Abstract

BackgroundTo report our experience in planning and delivering total marrow irradiation (TMI) and total marrow and lymphatic irradiation (TMLI) in patients with hematologic malignancies.MethodsTwenty-seven patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation were treated with TMI/TMLI using Helical Tomotherapy (HT). All skeletal bones exclusion of the mandible comprised the treatment target volume and, for TMLI, lymph node chains, liver, spleen and/or brain were also included according to the clinical indication. Planned dose of 8Gy in 2 fractions was delivered over 1 day for TMI while 10Gy in 2 fractions BID was used for TMLI. Organs at risk (OAR) contoured included the brain, brainstem, lens, eyes, optic nerves, parotids, oral cavity, lungs, heart, liver, kidneys, stomach, small bowel, bladder and rectum. In particular, a simple method to avoid hot or cold doses in the overlapping region was implemented and the plan sum was adopted to evaluate dose inhomogeneity. Furthermore, setup errors from 54 treatments were summarized to gauge the effectiveness of immobilization.ResultsDuring the TMI/TMLI treatment, no acute adverse effects occurred during the radiation treatment. Two patients suffered nausea or vomiting right after radiation course. For the 9 patients treated with TMI, the median dose reduction of major organs varied 30–65% of the prescribed dose, substantially lower than the traditional total body irradiation (TBI). Meanwhile, average biological equivalent doses to OARs with 8Gy/2F TMI approach were not different from the conventional 12Gy/6F TMI approach. In the dose junction region, the 93% of PTV was covered by the prescribed dose without obvious hotspots. For the 27 patients, the overall setup corrections were lower than 3 mm except those in the SI direction for abdomen-pelvis region, demonstrating excellent immobilization.ConclusionThe present study confirmed the technical feasibility of HT-based TMI/TMLI delivering 8-10Gy in 2 fractions over 1 day. For patients undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation the proposed 8Gy/2F TMI (or 10Gy/2F TMLI) strategy may be a novel approach to improve delivery efficiency, increase effective radiation dose to target while maintaining low risk of severe organ toxicities.

Highlights

  • To report our experience in planning and delivering total marrow irradiation (TMI) and total marrow and lymphatic irradiation (TMLI) in patients with hematologic malignancies

  • The aim of the present study was to investigate the technical feasibility of Helical Tomotherapy (HT)-based TMI-TMLI, with the total prescription dose of 8 to 10Gy delivered by 2 fractions within one day with a minimal interfraction interval of 6 h

  • Patient selection and simulation Twenty-seven patients treated with TMI/TMLI using HT at our institution between October 2016 and September 2017 were selected for retrospective analysis

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Summary

Introduction

To report our experience in planning and delivering total marrow irradiation (TMI) and total marrow and lymphatic irradiation (TMLI) in patients with hematologic malignancies. Total body irradiation (TBI) has been an important part of conditioning regimens for patients undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation [1]. Compared to the conditioning regimens based on chemotherapy alone, TBI has Randomized trials showed that increased TBI doses significantly reduced the probability of post-transplant relapse rates for patients [4]. The dose escalation of TBI is limited by the normal tissue toxicity and treatment-related mortality rates [5, 6]. Given the fact that the incidence of radiation-induced complications is dose related [4,5,6], a more targeted irradiation technique for TBI delivery is needed to reduce normal tissue toxicity and allow for dose escalation, and further decrease mortality and relapsed rates

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