Abstract

External beam radiation therapy with concurrent chemotherapy (CRT) is widely used for the treatment of unresectable pancreatic cancer. Noncoplanar (NCP) 3D conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT) and coplanar (CP) IMRT have been reported to lower the radiation dose to organs at risk (OARs). The purpose of this article is to examine the utility of noncoplanar beam angles in IMRT for the management of pancreatic cancer. Sixteen patients who were treated with CRT for unresectable adenocarcinoma of the pancreatic head or neck were re-planned using CP and NCP beams in 3DCRT and IMRT with the Varian Eclipse treatment planning system. Compared to CP IMRT, NCP IMRT had similar target coverage with slightly increased maximum point dose, 5,799 versus 5,775cGy (p=0.008). NCP IMRT resulted in lower mean kidney dose, 787 versus 1,210cGy (p<0.0001) and higher mean liver dose, 1,208 versus 1,061cGy (p<0.0001). Also, NCP IMRT resulted in similar mean stomach dose, 1,257 versus 1,248cGy (p=0.86) but slightly higher mean small bowel dose, 981 versus 866cGy (p<0.0001). The NCP IMRT was able to significantly decrease bilateral kidney dose, but did not improve other dose-volume criteria. The use of NCP beam angles is preferred only in patients with risk factors for treatment-related kidney dysfunction.

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