In Silico Comparison of Three Different Beam Arrangements for Intensity-Modulated Proton Therapy for Postoperative Whole Pelvic Irradiation of Prostate Cancer.
Emile GogineniHao ChenIan K CruickshankAndrew KoempelAarush GogineniHeng LiCurtiland DevillePublished in: Cancers (2024)
Background and purpose: Proton therapy has been shown to provide dosimetric benefits in comparison with IMRT when treating prostate cancer with whole pelvis radiation; however, the optimal proton beam arrangement has yet to be established. The aim of this study was to evaluate three different intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT) beam arrangements when treating the prostate bed and pelvis in the postoperative setting. Materials and Methods: Twenty-three post-prostatectomy patients were planned using three different beam arrangements: two-field (IMPT 2 B) (opposed laterals), three-field (IMPT 3 B) (opposed laterals inferiorly matched to a posterior-anterior beam superiorly), and four-field (IMPT 4 B) (opposed laterals inferiorly matched to two posterior oblique beams superiorly) arrangements. The prescription was 50 Gy radiobiological equivalent (GyE) to the pelvis and 70 GyE to the prostate bed. Comparisons were made using paired two-sided Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Results: CTV coverages were met for all IMPT plans, with 99% of CTVs receiving ≥ 100% of prescription doses. All organ at risk (OAR) objectives were met with IMPT 3 B and IMPT 4 B plans, while several rectum objectives were exceeded by IMPT 2 B plans. IMPT 4 B provided the lowest doses to OARs for the majority of analyzed outcomes, with significantly lower doses than IMPT 2 B +/- IMPT 3 B for bladder V30-V50 and mean dose; bowel V15-V45 and mean dose; sigmoid maximum dose; rectum V40-V72.1, maximum dose, and mean dose; femoral head V37-40 and maximum dose; bone V40 and mean dose; penile bulb mean dose; and skin maximum dose. Conclusion: This study is the first to compare proton beam arrangements when treating the prostate bed and pelvis. four-field plans provided better sparing of the bladder, bowel, and rectum than 2- and three-field plans. The data presented herein may help inform the future delivery of whole pelvis IMPT for prostate cancer.
Keyphrases
- prostate cancer
- radical prostatectomy
- health insurance
- type diabetes
- patients undergoing
- ejection fraction
- radiation therapy
- benign prostatic hyperplasia
- chronic kidney disease
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- molecular docking
- deep learning
- molecular dynamics simulations
- robot assisted
- bone mineral density
- soft tissue
- minimally invasive
- artificial intelligence
- wound healing
- body composition
- clinical evaluation
- big data
- electronic health record