학술논문

Technical note: Toward implementation of MR‐guided radiation therapy for laryngeal cancer with healthy volunteer imaging and a custom MR‐CT larynx phantom.
Document Type
Article
Source
Medical Physics. Mar2022, Vol. 49 Issue 3, p1814-1821. 8p.
Subject
*LARYNX
*CANCER radiotherapy
*AIRWAY (Anatomy)
*VOLUNTEERS
*STEREOTACTIC radiotherapy
*VOLUNTEER service
Language
ISSN
0094-2405
Abstract
Purpose: Internal motion of the larynx can cause normal tissue toxicity and/or tumor underdosage during radiotherapy. MR‐guided radiation therapy (MRgRT) provides improved soft‐tissue contrast for patient setup and real‐time gating of radiation based on cine imaging of tumor motion, potentially making it an advantageous modality for laryngeal treatments. However, there are potential concerns regarding the small target size, proximity to heterogeneous tissue interfaces in the airway that may cause dosimetric errors in the presence of the magnetic field, and uncertainty about the ability of MR‐linear accelerator (MR‐Linac) systems to visualize and track laryngeal motion. To date, there have been no reports of the use of MRgRT for laryngeal treatments. Methods: A healthy volunteer was imaged on a ViewRay MRIdian MR‐Linac. Organs‐at‐risk and a laryngeal pseudo target were contoured and used to generate a stereotactic body radiotherapy plan. A custom phantom was created using 3D‐printing based on structures delineated on the volunteer images to construct an enclosure containing the target and airway anatomy, with a gap for radiochromic film, and filled with gelatin. The treatment plan was mapped onto the phantom and delivered dose assessed on radiochromic film with global normalization and a 10% dose threshold. A cine MR of the volunteer was acquired to assess the magnitude of larynx motion with speaking and swallowing, and system's ability to gate radiation. Results: A clinically acceptable laryngeal treatment plan and larynx phantom that was MR and computed tomography‐visible were successfully created. The delivered dose had good agreement with the treatment plan with a gamma passing rate of 96.5% (3%/2 mm). The MR‐Linac was able to visualize, track, and gate larynx motion. Conclusions: The MRgRT workflow for laryngeal treatments was assessed and performed in preparation for clinical implementation on the MR‐Linac, demonstrating that it is feasible to treat laryngeal cancer patients on the MR‐Linac. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]