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Journal article

Biological optimization for mediastinal lymphoma radiotherapy – a preliminary study

Abstract:

Purpose: In current radiotherapy (RT) planning and delivery, population-based dose-volume constraints are used to limit the risk of toxicity from incidental irradiation of organs at risks (OARs). However, weighing tradeoffs between target coverage and doses to OARs (or prioritizing different OARs) in a quantitative way for each patient is challenging. We introduce a novel RT planning approach for patients with mediastinal Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) that aims to maximize overall outcome for each patient by optimizing on tumor control and mortality from late effects simultaneously.

Material and Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 34 HL patients treated with conformal RT (3DCRT). We used published data to model recurrence and radiation-induced mortality from coronary heart disease and secondary lung and breast cancers. Patient-specific doses to the heart, lung, breast, and target were incorporated in the models as well as age, sex, and cardiac risk factors (CRFs). A preliminary plan of candidate beams was created for each patient in a commercial treatment planning system. From these candidate beams, outcome-optimized (O-OPT) plans for each patient were created with an in-house optimization code that minimized the individual risk of recurrence and mortality from late effects. O-OPT plans were compared to VMAT plans and clinical 3DCRT plans.

Results: O-OPT plans generally had the lowest risk, followed by the clinical 3DCRT plans, then the VMAT plans with the highest risk with median (maximum) total risk values of 4.9 (11.1), 5.1 (17.7), and 7.6 (20.3)%, respectively (no CRFs). Compared to clinical 3DCRT plans, O-OPT planning reduced the total risk by at least 1% for 9/34 cases assuming no CRFs and 11/34 cases assuming presence of CRFs.

Conclusions: We developed an individualized, outcome-optimized planning technique for HL. Some of the resulting plans were substantially different from clinical plans. The results varied depending on how risk models were defined or prioritized.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1080/0284186X.2020.1733654

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Nuffield Department of Population Health
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Journal:
Acta Oncologica More from this journal
Volume:
59
Issue:
8
Pages:
879-887
Publication date:
2020-03-27
Acceptance date:
2020-02-18
DOI:
EISSN:
1651-226X
ISSN:
0284-186X


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1115034
Local pid:
pubs:1115034
Deposit date:
2020-06-29

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