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Clinical Trial
. 2024 Nov:200:110506.
doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2024.110506. Epub 2024 Aug 26.

Daily CBCT-based dose calculations for enhancing the safety of dose-escalation in lung cancer radiotherapy

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Free article
Clinical Trial

Daily CBCT-based dose calculations for enhancing the safety of dose-escalation in lung cancer radiotherapy

S N Thomsen et al. Radiother Oncol. 2024 Nov.
Free article

Abstract

Purpose: Dose-escalation in lung cancer comes with a high risk of severe toxicity. This study aimed to calculate the delivered dose in a Scandinavian phase-III dose-escalation trial.

Methods: The delivered dose was evaluated for 21 locally-advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) patients treated as part of the NARLAL2 dose-escalation trial. The patients were randomized between standard and escalated heterogeneous dose-delivery. Both treatment plans were created and approved before randomization. Daily cone-beam CT (CBCT) for patient positioning, and adaptive radiotherapy were mandatory. Standard and escalated plans, including adaptive re-plans, were recalculated on each daily CBCT and accumulated on the planning CT for each patient. Dose to the clinical target volume (CTV), organs at risk (OAR), and the effects of plan adaptions were evaluated for the accumulated dose and on each treated fraction scaled to full treatment.

Results: For the standard treatment, plan adaptations reduced the number of patients with CTV-T underdosage from six to one, and the total number of fractions with CTV-T underdosage from 161 to 56; while for the escalated treatment, the number of patients was reduced from five to zero and number of fractions from 81 to 11. For dose-escalation, three patients had fractions exceeding trial constraints for heart, bronchi, or esophagus, and one had an accumulated heart dose above the constraints.

Conclusion: Dose-escalation for LA-NSCLC patients, using daily image guidance and adaptive radiotherapy, is dosimetrically safe for the majority of patients. Dose calculation on daily CBCTs is an efficient tool to monitor target coverage and OAR doses.

Keywords: Daily dose calculation/imaging; Dose escalation; Lung cancer; NSCLC; Randomized clinical trial.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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