Abstract

When we irradiate lung cancer, the radiation dose that can be delivered safely is limited by the risk of radiation pneumonitis (RP) in the surrounding normal lung. This risk is dose-dependent and is commonly predicted using metrics such as the V20, which are usually formulated assuming homogeneous pulmonary function. Because in vivo pulmonary function is not homogeneous, if highly functioning lung can be identified beforehand and preferentially avoided during treatment, it might be possible to reduce the risk of RP, suggesting the utility of function-based prediction metrics. We retrospectively identified 26 patients who received ventilation and perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT-CT) immediately prior to curative-intent radiation therapy. Patients were separated into non-RP and RP groups. As-treated dose-volume histogram (DVH), perfusion-SPECT-based and ventilation-SPECT-based dose-function histogram (DFH) parameters were defined for each group and were tested for differences. The relative utilities of ventilation-based and perfusion-based DFH metrics were assessed using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. The standard mean lung dose (MLD) was significantly higher in the RP group; the standard V20 and V30 were higher in the RP group but not significantly. Perfusion-weighted and ventilation-weighted values of the MLD, V20 and V30 were all significantly higher in the RP group. ROC analysis suggested that SPECT-based DFH parameters outperformed standard DVH parameters as predictors of RP. SPECT-based DFH parameters appear to be useful as predictors of RP.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call