Correlation of tumour and treatment characteristics to dose received by cochlea in volumetric arc therapy.
Nidhin DasSourabha Kumar PatroDarwin KaushalPuneet PareekAbhinav DixitSri Harsha KombathulaKapil SoniVidhu SharmaAmit GoyalPublished in: European archives of oto-rhino-laryngology : official journal of the European Federation of Oto-Rhino-Laryngological Societies (EUFOS) : affiliated with the German Society for Oto-Rhino-Laryngology - Head and Neck Surgery (2021)
Mean (standard deviation, SD) cochlear volume was 0.14 (0.06) cm3 with maximum and mean planned doses of 10.3 (SD = 11.6) Gy and 8.5 (SD = 9.8) Gy, respectively. We found a statistically significant correlation between mean dose received by bilateral cochlea (P-0.000, rright-0.84, rleft-0.78, rmidline-0.92). Tumours of the paranasal sinuses, and the parotids and more advanced T stages were associated with a higher mean dose to cochlea but was not significant statistically. The dose received by the 95% target nodal volume (D95%) showed a significant correlation with the cochlear mean dose (P-0.000, rright-0.85, rleft-0.77, rmidline-0.93) CONCLUSION: With VMAT we have achieved a better sparing of cochlea. The mean dose to the cochlea of one side significantly differed from the other side in patients with lateralized cancers. D95% of nodal volume also showed a significant correlation with the cochlear mean dose.