MR-guided radiotherapy of moving targets.

2021 
Introduction Hybrid magnetic resonance (MR) linear accelerators (MR-Linacs) for radiotherapy allow for the visualization and tracking of moving target volumes during the entire treatment. This makes gated treatments possible, decreasing the irradiated volumes and thus sparing healthy tissue from unnecessary radiation dose. Conventionally, tumors that are subject to respiration motion are treated by irradiating the entire area of potential target presence (internal target volume, ITV). This study presents three patient cases (lung, adrenal gland, and liver tumors) treated with gated MR-guided radiotherapy and compares the treatment plans retrospectively with conventional ITV plans. Materials and methods The gross tumor volume was delineated on MR and computed tomography (CT) images of the patients, and MR-Linac treatment plans were generated using additional clinical and planning target volume margins. The motion of the gross tumor volume was evaluated on two-dimensional cine-MRI images during the entire MR-Linac treatment. Based on the motion analysis, standard ITV-based plans were retrospectively created and compared by means of irradiated target volumes and dose-volume parameters. Results For the MR-Linac plans, the irradiated treatment volumes were reduced by an average of 62% across the three cases, and for one case the ITV-based target volume would have overlapped with a critical organ. Target volume coverage was much better and the lung and adrenal MR-Linac plans revealed superior sparing of the organs at risks thanks to gated treatments. Conclusion Dosimetrically beneficial treatment plans with promising clinical outcomes can be applied when using gated MR-guided radiotherapy. Future studies will reveal which patients will benefit most from this technique. To utilize the full potential of online adaptive, individualized MR-guided therapy, the close collaboration of radio-oncology and radiology is needed.
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