Abstract

BackgroundWhen combined with adequate tumoricidal doses, accurate target volume delineation remains to be the one of the most important predictive factors for radiotherapy (RT) success in locally advanced or medically inoperable malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients. Recently, 18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (PET) has demonstrated significant improvements in diagnosis and accurate staging of MPM. However, role of additional PET data has not been studied in RT planning (RTP) of patients with inoperable MPM or in those who refuse surgery. Therefore, we planned to compare CT with co-registered PET-CT as the basis for delineating target volumes in these patients group.MethodsRetrospectively, the CT and co-registered PET-CT data of 13 patients with histologically proven MPM were utilized to delineate target volumes separately. For each patient, target volumes (gross tumor volume [GTV], clinical target volume [CTV], and planning target volume [PTV]) were defined using the CT and PET-CT fusion data sets. The PTV was measured in two ways: PTV1 was CTV plus a 1-cm margin, and PTV2 was GTV plus a 1-cm margin. We analyzed differences in target volumes.ResultsIn 12 of 13 patients, compared to CT-based delineation, PET-CT-based delineation resulted in a statistically significant decrease in the mean GTV, CTV, PTV1, and PTV2. In these 12 patients, mean GTV decreased by 47.1% ± 28.4%, mean CTV decreased by 38.7% ± 24.7%, mean PTV1 decreased by 31.1% ± 23.1%, and mean PTV2 decreased by 40.0% ± 24.0%. In 4 of 13 patients, hilar lymph nodes were identified by PET-CT that was not identified by CT alone, changing the nodal status of tumor staging in those patients.ConclusionThis study demonstrated the usefulness of PET-CT-based target volume delineation in patients with MPM. Co-registration of PET and CT information reduces the likelihood of geographic misses, and additionally, significant reductions observed in target volumes may potentially allow escalation of RT dose beyond conventional limits potential clinical benefits in tumor control rates, which needs to be tested in future studies.

Highlights

  • When combined with adequate tumoricidal doses, accurate target volume delineation remains to be the one of the most important predictive factors for radiotherapy (RT) success in locally advanced or medically inoperable malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients

  • In all but one patient, compared with CTbased delineation, positron emission tomography (PET)-Computed tomography (CT)-based delineation resulted in significantly decreased mean gross tumor volume (GTV), clinical target volume (CTV), PTV1, and PTV2 (Table 2)

  • In these 12 patients, mean GTV decreased by 47.1% ± 28.4%, mean CTV decreased by 38.7% ± 24.7%, mean PTV1 decreased by 31.1% ± 23.1%, and mean PTV2 decreased by 40.0% ± 24.0%

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Summary

Introduction

When combined with adequate tumoricidal doses, accurate target volume delineation remains to be the one of the most important predictive factors for radiotherapy (RT) success in locally advanced or medically inoperable malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients. RT planning (RTP) for MPM is difficult due to the large, irregularly shaped area at risk, the high doses required for local control, and the proximity of many radiosensitive structures such as the liver, ipsilateral kidney, heart, spinal cord, esophagus, contralateral lung, and the ipsilateral lung itself in inoperable cases. In the latter setting, which is a therapeutic challenge, the recent, more sophisticated RT techniques, including intensitymodulated radiotherapy (IMRT), image guided radiotherapy (IGRT), and especially helical tomotherapy (HT), are promising. Similar with all other tumor sites, accurate target delineation is crucial when RT is considered as the sole treatment or as a component of oncologic treatment, and when combined with adequate tumoricidal doses, accurate target volume delineation remains to be the one of the most important predictive factors for RT success in MPM

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