Elith Craig, Dempsey Shane E, Findlay Naomi, Warren-Forward Helen M
British Columbia Cancer Agency, Fraser Valley Centre, BC, Canada.
School of Health Sciences, University of Newcastle, Australia.
J Med Imaging Radiat Sci. 2011 Mar;42(1):37-43. doi: 10.1016/j.jmir.2010.11.005.
The goal of radiation therapy is to administer a therapeutic dose of radiation to a target while limiting the side effects caused by delivering the dose to surrounding tissues and vital organs. The ongoing pursuit to achieve an optimal dose distribution has prompted the radiation therapy profession to develop new techniques that incorporate advances in technology. In radiation therapy today, modern techniques that include three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy (3D-CRT) and intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) are routinely used in the treatment of cancers. Compared with 3D-CRT, IMRT is capable of producing dose distributions that conform to the planning treatment volume and deliver a reduced dose to surrounding tissues and vital organs. This has come with the cost of increased treatment time and a larger volume of normal tissue receiving low radiation doses. Most recently, there has been considerable interest in the rotating gantry IMRT techniques, tomotherapy and volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT). Tomotherapy is a dedicated treatment system that is best described as a combination of a computed tomography scanner and a linear accelerator. In tomotherapy, treatment is delivered using a rotating fan beam. A therapeutic dose is delivered when a patient is translated smoothly through the bore of the machine as its gantry continuously rotates. Tomotherapy is capable of producing high-quality plans that increasingly spare dose to surrounding organs at risk. In VMAT, treatment is delivered on a linear accelerator using a cone beam that rotates around the patient. The cone beam is modulated by dynamic multileaf collimation, variable dose rate and variable gantry speed to generate IMRT-quality dose distributions in a single optimized arc around the patient. VMAT treatments can significantly reduce the time and monitor units required to deliver a patient's treatment. Conventional IMRT, tomotherapy and VMAT typically produce dose distributions of similar quality. Which technique is most suited to treat a patient will depend on considerations such as the availability of the specific treatment type and its impact on the utilization of departmental planning and treatment resources.
放射治疗的目标是在向靶区给予治疗性辐射剂量的同时,限制因向周围组织和重要器官输送剂量而产生的副作用。对实现最佳剂量分布的不断追求促使放射治疗行业开发结合技术进步的新技术。在当今的放射治疗中,包括三维适形放射治疗(3D-CRT)和调强放射治疗(IMRT)在内的现代技术常用于癌症治疗。与3D-CRT相比,IMRT能够产生符合计划治疗体积的剂量分布,并减少向周围组织和重要器官输送的剂量。这带来了治疗时间增加以及更大体积的正常组织接受低辐射剂量的代价。最近,旋转机架IMRT技术、断层放射治疗和容积调强弧形治疗(VMAT)引起了相当大的关注。断层放射治疗是一种专用治疗系统,最好描述为计算机断层扫描仪和直线加速器的组合。在断层放射治疗中,使用旋转扇形束进行治疗。当患者在机架持续旋转时平稳地通过机器孔道时,给予治疗性剂量。断层放射治疗能够产生高质量的计划,越来越多地减少对周围危险器官的剂量。在VMAT中,使用围绕患者旋转的锥形束在直线加速器上进行治疗。锥形束通过动态多叶准直、可变剂量率和可变机架速度进行调制,以在围绕患者的单个优化弧形中生成IMRT质量的剂量分布。VMAT治疗可以显著减少为患者进行治疗所需的时间和监测单位。传统的IMRT、断层放射治疗和VMAT通常产生质量相似的剂量分布。哪种技术最适合治疗患者将取决于特定治疗类型的可用性及其对部门计划和治疗资源利用的影响等因素。