Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate the rectal dose reduction with hydrogel spacer in 3D conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT), volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), helical tomotherapy (HT), CyberKnife (CK) and proton therapy. Twenty patients who had hydrogel spacer for prostate radiotherapy were retrospectively enrolled. Computed tomography (CT) images with or without hydrogel spacer were used to evaluate rectal dose reduction. In total, 200 plans (20 patients × 2 CT images × 5 techniques) were created using the following criteria: 3DCRT, VMAT and HT [76 Gy/38 fractions (Fr), planning target volume (PTV) D50%], CK (36.25 Gy/5 Fr, PTV D95%) and proton therapy (63 GyE/21 Fr, PTV D50%). Rectal dose reduction was evaluated using low-/middle-dose (D20%, D50% and D80%) and high-dose (D2%) ranges. Rectal dose reduction of each dose index was compared for each technique. Significant rectal dose reduction (P < 0.001) between the treatment plans on pre- and post-CT images were achieved for all modalities for D50%, D20% and D2%. In particular, the dose reduction of high-dose (D2%) ranges were −40.61 ± 11.19, −32.44 ± 5.51, −25.90 ± 9.89, −13.63 ± 8.27 and −8.06 ± 4.19%, for proton therapy, CK, HT, VMAT and 3DCRT, respectively. The area under the rectum dose–volume histogram curves were 34.15 ± 3.67 and 34.36 ± 5.24% (P = 0.7841) for 3DCRT with hydrogel spacer and VMAT without hydrogel spacer, respectively. Our results indicated that 3DCRT with hydrogel spacer would reduce the medical cost by replacing the conventional VMAT without spacer for prostate cancer treatment, from the point of view of the rectal dose. For the high-dose gradient region, proton therapy and SBRT with CK showed larger rectal dose reduction than other techniques.
Highlights
A high conformal external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) is conventionally used to treat patients with low or intermediate risk for prostate cancer and shows favorable treatment outcomes compared with surgery [1]
For most of the planning target volume (PTV) dose indices, no significant difference was noted between SO(−) and SO(+), while there was a significant difference between some dose indices (P < 0.01; volumetric modulated arc radiotherapy (VMAT) D98% and D95%, and CK D50% and D2%)
We found that the dose differences themselves were small and had no effect on the PTV dose coverage in a clinical situation
Summary
A high conformal external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) is conventionally used to treat patients with low or intermediate risk for prostate cancer and shows favorable treatment outcomes compared with surgery [1]. Escalation with these techniques leads to a better treatment outcome [2, 3], toxicities on the rectum are still an important problem especially with 3DCRT [4]. As one of the solutions to reduce rectal dose, a hydrogel spacer (SpaceOARTM System, Augmenix Inc., Waltham, MA) has been introduced and used for EBRT in prostate cancer patients. A phase 3 trial for image-guided IMRT shows the benefit of a hydrogel spacer in reducing rectal dose, toxicity and quality of life decline [5]
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