Abstract

PurposeTo concurrently quantify the radiation-induced changes and temporal evolutions of parotid volume and parotid apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients treated by intensity-modulated radiotherapy by using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).Materials and MethodsA total of 11 NPC patients (9 men and 2 women; 48.7 ± 11.7 years, 22 parotid glands) were enrolled. Radiation dose, parotid sparing volume, severity of xerostomia, and radiation-to-MR interval (RMI) was recorded. MRI studies were acquired four times, including one before and three after radiotherapy. The parotid volume and the parotid ADC were measured. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS and MedCalc. Bonferroni correction was applied for multiple comparisons. A P value less than 0.05 was considered as statistically significant.ResultsThe parotid volume was 26.2 ± 8.0 cm3 before radiotherapy. The parotid ADC was 0.8 ± 0.15 × 10−3 mm2/sec before radiotherapy. The parotid glands received a radiation dose of 28.7 ± 4.1 Gy and a PSV of 44.1 ± 12.6%. The parotid volume was significantly smaller at MR stage 1 and stage 2 as compared to pre-RT stage (P < .005). The volume reduction ratio was 31.2 ± 13.0%, 26.1 ± 13.5%, and 17.1 ± 16.6% at stage 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The parotid ADC was significantly higher at all post-RT stages as compared to pre-RT stage reciprocally (P < .005 at stage 1 and 2, P < .05 at stage 3). The ADC increase ratio was 35.7 ± 17.4%, 27.0 ± 12.8%, and 20.2 ± 16.6% at stage 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The parotid ADC was negatively correlated to the parotid volume (R = -0.509; P < .001). The parotid ADC was positively associated with the radiation dose significantly (R2 = 0.212; P = .0001) and was negatively associated with RMI significantly (R2 = 0.203; P = .00096) significantly. Multiple regression analysis further showed that the post-RT parotid ADC was related to the radiation dose and RMI significantly (R2 = 0.3580; P < .0001). At MR stage 3, the parotid volume was negatively associated with the dry mouth grade significantly (R2 = 0.473; P < .0001), while the parotid ADC was positively associated with the dry mouth grade significantly (R2 = 0.288; P = .015).ConclusionOur pilot study successfully demonstrates the concurrent changes and temporal evolution of parotid volume and parotid ADC quantitatively in NPC patients treated by IMRT. Our results suggest that the reduction of parotid volume and increase of parotid ADC are dominated by the effect of acinar loss rather than edema at early to intermediate phases and the following recovery of parotid volume and ADC toward the baseline values might reflect the acinar regeneration of parotid glands.

Highlights

  • As a main treatment of choice for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), high-dose radiotherapy can cause structural damage and functional impairment of brain, brain stem, cranial nerve, basal skull, vessels, spinal cord, thyroid gland, and salivary glands [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • Temporal Evolution of Parotid Volume and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) in NPC Treated by intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT)

  • Our pilot study successfully demonstrates the concurrent changes and temporal evolution of parotid volume and parotid ADC quantitatively in NPC patients treated by IMRT

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Summary

Introduction

As a main treatment of choice for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), high-dose radiotherapy can cause structural damage and functional impairment of brain, brain stem, cranial nerve, basal skull, vessels, spinal cord, thyroid gland, and salivary glands [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. Salivary glands are more susceptible to radiation than other organs due to their higher radiosensitivity, leading to xerostomia and reducing quality of life in patients after radiotherapy [9]. Parotid-sparing radiotherapy techniques reduce the radiation dose delivered to parotid glands and prevent these glands from permanent damages [15]. Animal studies have demonstrated regeneration of acinar cells following parotid atrophy induced by ductal obstruction [16] as well as by radiation exposure [17]. At the era of parotid-sparing radiotherapy, there is increasing demand for clinicians to be familiar with the radiation induced morphological and physiological changes of parotid glands and the temporal evolutions of these changes to see whether these changes are reversible or not. It is important to evaluate radiotherapy-induced salivary gland injury in human directly since the human salivary glands may differ from the rat salivary glands in anatomic and physiological characteristics

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