Abstract

AimsStandard of care radiotherapy for locally advanced cervical cancer includes large margins to ensure the uterocervix remains within the treatment fields over the course of treatment. Daily online cone-beam adaptive radiotherapy corrects for interfractional changes by adjusting the plan to match the target position during each treatment session, thus allowing for significantly reduced clinical target volume (CTV) to planning target volume (PTV) margins. We hypothesise that reduced margins from daily online adaptive radiotherapy will reduce organ at risk dose without compromising target coverage. Materials and methodsTen patients with cervical cancer (stage IIB–IIIC2) were treated with definitive chemoradiation using daily online cone-beam adaptive radiotherapy in 25–27 fractions. Initial and all adapted treatment plans were generated with CTV to PTV margins versus standard of care image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) plans as follows: cervix/uterus/gross tumour volume (0.5 versus 1.5 cm), parametria/vagina (0.5 versus 1.0 cm) and nodal chains and gross nodes (0.5 versus 0.5 cm). IGRT plans were created and copied to synthetic computed tomography scans and contours generated from each daily adapted fraction. The dosimetry of each clinically treated online adapted fraction was compared with emulated IGRT plans. Statistical significance was defined as P < 0.05. ResultsDaily online cone-beam adaptive radiotherapy significantly improves bowel bag dosimetry compared with IGRT, with a reduction in V40 by an average of 91.3 cm3 [V40 (–6.2%) and V45 (–6.1%)]. The daily adapted plans showed significant improvements in bladder and rectum [V40 (–25.2% and –36.0%) and V30 (–9.7% and –17.1%), respectively]. Additionally, bone marrow had a significantly reduced dose [V10 (–2.7%) and V20 (–3.3%)]. Daily online cone-beam adaptive radiotherapy improved uterocervix CTV coverage and reduced hotspots compared with IGRT [D95% (+1.6%) and Dmax (–0.9%)]. ConclusionsReduced CTV to PTV margins achievable with daily online adaptive radiotherapy improves organ at risk dosimetry and target coverage when compared with standard of care IGRT for locally advanced cervical cancer. The clinical impact of improved dosimetry is currently undergoing investigation.

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