Abstract
Purpose:The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the feasibility of using 4-dimensional computed tomography (4DCT)-ventilation-weighted dose analysis to predict radiation-induced pneumonia probability (RIPP).Methods and Materials:The study population for this retrospective analysis included 16 patients with stage III lung cancer. Each patient’s 4DCT images, including end-inhale and end-exhale sequences, were used for the deformable image registration, and the Hounsfield units (HU) density-change was used to calculate the ventilation. A previously established equation was used to convert the original dose (OD) D 0, i in the lungs in the original plan (OP) to the weighted-dose (WD) D w, i in the weighted plan (WP). The patients were divided into 2 groups, one with radiation-induced pneumonia (RIP), and one without. The Spearman correlation analysis was used to analyze the correlation of RIP with ΔV20 (ΔV x = V w, x in the WP – V 0, x in the OP), ΔMLD (ΔMLD = mean lung dose (MLD) in the WP – MLD in the OP), and ΔV5.Results:The results showed that 5 of the 16 patients were suffering from acute RIP, 4 of which had higher ΔV20 and ΔMLD values than the rest of the patients. The results of the Spearman correlation analysis for those 4 patients were as follows: RIP vs. ΔV20, r = 0.5123; RIP vs. ΔMLD, r = 0.5119; RIP vs. ΔV5, r = 0.1904.Conclusions:The 4DCT-ventilation-based weighted-dose analysis showed some correlation between RIPP and both ΔV20 and ΔMLD, when comparing the weighted-dose and the conventional dose-volume histogram (DVH) analyses.
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More From: Dose-response : a publication of International Hormesis Society
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