Department of Therapeutic Radiology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510, USA.
Med Phys. 2009 Nov;36(11):5310-22. doi: 10.1118/1.3246613.
During the past decade, permanent radioactive source implantation of the prostate has become the standard of care for selected prostate cancer patients, and the techniques for implantation have evolved in many different forms. Although most implants use 125I or 103Pd sources, clinical use of 131Cs sources has also recently been introduced. These sources produce different dose distributions and irradiate the tumors at different dose rates. Ultrasound was used originally to guide the planning and implantation of sources in the tumor. More recently, CT and/or MR are used routinely in many clinics for dose evaluation and planning. Several investigators reported that the tumor volumes and target volumes delineated from ultrasound, CT, and MR can vary substantially because of the inherent differences in these imaging modalities. It has also been reported that these volumes depend critically on the time of imaging after the implant. Many clinics, in particular those using intraoperative implantation, perform imaging only on the day of the implant. Because the effects of edema caused by surgical trauma can vary from one patient to another and resolve at different rates, the timing of imaging for dosimetry evaluation can have a profound effect on the dose reported (to have been delivered), i.e., for the same implant (same dose delivered), CT at different timing can yield different doses reported. Also, many different loading patterns and margins around the tumor volumes have been used, and these may lead to variations in the dose delivered. In this report, the current literature on these issues is reviewed, and the impact of these issues on the radiobiological response is estimated. The radiobiological models for the biological equivalent dose (BED) are reviewed. Starting with the BED model for acute single doses, the models for fractionated doses, continuous low-dose-rate irradiation, and both homogeneous and inhomogeneous dose distributions, as well as tumor cure probability models, are reviewed. Based on these developments in literature, the AAPM recommends guidelines for dose prescription from a physics perspective for routine patient treatment, clinical trials, and for treatment planning software developers. The authors continue to follow the current recommendations on using D90 and V100 as the primary quantitles, with more specific guidelines on the use of the imaging modalities and the timing of the imaging. The AAPM recommends that the postimplant evaluation should be performed at the optimum time for specific radionuclides. In addition, they encourage the use of a radiobiological model with a specific set of parameters to facilitate relative comparisons of treatment plans reported by different institutions using different loading patterns or radionuclides.
在过去的十年中,前列腺永久性放射性源植入已成为某些前列腺癌患者的标准治疗方法,植入技术也已发展出多种不同形式。虽然大多数植入物使用 125I 或 103Pd 源,但最近也引入了 131Cs 源的临床应用。这些源产生不同的剂量分布,并以不同的剂量率照射肿瘤。最初使用超声引导肿瘤的计划和植入物。最近,许多诊所通常使用 CT 和/或 MR 进行剂量评估和计划。一些研究人员报告说,由于这些成像方式的固有差异,从超声、CT 和 MR 描绘的肿瘤体积和靶体积会有很大差异。也有报道称,这些体积严重依赖于植入后的成像时间。许多诊所,特别是那些使用术中植入的诊所,仅在植入当天进行成像。由于手术创伤引起的水肿的影响可能因患者而异,并且以不同的速度消退,因此剂量评估的成像时间可能对报告的剂量(已交付的剂量)产生深远影响,即对于相同的植入物(相同的剂量交付),不同时间的 CT 可以产生不同的报告剂量。此外,已经使用了许多不同的肿瘤体积加载模式和边缘,这些可能导致剂量交付的变化。在本报告中,回顾了关于这些问题的当前文献,并估计了这些问题对放射生物学反应的影响。审查了生物等效剂量(BED)的放射生物学模型。从急性单次剂量的 BED 模型开始,审查了分次剂量、连续低剂量率照射、均匀和不均匀剂量分布以及肿瘤治愈率模型的模型。基于文献中的这些发展,AAPM 从物理角度为常规患者治疗、临床试验和治疗计划软件开发商推荐剂量处方指南。作者继续遵循关于使用 D90 和 V100 作为主要数量的当前建议,并就使用成像方式和成像时间提供更具体的指导。AAPM 建议根据特定放射性核素,在最佳时间进行植入后评估。此外,他们鼓励使用具有特定参数集的放射生物学模型,以促进不同机构使用不同加载模式或放射性核素报告的治疗计划的相对比较。