Reduction of intrafraction pancreas motion using an abdominal corset compatible with proton therapy and MRI


Reduction of intrafraction pancreas motion using an abdominal corset compatible with proton therapy and MRI

Schneider, S.; Stefanowicz, S.; Jentsch, C.; Lohaus, F.; Thiele, J.; Haak, D.; Valentini, C.; Platzek, I.; Troost, E. G. C.; Hoffmann, A. L.

Abstract

Background and Purpose:

Motion mitigation is of crucial importance in particle therapy (PT) of patients with abdominal tumors to ensure high-precision irradiation. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an excellent modality for target volume delineation and motion estimation of mobile soft-tissue tumors. Thus, the aims of this study were to develop an MRI- and PT-compatible abdominal compression device, to investigate its effect on pancreas motion reduction, and to evaluate patient tolerability and acceptance.
Materials and Methods:
In a prospective clinical study, 16 patients with abdominal tumors received an individualized polyethylene-based abdominal corset. Pancreas motion was analyzed using time- and phase resolved MRI scans (orthogonal 2D-cine and 4D MRI) with and without compression by the corset. The pancreas was manually segmented in each MRI data set and the population-averaged center-of-mass motion in inferior-superior (IS), anterior-posterior (AP) and left-right (LR) directions was determined. A questionnaire was developed to investigate the level of patient acceptance of the corset, which the patients completed after acquisition of the planning computed tomography (CT) and MRI scans.
Results:
The corset was found to reduce pancreas motion predominantly in IS direction by on average 47 % - 51 % as found in the 2D-cine and 4D MRI data, respectively, while motion in the AP and LR direction was not significantly reduced. Most patients reported no discomfort when wearing the corset.
Conclusion:
An MRI- and PT-compatible individualized abdominal corset was presented, which substantially reduced breathing-induced pancreas motion and can be safely applied with no additional discomfort for the patients. The corset has been successfully integrated into our in-house clinical workflow for PT of tumors of the upper abdomen.

Keywords: MR guided proton therapy; image guidance; tumor motion; abdominal compression

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Permalink: https://www.hzdr.de/publications/Publ-35399