Purpose: Radiation-induced lymphopenia is a common immune toxicity that adversely impacts treatment outcomes. We report here our approach to translate a deep-learning (DL) model developed to predict severe lymphopenia risk among esophageal cancer into a strategy for incorporating the immune system as an organ-at-risk (iOAR) to mitigate the risk.
Materials And Methods: We conducted "virtual clinical trials" utilizing retrospective data for 10 intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and 10 passively-scattered proton therapy (PSPT) esophageal cancer patients. For each patient, additional treatment plans of the modality other than the original were created employing standard-of-care (SOC) dose constraints. Predicted values of absolute lymphocyte count (ALC) nadir for all plans were estimated using a previously-developed DL model. The model also yielded the relative magnitudes of contributions of iOARs dosimetric factors to ALC nadir, which were used to compute iOARs dose-volume constraints, which were incorporated into optimization criteria to produce "IMRT-enhanced" and "intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT)-enhanced" plans.
Results: Model-predicted ALC nadir for the original IMRT (IMRT-SOC) and PSPT plans agreed well with actual values. IMPT-SOC showed greater immune sparing vs IMRT and PSPT. The average mean body doses were 13.10 Gy vs 7.62 Gy for IMRT-SOC vs IMPT-SOC for patients treated with IMRT-SOC; and 8.08 Gy vs 6.68 Gy for PSPT vs IMPT-SOC for patients treated with PSPT. For IMRT patients, the average predicted ALC nadir of IMRT-SOC, IMRT-enhanced, IMPT-SOC, and IMPT-enhanced was 281, 327, 351, and 392 cells/µL, respectively. For PSPT patients, the average predicted ALC nadir of PSPT, IMPT-SOC, and IMPT-enhanced was 258, 316, and 350 cells/µL, respectively. Enhanced plans achieved higher predicted ALC nadir, with an average improvement of 40.8 cells/µL (20.6%).
Conclusion: The proposed DL model-guided strategy to incorporate the immune system as iOAR in IMRT and IMPT optimization has the potential for radiation-induced lymphopenia mitigation. A prospective clinical trial is planned.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11369390 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpt.2024.100624 | DOI Listing |
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