4.3 Article

Helical tomotherapy as a new treatment technique for whole abdominal irradiation

Journal

STRAHLENTHERAPIE UND ONKOLOGIE
Volume 184, Issue 3, Pages 145-149

Publisher

URBAN & VOGEL
DOI: 10.1007/s00066-008-1772-z

Keywords

advanced ovarian cancer; whole abdominal irradiation; tomotherapy; IMRT.4D-CT

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Purpose: To describe a new intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) technique using helical tomotherapy for whole abdominal irradiation (WAI) in patients with advanced ovarian cancer. Material and Methods: A patient with radically operated ovarian cancer FIGO stage IIIc was treated in a prospective clinical trial with WAI to a total dose of 30 Gy in 1.5-Gy fractions as an additional therapy after adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy. The planning target volume (PTV) included the entire peritoneal cavity. PTV was adapted according to breathing motion as detected in a four-dimensional respiratory-triggered computed tomography (4D-CT). Inverse treatment planning was done with the Hi-Art tomotherapy planning station. Organs at risk (OARs) were kidneys, liver, bone marrow, spinal cord, thoracic and Lumbosacral vertebral bodies, and pelvic bones. Daily control of positioning accuracy was performed with megavoltage computed tomography (MV-CT). Results: Helical tomotherapy enabled a very homogeneous dose distribution with excellent sparing of OARs and coverage of the PTV (V 90 of 93.1%, V 95 of 86.9%, V-105 of 1.9%, and V-110 of 0.01%). Mean Liver dose was 21.57 Gy and mean kidney doses were 9.75 Gy and 9.14 Gy, respectively. Treatment could be performed in 18.1 min daily and no severe side effects occurred. Conclusion: Helical tomotherapy is feasible and fast for WAI. Tomotherapy enabled excellent coverage of the PTV and effective sparing of Liver, kidneys and bone marrow.

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