Medical Physics Department, Hong Kong Sanatorium and Hospital, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Med Phys. 2023 Jun;50(6):3623-3636. doi: 10.1002/mp.16397. Epub 2023 Apr 6.
MR-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) is one of the most significant advances in radiotherapy in recent years. The hybrid systems were designed to visualize patient anatomical and physiological changes during the course of radiotherapy, enabling more precise treatment. However, before MR-linacs reach their full potential in delivering safe and accurate treatments to patients, the radiotherapy team must understand how a magnetic field alters the dosimetric properties of the radiation beam and its potential impact on treatment quality and clinical outcomes. This review aims to provide an in-depth description of the magnetic field induced dose effects for the two widely available systems, the 0.35 T and the 1.5 T MR-linacs. In MR-linac treatments, the primary photon beam passes through MR components that never exist in conventional linacs, which alter both in-field and out-of-field doses. More importantly, the interplay between the always-on magnetic field and the secondary electrons is not negligible. This interplay affects dose deposition in the patient, resulting in reduced in-field skin dose due to purged-out contaminant electrons, shortened build-up distance and a shifted crossline profile owing to asymmetric dose kernel. Especially two effects, namely, electron return effect (ERE) and electron stream effect (ESE), are not seen in conventional radiotherapy. This review also summarizes the clinical observations on the site-specific treatments influenced mostly by the magnetic field. In MR-linac treatment, the head and neck region is one of the most challenging sites as ERE occurs at low and high density tissue interfaces and around air cavities, generating hot and cold spots. In breast cancer treatment, consideration should be given to the increased in-field skin dose induced by ERE and the increased out-of-field dose caused by ESE for regions such as the ears, chin, and neck. In lung cancer treatments, tissue inhomogeneity combined with ERE will exacerbate target dose heterogeneity and increase or decrease interface dose. Lastly, treatment in the abdomen and pelvic region will be affected by the presence of gas pockets near the target. The review provides practical recommendations to mitigate these effects.
磁共振引导放疗(MRgRT)是近年来放疗领域的重大进展之一。这些混合系统旨在在放疗过程中可视化患者的解剖结构和生理变化,从而实现更精确的治疗。然而,在磁共振直线加速器充分发挥其为患者提供安全、准确治疗的潜力之前,放疗团队必须了解磁场如何改变辐射束的剂量学特性及其对治疗质量和临床结果的潜在影响。本文旨在深入描述两种广泛应用的系统(0.35 T 和 1.5 T 磁共振直线加速器)中的磁场诱导剂量效应。在磁共振直线加速器治疗中,初级光子束穿过在传统直线加速器中从未存在过的磁共振组件,这会改变场内和场外剂量。更重要的是,始终存在的磁场和二次电子之间的相互作用不可忽略。这种相互作用会影响患者体内的剂量沉积,导致由于清除污染物电子而使场内皮肤剂量降低,由于剂量核不对称而使建成距离缩短和十字线轮廓移位。特别是电子返回效应(ERE)和电子流效应(ESE)这两种效应在常规放疗中是看不到的。本文还总结了磁场对特定部位治疗的临床观察。在磁共振直线加速器治疗中,头颈部是最具挑战性的部位之一,因为 ERE 发生在低和高密度组织界面以及空气腔周围,会产生热点和冷点。在乳腺癌治疗中,应考虑 ERE 引起的场内皮肤剂量增加和 ESE 引起的耳、下巴和颈部等区域场外剂量增加。在肺癌治疗中,组织不均匀性加上 ERE 会使靶区剂量异质性恶化,并增加或减少界面剂量。最后,腹部和盆腔区域的治疗会受到靶区附近气腔的影响。本文提供了减轻这些影响的实用建议。