학술논문

Clinical Workflow of Cone Beam Computer Tomography-Based Daily Online Adaptive Radiotherapy with Offline Magnetic Resonance Guidance: The Modular Adaptive Radiotherapy System (MARS).
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Mar2024, Vol. 16 Issue 6, p1210. 14p.
Subject
*RADIATION therapy equipment
*RADIOTHERAPY
*RESEARCH funding
*COMPUTED tomography
*ARTIFICIAL intelligence
*MAGNETIC resonance imaging
*RADIATION dosimetry
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*PROSTATE tumors
*TREATMENT duration
*WORKFLOW
*ENDOMETRIAL tumors
*COMPUTERS in medicine
*LUNG tumors
*RADIATION doses
*MACHINE learning
*TRANSPORTATION of patients
*TIME
BLADDER tumors
CERVIX uteri tumors
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: Daily adaptation of the radiation plan on the treatment couch has the potential to reduce toxicity to healthy tissue while maintaining the dose or even enabling higher doses applied to cancerous tissue. However, current approaches either require more time and personnel to perform plan adaptation or lack resolution for soft tissue contrast. The Ethos radiotherapy device utilizes artificial intelligence and machine learning to allow rapid plan adaptation based on the daily anatomy. We here outline the first workflow in which we combine the Ethos machine with weekly magnetic resonance imaging, the gold standard for soft tissue resolution. This is facilitated by a shuttle system that allows patients to be transported from one device to the other in treatment position. Purpose: The Ethos (Varian Medical Systems) radiotherapy device combines semi-automated anatomy detection and plan generation for cone beam computer tomography (CBCT)-based daily online adaptive radiotherapy (oART). However, CBCT offers less soft tissue contrast than magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This work aims to present the clinical workflow of CBCT-based oART with shuttle-based offline MR guidance. Methods: From February to November 2023, 31 patients underwent radiotherapy on the Ethos (Varian, Palo Alto, CA, USA) system with machine learning (ML)-supported daily oART. Moreover, patients received weekly MRI in treatment position, which was utilized for daily plan adaptation, via a shuttle-based system. Initial and adapted treatment plans were generated using the Ethos treatment planning system. Patient clinical data, fractional session times (MRI + shuttle transport + positioning, adaptation, QA, RT delivery) and plan selection were assessed for all fractions in all patients. Results: In total, 737 oART fractions were applied and 118 MRIs for offline MR guidance were acquired. Primary sites of tumors were prostate (n = 16), lung (n = 7), cervix (n = 5), bladder (n = 1) and endometrium (n = 2). The treatment was completed in all patients. The median MRI acquisition time including shuttle transport and positioning to initiation of the Ethos adaptive session was 53.6 min (IQR 46.5–63.4). The median total treatment time without MRI was 30.7 min (IQR 24.7–39.2). Separately, median adaptation, plan QA and RT times were 24.3 min (IQR 18.6–32.2), 0.4 min (IQR 0.3–1,0) and 5.3 min (IQR 4.5–6.7), respectively. The adapted plan was chosen over the scheduled plan in 97.7% of cases. Conclusion: This study describes the first workflow to date of a CBCT-based oART combined with a shuttle-based offline approach for MR guidance. The oART duration times reported resemble the range shown by previous publications for first clinical experiences with the Ethos system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]