Dosimetric comparison of proton therapy and CyberKnife in stereotactic body radiation therapy for liver cancers.
Samuel ShyllonScott PenfoldRay DalfsenElsebe KirknessBen HugPejman RowshanfarzadPeter DevlinColin TangHien LePeter GorayskiGarry GroganRachel KearvellMartin A EbertPublished in: Physical and engineering sciences in medicine (2024)
Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) has been increasingly used for the ablation of liver tumours. CyberKnife and proton beam therapy (PBT) are two advanced treatment technologies suitable to deliver SBRT with high dose conformity and steep dose gradients. However, there is very limited data comparing the dosimetric characteristics of CyberKnife to PBT for liver SBRT. PBT and CyberKnife plans were retrospectively generated using 4DCT datasets of ten patients who were previously treated for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, N = 5) and liver metastasis (N = 5). Dose volume histogram data was assessed and compared against selected criteria; given a dose prescription of 54 Gy in 3 fractions for liver metastases and 45 Gy in 3 fractions for HCC, with previously published consensus-based normal tissue dose constraints. Comparison of evaluation parameters showed a statistically significant difference for target volume coverage and liver, lungs and spinal cord (p < 0.05) dose, while chest wall and skin did not indicate a significant difference between the two modalities. A number of optimal normal tissue constraints was violated by both the CyberKnife and proton plans for the same patients due to proximity of tumour to chest wall. PBT resulted in greater organ sparing, the extent of which was mainly dependent on tumour location. Tumours located on the liver periphery experienced the largest increase in organ sparing. Organ sparing for CyberKnife was comparable with PBT for small target volumes.
Keyphrases
- radiation therapy
- high dose
- spinal cord
- liver metastases
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- robot assisted
- newly diagnosed
- stem cells
- locally advanced
- low dose
- health insurance
- healthcare
- prognostic factors
- electronic health record
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- spinal cord injury
- stem cell transplantation
- wound healing
- clinical practice
- minimally invasive
- artificial intelligence
- data analysis
- patient reported
- radiofrequency ablation