4.6 Article

Utility of treatment planning for thermochemotherapy treatment of nonmuscle invasive bladder carcinoma

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 1170-1181

Publisher

AMER ASSOC PHYSICISTS MEDICINE AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1118/1.3679839

Keywords

treatment planning; deep regional hyperthermia; bladder cancer; effective thermal conductivity; optimization

Funding

  1. NIH [NCI P01-CA042745-23]

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Purpose: A recently completed Phase I clinical trial combined concurrent Mitomycin-C chemotherapy with deep regional heating using BSD-2000 Sigma-Ellipse applicator (BSD Corporation, Salt Lake City, UT, U.S.A.) for the treatment of nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer. This work presents a new treatment planning approach, and demonstrates potential impact of this approach on improvement of treatment quality. Methods: This study retrospectively analyzes a subset of five patients on the trial. For each treatment, expert operators selected clinical-optimal settings based on simple model calculation on the BSD-2000 control console. Computed tomography (CT) scans acquired prior to treatment were segmented to create finite element patient models for retrospective simulations with Sigma-HyperPlan (Dr. Sennewald Medizintechnik GmbH, Munchen, Germany). Since Sigma-HyperPlan does not account for the convective nature of heat transfer within a fluid filled bladder, an effective thermal conductivity for bladder was introduced. This effective thermal conductivity value was determined by comparing simulation results with clinical measurements of bladder and rectum temperatures. Regions of predicted high temperature in normal tissues were compared with patient complaints during treatment. Treatment results using computed-optimal settings from the planning system were compared with clinical results using clinical-optimal settings to evaluate potential of treatment improvement by reducing hot spot volume. Results: For all five patients, retrospective treatment planning indicated improved matches between simulated and measured bladder temperatures with increasing effective thermal conductivity. The differences were mostly within 1.3 degrees C when using an effective thermal conductivity value above 10 W/K/m. Changes in effective bladder thermal conductivity affected surrounding normal tissues within a distance of similar to 1.5 cm from the bladder wall. Rectal temperature differences between simulation and measurement were large due to sensitivity to the sampling locations in rectum. The predicted bladder T90 correlated well with single-point bladder temperature measurement. Hot spot locations predicted by the simulation agreed qualitatively with patient complaints during treatment. Furthermore, comparison between the temperature distributions with clinical and computedoptimal settings demonstrated that the computed-optimal settings resulted in substantially reduced hot spot volumes. Conclusions: Determination of an effective thermal conductivity value for fluid filled bladder was essential for matching simulation and treatment temperatures. Prospectively planning patients using the effective thermal conductivity determined in this work can potentially improve treatment efficacy (compared to manual operator adjustments) by potentially lower discomfort from reduced hot spots in normal tissue. (C) 2012 American Association of Physicists in Medicine. [DOI: 10.1118/1.3679839]

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