Abstract

We present a methodology which can be utilized to select proton or photon radiotherapy in prostate cancer patients. Four state-of-the-art competing treatment modalities were compared (by way of an in silico trial) for a cohort of 25 prostate cancer patients, with and without correction strategies for prostate displacements. Metrics measured from clinical image guidance systems were used. Three correction strategies were investigated; no-correction, extended-no-action-limit, and online-correction. Clinical efficacy was estimated via radiobiological models incorporating robustness (how probable a given treatment plan was delivered) and stability (the consistency between the probable best and worst delivered treatments at the 95% confidence limit). The results obtained at the cohort level enabled the determination of a threshold for likely clinical benefit at the individual level. Depending on the imaging system and correction strategy; 24%, 32% and 44% of patients were identified as suitable candidates for proton therapy. For the constraints of this study: Intensity-modulated proton therapy with online-correction was on average the most effective modality. Irrespective of the imaging system, each treatment modality is similar in terms of robustness, with and without the correction strategies. Conversely, there is substantial variation in stability between the treatment modalities, which is greatly reduced by correction strategies. This study provides a ‘proof-of-concept’ methodology to enable the prospective identification of individual patients that will most likely (above a certain threshold) benefit from proton therapy.

Highlights

  • Prostate cancer is the most common cancer diagnosis and the third-leading cause of cancer death [1]

  • Each modality was evaluated based upon prostate displacement probability distributions Each modality was evaluated based upon prostate displacement probability distributions provided by 3DUS and cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT), with and without correction strategies

  • Irrespective of the imaging system, each treatment modality is similar in terms of robustness, with and without the correction strategies

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Summary

Introduction

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer diagnosis and the third-leading cause of cancer death [1]. When prostate cancer is suspected, biopsy is the standard of care for diagnosis. Several treatment options are available for prostate cancer patients. In the context of radiotherapy treatment, there are several options: brachytherapy and external beam radiotherapy (photons, protons and ions). With respect to a definitive assessment of the clinical efficacy of proton (P-EBRT) vs photon (X-EBRT) external beam radiotherapy cannot be made as there is limited evidence [3]. Clinicians are faced with a dilemma when deciding which treatment option to utilize. This should be viewed against the backdrop of the move towards precision medicine [4,5] (the right treatment for the right patient) within the healthcare community

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