Abstract

An accurate assessment of the extent of the tumor is critical for successful local treatment of lung cancer by surgery and/or radiotherapy. Guidelines to establish the extent of treatment margins may be derived from correlation studies between pre-treatment imaging and histopathology. Deformations occur, however, between in-vivo CT imaging and ex-vivo pathology due to the softness of lung tissue and pathology processing. The first aim of this study was to quantify these deformations in tissue around non-small cell lung cancer. The second aim was to explore factors associated with the magnitude of the deformations. The study was performed in 25 patients who underwent lobectomy after preoperative CT. Non-rigid registration was employed to evaluate tissue deformations around the gross tumor volume (GTV), taking into account potential differences in elasticity between tumor and healthy lung tissue. Tissue was found to be compacted by approximately 60% depending on circularity of the tumor and orientation of the specimen on the pathology table during processing. The deformations give rise to potential underestimation of the treatment margins in pathology studies that do not take this aspect into account.

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