Abstract
Purpose: Loco-regional hyperthermia combined with mitomycin C is used for treatment of nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). Air pockets may be present in the bladder during treatment. The aim of this study is to quantify the effect of air pockets on the thermal dose of the bladder.Methods: We analysed 16 patients treated for NMIBC. Loco-regional hyperthermia was performed with the in-house developed 70 MHz AMC-4 hyperthermia device. We simulated treatments with the clinically applied device settings using Plan2Heat (developed in-house) including the air pockets delineated on CT scans made following treatment, and with the same volume filled with urine. Temperature distributions simulated with and without air pockets were compared.Results: The average air and fluid volumes in the bladder were 6.0 ml (range 0.8 − 19.3 ml) and 183 ml (range 47–322 ml), respectively. The effect of these air pockets varied strongly between patients. Averaged over all patients, the median bladder wall temperature (T50) remained unchanged when an air pocket was present. Temperature changes exceeded ±0.2 °C in, on average, 23% of the bladder wall volume (range 1.3–59%), in 6.0% (range 0.6–20%) changes exceeded ±0.5 °C and in 3.2% (range 0.0–7.4%) changes exceeded ±1.0 °C. There was no correlation between the differences in temperature and the air pocket or bladder volume. There was a positive correlation between air pocket surface and temperature heterogeneity.Conclusion: Presence of air causes more heterogeneous bladder wall temperatures and lower T90, particularly for larger air pockets. The size of air pockets must therefore be minimized during bladder hyperthermia treatments.
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