Abstract

Radiation therapy (RT) plays a critical role in the treatment of glioblastoma. Studies of brain imaging during RT for glioblastoma have demonstrated changes in the brain during RT. However, frequent or daily utilization of standalone magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans during RT have limited feasibility. The recent release of the tri-cobalt-60 MRI-guided RT (MR-IGRT) device (ViewRay MRIdian, Cleveland, OH) allows for daily brain MRI for the RT setup. Daily MRI of three postoperative patients undergoing RT and temozolomide for glioblastoma over a six-week course allowed for the identification of changes to the cavity, edema, and visible tumor on a daily basis. The volumes and dimensions of the resection cavities, edema, and T2-hyperintense tumor were measured. A general trend of daily decreases in cavity measurements was observed in all patients. For the one patient with edema, a trend of daily increases followed by a trend of daily decreases were observed. These results suggest that daily MRI could be used for onboard resimulation and adaptive RT for future fluctuations in the sizes of brain tumors, cavities, or cystic components. This could improve tumor targeting and reduce RT of healthy brain tissue.

Highlights

  • The current standard of care in newly diagnosed glioblastoma includes the use of fractionated radiation therapy (RT) to 60 Gy in two Gy fractions delivered over six weeks with concurrent and adjuvant temozolomide following maximal safe resection of the tumor

  • We evaluated the daily MR-image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) images of three glioblastoma patients treated on an integrated Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-RT system to determine whether changes in resection cavity volume and cerebral edema can be observed on daily MRI

  • The cavity volume changes observed in this case series have been confirmed in a study, which retrospectively replanned treatment volumes on a computed tomography (CT) scan taken five weeks after RT in 19 patients with glioblastoma treated with gross total resection (GTR)

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Summary

Introduction

The current standard of care in newly diagnosed glioblastoma includes the use of fractionated radiation therapy (RT) to 60 Gy in two Gy fractions delivered over six weeks with concurrent and adjuvant temozolomide following maximal safe resection of the tumor. European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer guidelines consider the surgical cavity volume and residual tumor volume, while Radiation Therapy Oncology Group guidelines add the volume of the surrounding edema [1]. Target volumes are typically generated from preoperative and/or postoperative imaging fused with a computed tomography (CT) scan taken during the simulation of the patient [2]. The volumes of the resection cavity, residual tumor, and cerebral edema often change following surgery and over the course of RT, potentially leading to treatment volumes that do not accurately target the area of disease [2,3]. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans during RT could be used to assess these changes and allow for RT modifications; feasibility and

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