Cardiorespiratory motion characteristics and their dosimetric impact on cardiac stereotactic body radiotherapy

Author:

Li Guangjun12,Wang Guangyu3,Wei Weige12,Li Zhibin4,Xiao Qing12,He Haiping12,Luo Dashuang12,Chen Li5,Li Jing12,Zhang Xiangyu12,Song Ying12,Bai Sen12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiation Oncology Cancer Center West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu Sichuan China

2. Department of Radiotherapy Physics & Technology West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu Sichuan China

3. State Key Laboratory of Oncology in South China Guangdong Provincial Clinical Research Center for Cancer Sun Yat‐sen University Cancer Center Guangzhou China

4. Department of Radiotherapy & Oncology The First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University Institute of Radiotherapy & Oncology Soochow University Suzhou China

5. Department of Radiotherapy & Oncology The Second Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University Suzhou China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCardiac stereotactic body radiotherapy (CSBRT) is an emerging and promising noninvasive technique for treating refractory arrhythmias utilizing highly precise, single or limited‐fraction high‐dose irradiations. This method promises to revolutionize the treatment of cardiac conditions by delivering targeted therapy with minimal exposure to surrounding healthy tissues. However, the dynamic nature of cardiorespiratory motion poses significant challenges to the precise delivery of dose in CSBRT, introducing potential variabilities that can impact treatment efficacy. The complexities of the influence of cardiorespiratory motion on dose distribution are compounded by interplay and blurring effects, introducing additional layers of dose uncertainty. These effects, critical to the understanding and improvement of the accuracy of CSBRT, remain unexplored, presenting a gap in current clinical literature.PurposeTo investigate the cardiorespiratory motion characteristics in arrhythmia patients and the dosimetric impact of interplay and blurring effects induced by cardiorespiratory motion on CSBRT plan quality.MethodsThe position and volume variations in the substrate target and cardiac substructures were evaluated in 12 arrhythmia patients using displacement maximum (DMX) and volume metrics. Moreover, a four‐dimensional (4D) dose reconstruction approach was employed to examine the dose uncertainty of the cardiorespiratory motion.ResultsCardiac pulsation induced lower DMX than respiratory motion but increased the coefficient of variation and relative range in cardiac substructure volumes. The mean DMX of the substrate target was 0.52 cm (range: 0.26–0.80 cm) for cardiac pulsation and 0.82 cm (range: 0.32–2.05 cm) for respiratory motion. The mean DMX of the cardiac structure ranged from 0.15 to 1.56 cm during cardiac pulsation and from 0.35 to 1.89 cm during respiratory motion. Cardiac pulsation resulted in an average deviation of –0.73% (range: –4.01%–4.47%) in V25 between the 3D and 4D doses. The mean deviations in the homogeneity index (HI) and gradient index (GI) were 1.70% (range: –3.10%–4.36%) and 0.03 (range: –0.14–0.11), respectively. For cardiac substructures, the deviations in D50 due to cardiac pulsation ranged from –1.88% to 1.44%, whereas the deviations in Dmax ranged from –2.96% to 0.88% of the prescription dose. By contrast, the respiratory motion led to a mean deviation of –1.50% (range: –10.73%–4.23%) in V25. The mean deviations in HI and GI due to respiratory motion were 4.43% (range: –3.89%–13.98%) and 0.18 (range: –0.01–0.47) (p < 0.05), respectively. Furthermore, the deviations in D50 and Dmax in cardiac substructures for the respiratory motion ranged from –0.28% to 4.24% and –4.12% to 1.16%, respectively.ConclusionsCardiorespiratory motion characteristics vary among patients, with the respiratory motion being more significant. The intricate cardiorespiratory motion characteristics and CSBRT plan complexity can induce substantial dose uncertainty. Therefore, assessing individual motion characteristics and 4D dose reconstruction techniques is critical for implementing CSBRT without compromising efficacy and safety.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

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