Department of Radiotherapy Physics, Northern Centre for Cancer Care, The Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys. 2019 Mar 15;103(4):1004-1010. doi: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2018.11.040. Epub 2018 Nov 26.
Reducing respiratory motion during the delivery of radiation therapy reduces the volume of healthy tissues irradiated and may decrease radiation-induced toxicity. The purpose of this study was to assess the potential for rapid shallow non-invasive mechanical ventilation to reduce internal anatomy motion for radiation therapy purposes.
Ten healthy volunteers (mean age, 38 years; range, 22-54 years; 6 female and 4 male) were scanned using magnetic resonance imaging during normal breathing and at 2 ventilator-induced frequencies: 20 and 25 breaths per minute for 3 minutes. Sagittal and coronal cinematic data sets, centered over the right diaphragm, were used to measure internal motions across the lung-diaphragm interface. Repeated scans assessed reproducibility. Physiologic parameters and participant experiences were recorded to quantify tolerability and comfort.
Physiologic observations and experience questionnaires demonstrated that rapid shallow non-invasive ventilation technique was tolerable and comfortable. Motion analysis of the lung-diaphragm interface demonstrated respiratory amplitudes and variations reduced in all subjects using rapid shallow non-invasive ventilation compared with spontaneous breathing: mean amplitude reductions of 56% and 62% for 20 and 25 breaths per minute, respectively. The largest mean amplitude reductions were found in the posterior of the right lung; 40.0 mm during normal breathing to 15.5 mm (P < .005) and 15.2 mm (P < .005) when ventilated with 20 and 25 breaths per minute, respectively. Motion variations also reduced with ventilation; standard deviations in the posterior lung reduced from 14.8 mm during normal respiration to 4.6 mm and 3.5 mm at 20 and 25 breaths per minute, respectively.
To our knowledge, this study is the first to measure internal anatomic motion using rapid shallow mechanical ventilation to regularize and minimize respiratory motion over a period long enough to image and to deliver radiation therapy. Rapid frequency and shallow, non-invasive ventilation both generate large reductions in internal thoracic and abdominal motions, the clinical application of which could be profound-enabling dose escalation (increasing treatment efficacy) or high-dose ablative radiation therapy.
减少放射治疗过程中的呼吸运动可降低受照射健康组织的体积,并可能降低放射性毒性。本研究的目的是评估快速浅无创机械通气降低放射治疗内部解剖运动的潜力。
10 名健康志愿者(平均年龄 38 岁;范围 22-54 岁;6 名女性和 4 名男性)在正常呼吸和 2 种呼吸机诱导频率(20 次/分钟和 25 次/分钟,持续 3 分钟)下使用磁共振成像进行扫描。以右膈肌为中心的矢状面和冠状面电影数据集用于测量肺-膈肌界面的内部运动。重复扫描评估可重复性。记录生理参数和参与者的体验,以量化耐受性和舒适度。
生理观察和经验问卷表明,快速浅无创通气技术是可耐受和舒适的。与自主呼吸相比,使用快速浅无创通气时,所有受试者的肺-膈肌界面运动幅度和变化均降低:每分钟 20 次和 25 次呼吸时的平均幅度分别降低 56%和 62%。最大的平均幅度降低发生在右肺后部;正常呼吸时为 40.0 毫米,分别为 20 次/分钟时的 15.5 毫米(P <.005)和 25 次/分钟时的 15.2 毫米(P <.005)。通气时运动变化也减少;正常呼吸时,后肺的标准差从 14.8 毫米降低到 20 次/分钟时的 4.6 毫米和 25 次/分钟时的 3.5 毫米。
据我们所知,这项研究是首次使用快速浅机械通气测量内部解剖运动,以在足够长的时间内对呼吸运动进行规律化和最小化,从而进行成像和放射治疗。快速频率和浅、无创通气都可大大减少胸部和腹部内部运动,其临床应用可能是深远的——能够实现剂量递增(增加治疗效果)或高剂量消融性放射治疗。