AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzed the impact of tumor movement in the abdomen on the effectiveness of intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) for patients with liver or pancreas tumors.
  • It involved recording and analyzing fluoroscopy sessions to quantify tumor motion in 7 patients, which showed an average peak-to-peak motion of 7.4 mm in one direction and 3.8 mm in another.
  • Results indicated that while most patients experienced minimal impact on dose delivery, significant motion in some cases could compromise treatment effectiveness, suggesting that techniques to manage motion may be necessary for optimal outcomes.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The treatment of moving targets with intensity-modulated radiotherapy may introduce errors in dose delivery. The motion of tumors in the abdomen was studied using quantitative fluoroscopic analysis, and the effect on dose delivery to the target was studied.

Methods And Materials: Fluoroscopy sessions for 7 patients with pancreas or liver tumors and fiducial clips were recorded, converted to digital format, and analyzed to quantify the characteristics of tumor motion. Intensity-modulated radiotherapy plans were generated for 3 patients (a total of five plans), and the dose-volume histograms for the target volume were compared between plans with and without tumor motion.

Results: The average magnitude of the peak-to-peak motion for the 7 patients in the craniocaudal and AP directions was 7.4 mm and 3.8 mm, respectively. The clip motion varied widely, because the maximal clip excursions were about 47% greater than the average clip excursions for each patient. The inclusion of tumor motion did not lead to a significant degradation in the target dose-volume histogram for four of five treatment plans studied.

Conclusion: The amount of tumor motion for most patients in this study was not large but could, in some instances, significantly degrade the planned target dose-volume histogram. For some patients, therefore, motion mitigation or intervention during treatment may be necessary.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijrobp.2003.09.077DOI Listing

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