Abstract

BackgroundProton beam therapy is promising for the treatment of head and neck cancer (HNC), but it is sensitive to uncertainties in patient positioning and particle range. Studies have shown that the planning target volume (PTV) concept may not be sufficient to ensure robustness of the target coverage. A few planning studies have considered irradiation of unilateral HNC targets with protons, but they have only taken into account the dose on the nominal plan, without considering anatomy changes occurring during the treatment course.MethodsFour pencil beam scanning (PBS) proton therapy plans were calculated for 8 HNC patients with unilateral target volumes: single-field (SFO) and multi-field optimized (MFO) plans, either using the PTV concept or clinical target volume (CTV)-based robust optimization. The dose was recalculated on computed tomography (CT) scans acquired during the treatment course. Doses to target volumes and organs at risk (OARs) were compared for the nominal plans, cumulative doses considering anatomical changes, and additional setup and range errors in each fraction. If required, the treatment plan was adapted, and the dose was compared with the non-adapted plan.ResultsAll nominal plans fulfilled the clinical specifications for target coverage, but significantly higher doses on the ipsilateral parotid gland were found for both SFO approaches. MFO PTV-based plans had the lowest robustness against range and setup errors. During the treatment course, the influence of the anatomical variation on the dose has shown to be patient specific, mostly independent of the chosen planning approach. Nine plans in four patients required adaptation, which led to a significant improvement of the target coverage and a slight reduction in the OAR dose in comparison to the cumulative dose without adaptation.ConclusionsThe use of robust MFO optimization is recommended for ensuring plan robustness and reduced doses in the ipsilateral parotid gland. Anatomical changes occurring during the treatment course might degrade the target coverage and increase the dose in the OARs, independent of the chosen planning approach. For some patients, a plan adaptation may be required.

Highlights

  • Proton beam therapy is promising for the treatment of head and neck cancer (HNC), but it is sensitive to uncertainties in patient positioning and particle range

  • Target coverage was similar for the four plans, fulfilling the specification

  • This dose increase was statistically significant for the SFO PTV-based plan (SFOPTV) plans (ANOVA: p = 0.005; MFO planning target volume (PTV)-based plan (MFOPTV) vs. SFOPTV: p = 0.026, MFO robust-optimized plan (MFORob) vs. SFOPTV: p = 0.006)

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Summary

Introduction

Proton beam therapy is promising for the treatment of head and neck cancer (HNC), but it is sensitive to uncertainties in patient positioning and particle range. Due to the physical characteristics of dose deposition, protons are more sensitive to uncertainties than photons These uncertainties can arise from changes in the patient anatomy throughout the treatment course, by e.g. tumor shrinkage, different cavity filling or weight loss, from daily variations in patient setup, from uncertainties in the proton range due to the conversion of computed tomography (CT) numbers to stopping power ratios [6, 7] and due to uncertainties in the beam delivery system. In SFO, the spot positions and weights of each proton field are optimized individually, so the resultant dose distribution by each field is uniform over the target volume. Unlike SFO, the dose from individual MFO fields can be relatively inhomogeneous [8, 9]

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