eISSN: 2081-2841
ISSN: 1689-832X
Journal of Contemporary Brachytherapy
Current Issue Archive Supplements Articles in Press Journal Information Aims and Scope Editorial Office Editorial Board Register as Author Register as Reviewer Instructions for Authors Abstracting and indexing Subscription Advertising Information Links
Editorial System
Submit your Manuscript
SCImago Journal & Country Rank

4/2013
vol. 5
 
Share:
Share:

Original paper
Head and neck 192Ir HDR-brachytherapy dosimetry using a grid-based Boltzmann solver

Frank-André Siebert
,
Sabine Wolf
,
George Kóvacs

J Contemp Brachytherapy 2013; 5, 4: 232-235
Online publish date: 2013/12/18
Article file
- head and neck.pdf  [0.17 MB]
Get citation
 
 

Purpose

High-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy (BT) is a successful treatment option for many head and neck (H&N) cancer diseases [1-4]. In general, plastic tubes are implanted into the target volume followed by computed tomography (CT) in order to prepare a treatment plan. An important question in modern H&N BT is the accuracy of dose calculation. Nowadays, dose calculation is performed usually using the TG-43 formalism [5]. Nevertheless, it is known that results of the TG-43 formalism can be suboptimal in several scenarios, in particular when tissue inhomogeneities, like bony structures and air cavities, are present [6,7], or finite patient dimensions are taken into account. Thus, modern treatment planning systems (TPSs) might be used to account for these inhomogeneities and provide the user with a more accurate calculated dose. Rivard et al. [8] gave an overview for which treatment sites and dose rates (high or low) vary between TG-43 formalism [6] and modern algorithms, like Monte-Carlo (MC), and model-based dose calculation algorithms (MBDCAs) are to be expected. Since H&N treatments are not included in discussion, a retrospective analysis was performed and is presented here. Data of H&N BT patients treated by a HDR 192Ir BT source were evaluated, and dosimetry of a commercially available

MBDCA grid-based Boltzmann solver (GBBS) [9-13] was compared with TG-43 based dosimetry.

Material and methods

Treatment plans for 49 consecutive H&N BT patients were analyzed in this project. The patient cohort (15 female, 34 male) were treated with a HDR 192Ir BT afterloader of type VariSource (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA, USA) between 2001 and 2009, applying a single fraction dose of 2.5 Gy. Overall doses varied between 25 and 40 Gy depending on the patient. The 2.5 Gy single fraction, with 2 fractions per day, dose was chosen to be radiobiologically equivalent with a pulse-dose-rate (PDR) regimen of 5 fractions of 1 Gy single fraction dose each 2 hours [14]. The mean age of the patients was 57.1 years, standard deviation (SD) 12 years, maximum age 86 years, and minimum age 36 years. The diagnoses comprised floor of mouth carcinoma, larynx carcinoma, and parotid carcinoma with varying stages and grading. Plastic catheters (median: 5.2, SD: 2, min: 2, max: 12) were implanted. All patients underwent a 3D computed tomography (CT) for treatment planning purposes using a Picker PQ 2000 CT (Philips Healthcare, Eindhoven, The Netherlands) with 2 mm slice thickness. The patient’s treatment plans were calculated with the BrachyVision v8.8 (Varian Medical System, Palo Alto, CA, USA) software, using the commercial GBBS Acuros module (v1.3.1) of BrachyVision without reoptimization of dwell weights as well as the TG-43 formalism. Dose output was reported to dose-to-water in Gy. For commissioning of the GBBS, level 1 recommendations of the TG-186 report were followed [6]. For calculation in water of a single dwell position, constant dwell time of 10 s, the GBBS algorithm was compared in defined dose points against TG-43 dose distribution of the used VariSource 2000 source in 1 and 5 cm distance. The vendor anisotropy function for the VS2000 HDR 192Ir-source was used; relevant data were published by Mikell et al. [12]. Tissue assignment was performed using CT data. According to the Varian Reference Guide, nine classes of densities are defined and mapped to materials. Low densities (< 0.001 g/cm3) as well as high densities

(> 8 g/cm3) remained leveled at minimum/maximum values (BrachyVision-Acuros Algorithm Reference Guide, Varian Medical Systems, March 2009).

Dosimetric indices D90, V100, and V150 of the CTVs, and the dose homogeneity index (DHI) [15] were evaluated and compared between two dose calculation methods. Because target delineation was not performed in all cases, for all patients the 100% prescription dose outline of the TG-43 dose calculation was converted into a 3D contour, and used as an artificial clinical target volume (CTV). Statistical significance (p-value < 0.05) was analyzed by the two-sided Mann-Whitney rank sum test. For the correlation analysis, the Pearson correlation coefficient was determined. We assumed a trend meaningful, when the Pearson correlation coefficient is > 0.5.

