Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin
Introduction: SABR may facilitate treatment in a greater proportion of locally-advanced NSCLC patients, just as it has for early-stage disease. The oesophagus is one of the key dose-limiting organs and visualization during IGRT would better ensure toxicity is avoided. As the oesophagus is poorly see...
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doaj-bbab2b5a83a74568956db1dc98a4d2c32020-11-25T01:32:36ZengElsevierTechnical Innovations & Patient Support in Radiation Oncology2405-63242019-12-01121622Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. GastrografinKatrina Woodford0Vanessa Panettieri1Jeremy D Ruben2Sidney Davis3Esther Sim4Trieumy Tran Le5Sashendra Senthi6Alfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Surgery, Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Corresponding author at: Alfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, 55 Commercial Road, Melbourne, Victoria 3004, Australia.Alfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Medical Imaging and Radiation Sciences, School of Biomedical Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, AustraliaAlfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Surgery, Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaAlfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Surgery, Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaAlfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaAlfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaAlfred Health Radiation Oncology, The Alfred, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Department of Surgery, Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaIntroduction: SABR may facilitate treatment in a greater proportion of locally-advanced NSCLC patients, just as it has for early-stage disease. The oesophagus is one of the key dose-limiting organs and visualization during IGRT would better ensure toxicity is avoided. As the oesophagus is poorly seen on CBCT, we assessed the extent to which this is improved using two oral contrast agents. Materials & methods: Six patients receiving radiotherapy for Stage I-III NSCLC were assigned to receive 50 mL Gastrografin or 50 mL barium sulphate prior to simulation and pre-treatment CBCTs. Three additional patients who did not receive contrast were included as a control group. Oesophageal visibility was determined by assessing concordance between six experienced observers in contouring the organ. 36 datasets and 216 contours were analysed. A STAPLE contour was created and compared to each individual contour. Descriptive statistics were used and a Kappa statistic, Dice Coefficient and Hausdorff distance were calculated and compared using a t-test. Contrast-induced artefact was assessed by observer scoring. Results: Both contrast agents significantly improved the consistency of oesophagus localisation on CBCT across all comparison metrics compared to CBCTs without contrast. Barium performed significantly better than Gastrografin with improved kappa statistics (p = 0.007), dice coefficients (p < 0.001) and Hausdorff distances (p = 0.002), although at a cost of increased image artefact. Discussion: Barium produced lower delineation uncertainties but more image artefact, compared to Gastrografin and no contrast. It is feasible to use oral contrast as a tool in IGRT to help guide clinicians and therapists with online matching and monitoring of the oesophageal position. Keywords: Stereotactic body radiotherapy, Oral contrast, Oesophagus, Cone-beam computed tomographyhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405632419300162 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Katrina Woodford Vanessa Panettieri Jeremy D Ruben Sidney Davis Esther Sim Trieumy Tran Le Sashendra Senthi |
spellingShingle |
Katrina Woodford Vanessa Panettieri Jeremy D Ruben Sidney Davis Esther Sim Trieumy Tran Le Sashendra Senthi Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin Technical Innovations & Patient Support in Radiation Oncology |
author_facet |
Katrina Woodford Vanessa Panettieri Jeremy D Ruben Sidney Davis Esther Sim Trieumy Tran Le Sashendra Senthi |
author_sort |
Katrina Woodford |
title |
Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin |
title_short |
Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin |
title_full |
Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin |
title_fullStr |
Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin |
title_full_unstemmed |
Contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: Barium vs. Gastrografin |
title_sort |
contrast enhanced oesophageal avoidance for stereotactic body radiotherapy: barium vs. gastrografin |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Technical Innovations & Patient Support in Radiation Oncology |
issn |
2405-6324 |
publishDate |
2019-12-01 |
description |
Introduction: SABR may facilitate treatment in a greater proportion of locally-advanced NSCLC patients, just as it has for early-stage disease. The oesophagus is one of the key dose-limiting organs and visualization during IGRT would better ensure toxicity is avoided. As the oesophagus is poorly seen on CBCT, we assessed the extent to which this is improved using two oral contrast agents. Materials & methods: Six patients receiving radiotherapy for Stage I-III NSCLC were assigned to receive 50 mL Gastrografin or 50 mL barium sulphate prior to simulation and pre-treatment CBCTs. Three additional patients who did not receive contrast were included as a control group. Oesophageal visibility was determined by assessing concordance between six experienced observers in contouring the organ. 36 datasets and 216 contours were analysed. A STAPLE contour was created and compared to each individual contour. Descriptive statistics were used and a Kappa statistic, Dice Coefficient and Hausdorff distance were calculated and compared using a t-test. Contrast-induced artefact was assessed by observer scoring. Results: Both contrast agents significantly improved the consistency of oesophagus localisation on CBCT across all comparison metrics compared to CBCTs without contrast. Barium performed significantly better than Gastrografin with improved kappa statistics (p = 0.007), dice coefficients (p < 0.001) and Hausdorff distances (p = 0.002), although at a cost of increased image artefact. Discussion: Barium produced lower delineation uncertainties but more image artefact, compared to Gastrografin and no contrast. It is feasible to use oral contrast as a tool in IGRT to help guide clinicians and therapists with online matching and monitoring of the oesophageal position. Keywords: Stereotactic body radiotherapy, Oral contrast, Oesophagus, Cone-beam computed tomography |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405632419300162 |
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