Radiotherapy quality assurance for mesorectum treatment planning within the multi-center phase II STAR-TReC trial: Dutch results

Background: The STAR-TReC trial is an international multi-center, randomized, phase II study assessing the feasibility of short-course radiotherapy or long-course chemoradiotherapy as an alternative to total mesorectal excision surgery. A new target volume is used for both (chemo)radiotherapy arms which includes only the mesorectum. The treatment planning QA revealed substantial variation in dose to organs at risk (OAR) between centers. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the treatment plan variability in terms of dose to OAR and assess the effect of a national study group meetin... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Van Den Ende, Roy P.J.
Peters, Femke P.
Harderwijk, Ernst
Rütten, Heidi
Bouwmans, Liza
Berbee, Maaike
Canters, Richard A.M.
Stoian, Georgiana
Compagner, Kim
Rozema, Tom
De Smet, Mariska
Intven, Martijn P.W.
Tijssen, Rob H.N.
Theuws, Jacqueline
Van Haaren, Paul
Van Triest, Baukelien
Eekhout, Dave
Marijnen, Corrie A.M.
Van Der Heide, Uulke A.
Kerkhof, Ellen M.
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2020
Schlagwörter: Quality assurance / Radiotherapy / Rectal neoplasms / Treatment planning / Radiotherapy Dosage / Intensity-Modulated/methods / Humans / Health Care/standards / Rectum/radiation effects / Netherlands / Organs at Risk/radiation effects / Radiotherapy Planning / Computer-Assisted/standards / Rectal Neoplasms/radiotherapy / Organ Sparing Treatments/methods / Oncology / Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging / Journal Article / Randomized Controlled Trial / Multicenter Study / Clinical Trial / Phase II
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27611535
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/394648

Background: The STAR-TReC trial is an international multi-center, randomized, phase II study assessing the feasibility of short-course radiotherapy or long-course chemoradiotherapy as an alternative to total mesorectal excision surgery. A new target volume is used for both (chemo)radiotherapy arms which includes only the mesorectum. The treatment planning QA revealed substantial variation in dose to organs at risk (OAR) between centers. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the treatment plan variability in terms of dose to OAR and assess the effect of a national study group meeting on the quality and variability of treatment plans for mesorectum-only planning for rectal cancer. Methods: Eight centers produced 25 × 2 Gy treatment plans for five cases. The OAR were the bowel cavity, bladder and femoral heads. A study group meeting for the participating centers was organized to discuss the planning results. At the meeting, the values of the treatment plan DVH parameters were distributed among centers so that results could be compared. Subsequently, the centers were invited to perform replanning if they considered this to be necessary. Results: All treatment plans, both initial planning and replanning, fulfilled the target constraints. Dose to OAR varied considerably for the initial planning, especially for dose levels below 20 Gy, indicating that there was room for trade-offs between the defined OAR. Five centers performed replanning for all cases. One center did not perform replanning at all and two centers performed replanning on two and three cases, respectively. On average, replanning reduced the bowel cavity V20Gy by 12.6%, bowel cavity V10Gy by 22.0%, bladder V35Gy by 14.7% and bladder V10Gy by 10.8%. In 26/30 replanned cases the V10Gy of both the bowel cavity and bladder was lower, indicating an overall lower dose to these OAR instead of a different trade-off. In addition, the bowel cavity V10Gy and V20Gy showed more similarity between centers. Conclusions: Dose to OAR varied considerably ...