Results

Results of the commissioning process are presented here in summarized form only. Differences between GBBS and TG-43 based doses in orthogonal and semi-orthogonal (45 degree) directions from the source direct axis are in mean –2.1% in 1 cm distance, and 2% in 5 cm distance. In direct axis directions of the source dose differences up to –89.1% were found. The negative signs indicate that doses from the TG-43 were lower than computed by GBBS algorithm. This dose difference was found at a test point 1 cm in distal direction of the source (direction to the source cable). Absolute doses of 0.522 Gy (TG-43) resp. 0.987 Gy (GBBS) were calculated by the TPS in a reference point for a dwell time of 10 s.

Median CTV volume was 30.0 ml (SD: 26.3 ml, minimum: 4.1 ml, maximum: 132.1 ml). The collected data is summarized in Table 1. Median D90 and V100 for TG-43 calculation are about 3% higher, and statistically significant (p < 0.01) than for GBBS. The V150 dose parameter showed a 1.6% increase from GBBS to TG-43, also statistically significant (p < 0.01). Nevertheless, these are median parameters and clinical assessment must be performed individually for each patient. The dose parameters D90, V100, and V150 showed larger variations for the GBBS than for the TG-43 calculations. This is expressed in a larger range of the parameters (Min./Max. values in Table 1). The DHI was almost constant for both calculation methods used in this study. No significant differences were observed.

In Fig. 1, a typical isodose distribution for both calculation methods is demonstrated and illustrates the influence of the medium to the dose calculation results. It is obvious that the GBBS resulted in a lower dose, in particular in the right anterior region of the head of this patient. This is mainly due to the consideration of air cavities and air outside the head, producing less backscatter in these regions.

Dose values of the GBBS algorithm were subtracted from corresponding TG-43 values and are depicted against the volume of the individual CTVs, as it is show in Fig. 2. There seems to be a trend for differences in D90 and V100 to increase when treating larger target volumes. The Pearson correlation coefficients are 0.62 for D90, and 0.64 for V100. In the V150 this trend is not so clear, with a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.47.

Discussion

Dose differences that were measured in our commissioning process were partly discussed in [6]. In particular, high dose differences near the source delivery cable are described by Mikell et al. [12]. They observed dose differences of > 20% in between TG-43 and Acuros. For analysis they exported the doses and analysed it separately, whereas in our study we only used the TPS itself. This as well as slightly different positioning of the source center, with respect to the voxel data, might have caused variations in the results of the dose differences.

This study of HDR 192Ir BT for H&N patients showed small variations between doses from GBBS and TG-43 algorithm. However, the differences were about 3% for D90, and V100 of the CTV between GBBS and TG-43 calculations. Further analysis showed that dose differences are patient dependent. There was a trend for larger target volumes to provide higher dose differences than for smaller volumes.

Poon and Verhaegen [16] compared results from TG-43 calculations with an analytical approach for one H&N BT patient case with two catheters implanted, and found that the isodose lines > 50% of reference dose (no reference dose was provided) for TG-43 and their analytical dose calculation algorithm were almost the same. Hyer et al. [17] reported for cervical cancer patients treated with HDR 192Ir BT for the D90 of the CTV a decrease of –1.9% when accounting for heterogeneities. Agnostopoulos et al. [18] calculated dose differences due to tissue inhomogeneities for oesopharingeal HDR 192Ir BT patients, and showed that presence tissue inhomogeneities do not significantly change the planning target volume (PTV) dose distribution. Investigations for breast HDR 192Ir BT patients between TG-43 and MC were presented by Pantelis et al. [19], and found isodose contours > 60% of the prescribed dose were not affected by the presence of the lung or finite breast dimensions.

The trend for higher dose differences in larger volumes should be assessed with care, because uncertainties in DVH dose calculation are higher for smaller volumes than for larger ones, as was shown by Kirisits et al. [20]. In the used TPS, the end caps of structures are rounded automatically. The impact on this to volume computation is larger for small structures than for large ones, and might be a reason for the decrease of the V150 differences presented in Fig. 2. In particular, when the higher doses at the distal and proximal end of the source calculated with the GBBS is taken into account; the shown “drop” of the V150 is applicable. But as demonstrated in other publications, dose differences are higher when further away from the implant [16,19]. The reason for this is that with increasing distance from the source, the scattered dose proportion is growing. Close to the source, the primary dose has the most ruling influence. Thus, in larger target volumes this effect might be considered as presented in our work.

Conclusions

The presented H&N dosimetry study demonstrate complementary data to existing literature on dose distributions of modern treatment planning algorithms for various treatment sites in HDR BT. Dose differences between GBBS and TG-43 for HDR H&N BT patients to the target volume were found. Differences of about 3% for D90, and V100 of the CTV between GBBS and TG-43 dose computations were observed. In our clinical practice, prescription doses remain unchanged for high-dose-rate head and neck brachytherapy for the time being.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Varian Medical system for the technical support of this study.

