Σφακιανάκης Αλέξανδρος
ΩτοΡινοΛαρυγγολόγος
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Τρίτη 29 Αυγούστου 2017

Evaluation of high dose volumetric CT to reduce inter-observer delineation variability and PTV margins for prostate cancer radiotherapy

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Publication date: Available online 28 August 2017
Source:Radiotherapy and Oncology
Author(s): Hamideh Alasti, Young-Bin Cho, Charles Catton, Alejandro Berlin, Peter Chung, Andrew Bayley, Aaron Vandermeer, Vickie Kong, David Jaffray
PurposeThe aim was to determine whether the enhanced soft tissue contrast provided by high-dose volumetric CT (HDVCT) can reduce inter-observer variability in delineating prostate compared to helical conventional CT (CCT) scans and 3T MRI scans for patients undergoing radical prostate cancer radiotherapy. Secondly, to quantify the potential PTV reduction with decreased inter-observer variability.Materials and methodsA 320 slice volumetric CT scanner was used. The wide-detector coverage of 16cm enabled volumetric image acquisition of prostate gland in one rotation. Three imaging studies were performed on ten patients. CCT and HDVCT were performed consecutively at the same coordinate system followed by MRI. Five radiation oncologists delineated the prostate.ResultsThe inter-observer variability is 2.0±0.6, 1.9±0.4 and 1.8±0.4mm for CCT, HDVCT and MR respectively with the maximum at the apex region. Comparing inter-observer difference variability between CCT and HDVCT with MR indicates that observers have larger variations in contouring using CCT than HDVCT especially at apex. Jaccard index of HDVCT is significantly higher than CCT with a mean difference of 0.03 (p=0.011). Both MRI and HDVCT provide the opportunity for a 2mm PTV margin reduction at the apex compared to CCT.ConclusionInter-observer variability in delineation remains an important source of systematic error. HDCTV for treatment planning reduces this error without recourse to MRI and permits a PTV reduction of 2mm at the apex. The margins required to account for residual error with any imaging modality are still greater than are used in typical current practice.



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