Influence of computed tomography contrast agent on radiotherapy dose calculation for pancreatic carcinoma: A dosimetric study based on tomotherapy and volumetric-modulated arc therapy techniques.

Medical Dosimetry(2017)

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Abstract
The main purpose of our investigation was to quantify the dosimetric influence of intravenous contrast agent for pancreatic cancer radiotherapy treatment. This study focused on complex modulated irradiation techniques of tomotherapy (TOMO) and volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT) to investigate if novel conformal treatment methods could reduce the influence of contrast agent. In our study, patients with pancreatic cancer were enrolled to have 2 computed tomography (CT) scans in the same position without and with intravenous contrast agent for treatment planning. Then tumors and organ at risks were countered on contrast-enhanced CT (CECT) images. Each patient's CECT was assigned a TOMO plan and a VMAT plan. Then these plans were copied onto the non-CECT image and dose distribution was calculated with the same algorithm and structure sets. Finally, the dose distribution and the dose difference were analyzed for the target volume and organs at risk between the 2 sets of images. The statistic dosimetric result showed that for both TOMO and VMAT, no significant dose difference between CECT and non-CECT-based plan was observed. Dose difference was clinically negligible because the average relative percentage dose difference was 1% ± 1% for target volume, except a blurring effect at the higher dose region of the target volume. It implied that intravenous contrast agent will not affect dose calculation for pancreatic cancer radiotherapy significantly. Also the dose deviation based on TOMO showed no statistical difference compared with that on VMAT. For both superposition/conversation algorithm used by TOMO and Monte Carlo algorithm used by VMAT, the dosimetric difference was nonsignificant. A full analysis demonstrated a negligible dose difference of less than 1% between CECT-based plan and non-CECT-based plan. Therefore, contrast-enhanced CT image can be used directly for dose calculation of TOMO and VMAT plans for pancreatic cancer. It is unnecessary to scan twice then make a fusion of CECT and non-CECT, which would result to additional unnecessary radiation dose to patient and decrease work efficiency.
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Key words
Intravenous contrast CT,Pancreatic cancer,Tomotherapy,VMAT,Dosimetric influence
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