Disclosure

Authors report no conflict of interest.

References

1. Mazeron JJ, Ardiet JM, Haie-Méder C et al. GEC-ESTRO recommendations for brachytherapy for head and neck squamous cell carcinomas. Radiother Oncol 2009; 91: 150-156.

 2. Nag S, Cano ER, Puthawala AA et al. The American Brachytherapy Society recommendations for high-dose-rate brachytherapy for head-and-neck carcinoma. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2001; 50: 1190-1198.

 3. Martínez-Mongue R, Alcalde J, Concejo C et al. Perioperative high-dose-rate brachytherapy (PHDRB) in previously irradiated head and neck cancer: Initial results of a Phase I/II reirradiation study. Brachytherapy 2006; 5: 32-40.

 4. Cano ER, Johnson JT, Carrau R et al. Brachytherapy in the treatment of Stage IV carcinoma a of the base of tongue. Brachytherapy 2004; 3: 41-48.

 5. Rivard MJ, Coursey BM, DeWerd LA et al. Update of AAPM Task Group No. 43 Report: A revised AAPM protocol for brachytherapy dose calculations. Med Phys 2004; 31: 633-674.

 6. Beaulieu L, Carlsson Tedgren Å, Carrier JF et al. Report of the Task Group 186 on model-based dose calculation methods in brachytherapy beyond the TG-43 formalism: Current status and recommendations for clinical implementation. Med Phys 2012; 39: 6208-6236.

 7. Daskalov GM, Baker RS, Rogers DW et al. Dosimetric modeling of the microselectron high-dose rate 192Ir source by the multigroup discrete ordinates method. Med Phys 2000; 27: 2307-2319.

 8. Rivard MJ, Venselaar J, Beaulieu L. The evolution of brachytherapy treatment planning. Med Phys 2009; 36: 2136-2153.

 9. Zourari K, Pantelis E, Moutsatsos A et al. Dosimetric accuracy of a deterministic radiation transport based 192Ir brachytherapy treatment planning system. Part I: Single sources and bounded homogeneous geometries. Med Phys 2010; 37: 649-661.

10. Petrokokkinos L, Zourari K, Pantelis E et al. Dosimetric accuracy of a deterministic radiation transport based 192Ir brachytherapy treatment planning system. Part II: Monte Carlo and experimental verification of a multiple source dwell position plan employing a shielded applicator. Med Phys 2011; 38: 1981-1992.

11. Zourari K, Pantelis E, Moutsatsos A et al. Dosimetric accuracy of a deterministic radiation transport based 192Ir brachytherapy treatment planning system. Part III. Comparison to Monte Carlo simulation in voxelized anatomical computational models. Med Phys 2013; 40: 011712.

12. Mikell JK, Moutada F. Dosimetric Impact of an 192Ir Brachytherapy Source Cable Length Modeled Using a Grid-based Boltzmann Transport Equation. Med Phys 2010; 37: 4733-4743.

13. Mikell JK, Klopp AH, Gonzales GM et al. Impact of heterogeneity-based dose calculation using a deterministic grid-based Boltzmann equation solver for intracavitary brachytherapy. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2012: 83: e417-e422.

14. Personal communication of Jack Fowler.

15. Wu A, Ulin K, Sternick A. A dose homogeneity index for evaluating 192Ir interstitial breast implants. Med Phys 1998; 15: 104-107.

16. Poon E, Verhaegen F. A CT-based analytical dose calculation method for HDR 192Ir brachytherapy. Med Phys 2009; 36: 3982-3994.

17. Hyer E, Sheybani A, Jacobson GM et al. The dosimetric impact of heterogeneity corrections in high-dose rate 192Ir brachytherapy for cervical cancer: Investigation of both conventional Point-A and volume optimized plans. Brachytherapy 2012; 11: 515-520.

18. Anagnostopoulos G, Baltas D, Pantelis E et al. The effect of patient inhomogeneities in oesophageal 192Ir HDR brachytherapy: a Monte Carlo and analytical dosimetry study. Phys Med Biol 2004; 49: 2675-2685.

19. Pantelis E, Papagiannis P, Karaiskos P et al. The effect of finite patient dimensions and tissue inhomogeneities on dosimetry planning of 192Ir HDR breast brachytherapy: a Monte Carlo dose verification study. Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys 2005; 61: 1596-1602.

20. Kirisits C, Siebert FA, Baltas D et al. Accuracy of volume and DVH parameters determined with different brachytherapy treatment planning systems. Radiother Oncol 2007; 84: 290-297.
Copyright: © 2013 Termedia Sp. z o. o. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
 
Quick links
© 2024 Termedia Sp. z o.o.
Developed by Bentus.