The Impact of Mid-Treatment MRI on Defining Boost Volumes in the Radiation Treatment of Glioblastoma Multiforme

Author:

Manon Rafael1,Hui Susanta1,Chinnaiyan Prakash1,Suh John2,Chang Eric3,Timmerman Robert4,Phan See5,Das Rupak1,Mehta Minesh1

Affiliation:

1. University of Wisconsin Department of Radiation Oncology K4/B100, 600 Highland Ave Madison, WI 53792 USA

2. Cleveland Clinic Foundation Dept. Radiation Oncology Desk T28 9500 Euclid Ave Cleveland, OH 44195 USA

3. MD Arderson Cancer Center 1515 Holcombe Blvd., Box 97 Houston, TX 77030 USA

4. Indiana University Medical center 535 Barnhill Dr. RT 041 Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA

5. Pharmacyclics Inc. 995 East Arques Ave Sunnyvale, CA 94085-4521 USA

Abstract

Radiation therapy is a central modality in the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Integral to adequate radiation therapy delivery is the appropriate determination of tumor volume and extent at the time treatment is being delivered. As a matter of routine practice, radiation therapy treatment fields are designed based on tumor volumes evident on preoperative or immediate post-operative MRIs; another MRI is generally not obtained for planning boost fields. In some instances the time interval from surgery to radiotherapy initiation is up to 5 weeks and the boost or “cone-down phase” commences 4–5 weeks later. The contrast enhanced T1 MRI may not be a totally reliable indicator of active tumor, especially in regions where such blood-brain barrier breakdown has not occurred. Moreover, these volumes may change during the course of treatment. This may lead to a geographic miss when mid-treatment boost volumes are designed based on a pre-radiotherapy MRI. The goal of this study is to examine how a mid-treatment MRI impacts the delineation and definition of the boost volume in GBM patients in comparison to the pre-treatment MRI scan, particularly when the tumor-specific agent Motexafin-Gadolinium is used.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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