Plan Quality Comparison Between Hippocampus-Sparing Whole-Brain Radiotherapy Treated With Halcyon and Tomotherapy Intensity-Modulated Radiotherapy

Objective : Hippocampus-sparing whole-brain radiotherapy using Halcyon, an instrument dedicated to volumetric modulated arc therapy, has not been studied till date; hence, we aimed to examine whether it can meet the RTOG0933 criteria. Based on this, we compared Halcyon to Tomotherapy, which also use...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kazutoshi Yokoyama RT, Hiromasa Kurosaki MD, PhD, Hajime Oyoshi RT, Kosei Miura MD, PhD, Nobuko Utsumi MD, PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2022-06-01
Series:Technology in Cancer Research & Treatment
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/15330338221108529
Description
Summary:Objective : Hippocampus-sparing whole-brain radiotherapy using Halcyon, an instrument dedicated to volumetric modulated arc therapy, has not been studied till date; hence, we aimed to examine whether it can meet the RTOG0933 criteria. Based on this, we compared Halcyon to Tomotherapy, which also uses an O-ring-type linear accelerator. Methods: This exploratory, experimental, and retrospective study used 5 sets of computed tomography images in the head area to investigate the planning target volume, hippocampal doses, and irradiation time. Calculations were performed from 1 to 4 arcs to determine the optimal number of arcs in the Halcyon plan, which were compared to those of Tomotherapy. Results: The Radiation Therapy Oncology Group 0933 criteria could not be satisfied in Halcyon with 1 arc. With 2 arcs, the condition D max <16 Gy was not satisfied for 1 case in the hippocampus. Since there were no significant differences between 3 and 4 arcs, including the irradiation time, 3 arcs were considered the best. We compared Halcyon at 3 arcs with tomotherapy and found that tomotherapy was inferior to Halcyon at D 98% ; however, it was superior to Halcyon in other dose parameters. In contrast, the irradiation time in Halcyon was overwhelmingly superior, with the irradiation time for Halcyon being 1/ninth the time for Tomotherapy. Conclusion: Halcyon was effective in handling hippocampus-sparing whole-brain radiotherapy. We believe that 3-arc radiation is best suited for this procedure. Although Halcyon was inferior to Tomotherapy in terms of dose distribution excluding D 98% , it was overwhelmingly superior in terms of irradiation time.
ISSN:1533-0338