MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels

Abstract Background Brachytherapy involves placement of radioactive sources inside or near the tumour. For gynaecological cancer, recent developments, including 3D imaging and image-guided adaptive brachytherapy, have improved treatment quality and outcomes. However, for large or complex tumours, ta...

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Main Authors: Rianne C. Laan, Remi A. Nout, Jenny Dankelman, Nick J. van de Berg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:3D Printing in Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41205-019-0047-x
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spelling doaj-ed6670c4ffa942618f5772ab7ceedee02020-11-25T03:01:17ZengBMC3D Printing in Medicine2365-62712019-05-01511810.1186/s41205-019-0047-xMRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channelsRianne C. Laan0Remi A. Nout1Jenny Dankelman2Nick J. van de Berg3BioMechanical Engineering, Delft University of TechnologyRadiation Oncology, Leiden University Medical CenterBioMechanical Engineering, Delft University of TechnologyBioMechanical Engineering, Delft University of TechnologyAbstract Background Brachytherapy involves placement of radioactive sources inside or near the tumour. For gynaecological cancer, recent developments, including 3D imaging and image-guided adaptive brachytherapy, have improved treatment quality and outcomes. However, for large or complex tumours, target coverage and local control with commercially available applicators remain suboptimal. Moreover, side effects are frequent and impact on quality of life. This signifies that brachytherapy treatment conformity can improve. Therefore, the aim of this study is to develop 3D printed personalised brachytherapy applicators with a custom vaginal topography and guided needle source channels, based on the patients’ anatomy. Methods Customised applicators were derived from MRI data of two gynaecological cancer patients. Needle channels were planned by the Radiation Oncologist during image segmentation. Applicators contained multi-curved channels for 6F needles (ProGuide, Elekta) and were manufactured using a digital light processing-based 3D printer. Needle channel radius constraints were measured by analysing needle insertion forces in a 3D printed template, and imposed on the designs. Results Two customised needle applicators are presented. Interstitial needle channels have tapered ends to increase needle protrusion angle accuracy. Additional structures were included to serve as anchor points in MR images for applicator and needle modelling and reconstruction during treatment planning. An insertion force analysis yielded a radius constraint of 35 mm to minimise the risk on needle jamming or buckling. For radii larger than 50 mm, no differences in insertion forces were found. Conclusion A novel method to design and produce vaginal topography-based 3D prints for personalised brachytherapy applicators, derived from patient MRI data, is presented. The applicators include curved needle channels that can be used for intracavitary and guided interstitial needle placement. Further spatial optimisation of brachytherapy source channels to the patient anatomy is expected to increase brachytherapy conformity and outcome.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41205-019-0047-xBrachytherapyGynaecologyPersonalised healthcareMedical devicesNeedle steeringAdditive manufacturing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rianne C. Laan
Remi A. Nout
Jenny Dankelman
Nick J. van de Berg
spellingShingle Rianne C. Laan
Remi A. Nout
Jenny Dankelman
Nick J. van de Berg
MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
3D Printing in Medicine
Brachytherapy
Gynaecology
Personalised healthcare
Medical devices
Needle steering
Additive manufacturing
author_facet Rianne C. Laan
Remi A. Nout
Jenny Dankelman
Nick J. van de Berg
author_sort Rianne C. Laan
title MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
title_short MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
title_full MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
title_fullStr MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
title_full_unstemmed MRI-driven design of customised 3D printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
title_sort mri-driven design of customised 3d printed gynaecological brachytherapy applicators with curved needle channels
publisher BMC
series 3D Printing in Medicine
issn 2365-6271
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background Brachytherapy involves placement of radioactive sources inside or near the tumour. For gynaecological cancer, recent developments, including 3D imaging and image-guided adaptive brachytherapy, have improved treatment quality and outcomes. However, for large or complex tumours, target coverage and local control with commercially available applicators remain suboptimal. Moreover, side effects are frequent and impact on quality of life. This signifies that brachytherapy treatment conformity can improve. Therefore, the aim of this study is to develop 3D printed personalised brachytherapy applicators with a custom vaginal topography and guided needle source channels, based on the patients’ anatomy. Methods Customised applicators were derived from MRI data of two gynaecological cancer patients. Needle channels were planned by the Radiation Oncologist during image segmentation. Applicators contained multi-curved channels for 6F needles (ProGuide, Elekta) and were manufactured using a digital light processing-based 3D printer. Needle channel radius constraints were measured by analysing needle insertion forces in a 3D printed template, and imposed on the designs. Results Two customised needle applicators are presented. Interstitial needle channels have tapered ends to increase needle protrusion angle accuracy. Additional structures were included to serve as anchor points in MR images for applicator and needle modelling and reconstruction during treatment planning. An insertion force analysis yielded a radius constraint of 35 mm to minimise the risk on needle jamming or buckling. For radii larger than 50 mm, no differences in insertion forces were found. Conclusion A novel method to design and produce vaginal topography-based 3D prints for personalised brachytherapy applicators, derived from patient MRI data, is presented. The applicators include curved needle channels that can be used for intracavitary and guided interstitial needle placement. Further spatial optimisation of brachytherapy source channels to the patient anatomy is expected to increase brachytherapy conformity and outcome.
topic Brachytherapy
Gynaecology
Personalised healthcare
Medical devices
Needle steering
Additive manufacturing
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41205-019-0047-x
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