Abstract

Objective. Online adaptive radiotherapy has demonstrated improved dose conformality in response to inter-fraction geometric variations in the abdomen. The dosimetric impact of intra-fractional variations in anatomic configuration resulting from breathing, gastric contraction and slow configuration motion, however, have been largely ignored, leading to differences between delivered and planned. To investigate the impact of intra-fractional abdominal motions on delivered dose, anatomical deformations due to these three motion modes were extracted from dynamic MRI data using a previously developed hierarchical motion modeling methodology. Approach. Motion magnitudes were extracted from deformation fields between a reference state and all other motion states of the patient. Delivered dose estimates to various gastrointestinal organs (stomach, duodenum, small bowel and colon) were calculated on each motion state of the patient and accumulated to estimate the delivered dose to each organ for the entire treatment fraction. Main results. Across a sample of 10 patients, maximal motions of 33.6, 33.4, 47.6 and 49.2 mm were observed over 20 min for the stomach, duodenum, small bowel and colon respectively. Dose accumulation results showed that motions could lead to average increases of 2.0, 2.1, 1.1, 0.7 Gy to the maximum dose to 0.5cc (D0.5cc) and 3.0, 2.5, 1.3, 0.9 Gy to the maximum dose to 0.1cc (D0.1cc) for these organs at risk. From the 40 dose accumulations performed (10 for each organ at risk), 27 showed increases of modeled delivered dose compared to planned doses, 4 of which exceeded planned dose constraints. Significance. The use of intra-fraction motion measurements to accumulate delivered doses is feasible, and supports retrospective estimation of dose delivery to improve estimates of delivered doses, and further guide strategies for both plan adaptation as well as advances in intra-fraction motion management.

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