Abstract

BackgroundDaily image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) can contribute to cover extended body volumes with low radiation dose. The effect of additional imaging dose on secondary cancer development is modelled for a collective of children with Morbus Hodgkin.MethodsEleven radiotherapy treatment plans from pediatric patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma were retrospectively analyzed, including imaging dose from scenarios using different energies (kV/MV) and planar/cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) techniques. In addition to assessing the effect of imaging dose on organs at risk, the excess average risk (EAR) for developing a secondary carcinoma of the lung or breast was modelled.ResultsAlthough the variability between the patients is relatively large due to the different target volumes, the additional EAR due to imaging can be consistently determined. For daily 6MV CBCT, the EAR for developing a secondary cancer at age 50 is over 3 cases per 104 PY (patient-years) for the female breast and 0.7–0.8 per 104 PY for the lungs. This can be decreased by using only planar images (< 1 per 104 PY for the breast and 0.1 for the lungs). Similar values are achieved by daily 360° kV CBCT (0.44–0.57 per 104 PY for the breast and 0.08 per 104 PY for the lungs), which is again reduced for daily 200° kV CBCT (0.02 per 104 PY for the lungs and 0.07–0.08 per 104 PY for the breast). These values increase if an older attained age is considered (e.g., for 70 years, by a factor of four for the lungs).ConclusionsDaily imaging can be performed with an additional secondary cancer risk of less than 1 per 104 PY if kV CBCT is applied. If MV modalities must be chosen, a similar EAR can be achieved with planar images. A further reduction in risk is possible if the imaging geometry allows for sparing of the breast by a partial rotation underneath the patient.

Highlights

  • Image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) can contribute to cover extended body volumes with low radiation dose

  • The aim of this study is to analyse and compare several common linac-based imaging scenarios (6MV and 121 kV energies for planar and cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) imaging with daily or non-daily frequency) with regard to their influence on Organ at risk (OAR) dose and secondary cancer risk in children with Morbus Hodgkin irradiated at the Saarland University Medical Centre

  • The dose distributions of the different imaging scenarios are quite different from each other, both in absolute dose and in dose distribution

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Summary

Introduction

Image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) can contribute to cover extended body volumes with low radiation dose. The aim of this study is to analyse and compare several common linac-based imaging scenarios (6MV and 121 kV energies for planar and CBCT imaging with daily or non-daily frequency) with regard to their influence on OAR dose and secondary cancer risk in children with Morbus Hodgkin irradiated at the Saarland University Medical Centre. This collective was chosen because of good long-term survival of children with Hodgkin’s lymphoma, so that there is a high probability that they will live long enough so that a secondary cancer might develop. Secondary cancer induction by irradiation of Morbus Hodgkin patients has been extensively studied for the same reason, so that mathematical model parameters for secondary cancer risk are better known for this type of irradiation

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