Abstract

PURPOSEImage-guided adaptive brachytherapy (IGABT) recently has shown excellent clinical outcomes with superior local control and less toxicity. For IGABT, T2W (T2-weighted) MRI is the gold standard. However, studies have shown that target delineation with the same results in uncertainties, poor interobserver variabilities, and low conformity indices for high-risk clinical target volume contours. In this study, we investigate the role of diffusion-weighted imaging–derived apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps to aid in IGABT. We also evaluated ADC from the baseline to brachytherapy. Methods and MaterialsThirty selected patients were enrolled for this study, and two MRIs were taken at diagnosis and before brachytherapy. Patients were divided into two groups, Group 1 being patients with parametrial involvement before external beam radiotherapy and no parametrial involvement before brachytherapy. Group 2 included patients with parametrial involvement before external beam radiotherapy and persistent parametrial involvement before brachytherapy. ADC was measured at the center, edge, and 1 cm from the edge. ResultsThe measured ADC increased from diagnosis to brachytherapy, and this increase was more for the patients in Group 1 than in Group 2. The mean TDadc (diagnosis ADC, center), TEadc (tumor edge ADC diagnosis), and T1cmDadc (1 cm from edge at diagnosis) were 0.884, 1.45, and 1.9 × 10−3 mm2/s, respectively. The TBadc (ADC at brachytherapy, center), TEBadc (tumor edge ADC at brachytherapy), and TE1cmBadc (1 cm from edge brachytherapy) were 1.2, 1.8, and 2.3 × 10−3 mm2/s, respectively, p-value <0.00001. No abnormal ADC was present outside the high-risk clinical target volume contours. ConclusionMRI-based IGABT using T2W imaging essentially covers all functionally abnormal zones at brachytherapy. Diffusion-weighted imaging, along with ADC maps, should only be used as a supplement for target delineation.

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