on average by approximately 57%, from 44.7 +/- 16.8% with 3D-CRT to 18.6 +/- 9.2% with IMRT (p < 0.01). For 3 patients with a GTV surrounding <50% of the circumference of the femur, the reduction in the V100 to the femur ranged from 61% to 79%. The hot spots in the femur, as measured by D05 (the dose encompassing 5% of volume), reduced on average from 67.2 +/- 1.8 Gy with 3D-CRT to 65.0 +/- 1.2 Gy with IMRT (p < 0.01). The mean dose to the femur was on average 38.5 +/- 11.5 Gy with IMRT, compared with 40.9 +/- 12.7 Gy with 3D-CRT. The volume of the surrounding soft tissues, defined as the ipsilateral limb excluding the PTV and the femur, receiving at least prescription dose (63 Gy) was reduced on average by about 78%, from 997 +/- 660 cc with 3D-CRT to 201 +/- 144 cc with IMRT (p < 0.01). The D05 to the surrounding soft tissues was on average 58.7 +/- 4.7 Gy with IMRT, compared to 67.8 +/- 1.3 Gy with 3D-CRT (p < 0.01), a reduction of approximately 13%. The mean dose to the surrounding soft tissues was comparable in both plans. The volume of the skin (from surface to 5 mm depth) receiving prescription dose (63 Gy) declined by roughly 45%, from 115 +/- 40 cc with 3D-CRT to 61 +/- 20 cc with IMRT (p < 0.01), with IMRT providing full skin dose coverage to scars. The hot spots in the skin decreased from 68.0 +/- 1.7 Gy with 3D-CRT to 65.2 +/- 1.2 Gy with IMRT (p < 0.01). The mean dose to the skin lessened from 51.5 +/- 4.7 Gy with 3D- CRT to 44.0 +/- 4.2 Gy with IMRT (p < 0.01), a reduction of 14%.

CONCLUSIONS

Intensity-modulated radiation therapy techniques can reduce the dose to the femur without compromising target coverage by achieving concave dose distributions around the interface of the PTV and the femur. At the same time, IMRT can reduce the hot spots significantly in the surrounding soft tissues and skin. Whether such dosimetric improvements can translate into reduction of complications and/or improving local control needs to be investigated.

摘要

目的

股骨骨折是大腿软组织肉瘤患者保肢手术后接受外照射放疗的晚期并发症之一。当靶区接近股骨时,采用传统放疗技术往往不可避免地会使大部分股骨接受全处方剂量照射。我们报告调强放射治疗(IMRT)技术在实现充分的靶区覆盖和保护骨骼方面的剂量学可行性。

方法和材料

对10例大腿软组织肉瘤且肿瘤接近股骨的患者,使用三维适形放疗(3D-CRT)和IMRT技术进行治疗计划。所有患者均无骨受累。对所有患者,勾勒出大体肿瘤总体积(GTV)和股骨轮廓。临床靶区(CTV)定义为轴向边缘为1.5 cm的GTV,但在骨界面处,如果1.5 cm的轴向边缘超出骨界面,则以骨界面作为CTV。在上下方向上,围绕GTV的CTV边缘在5至10 cm之间变化。计划靶区(PTV)定义为四周有5 mm边缘的CTV。3D适形技术主要由两到三束带有楔形或部分透射挡块作为补偿器的射束组成。对于IMRT技术,使用五束共面射束,其选择旨在尽可能多地保护周围软组织,并避开另一侧肢体或腹股沟区域。IMRT计划旨在充分治疗计划靶区并尽可能保护股骨。

结果

分析剂量分布和剂量体积直方图。PTV覆盖在IMRT和3D-CRT计划中相当。然而,剂量分布在IMRT中更适形,特别是对于轮廓变化较大的患者。接受至少全处方剂量(63 Gy)的股骨体积V100平均减少约57%,从3D-CRT时的44.7±16.8%降至IMRT时的18.6±9.2%(p<0.01)。对于3例GTV围绕股骨周长<50%的患者,股骨V100的减少范围为61%至79%。通过D05(包含5%体积的剂量)测量的股骨热点平均从3D-CRT时的67.2±1.8 Gy降至IMRT时的65.0±1.2 Gy(p<0.01)。IMRT时股骨的平均剂量平均为38.5±11.5 Gy,而3D-CRT时为40.9±12.7 Gy。定义为同侧肢体(不包括PTV和股骨)接受至少处方剂量(63 Gy)的周围软组织体积平均减少约78%,从3D-CRT时的997±660 cc降至IMRT时的201±144 cc(p<0.01)。IMRT时周围软组织的D05平均为58.7±4.

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