Practice patterns of photon and proton pediatric image guided radiation treatment: Results from an International Pediatric Research Consortium

Sara R. Alcorn, Michael J. Chen, Line Claude, Karin Dieckmann, Ralph P. Ermoian, Eric C. Ford, Claude Malet, Shannon M. MacDonald, Alexey V. Nechesnyuk, Kristina Nilsson, Rosangela C. Villar, Brian A. Winey, Erik J. Tryggestad, Stephanie A. Terezakis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Image guided radiation therapy (IGRT) has become common practice for both photon and proton radiation therapy, but there is little consensus regarding its application in the pediatric population. We evaluated clinical patterns of pediatric IGRT practice through an international pediatrics consortium comprised of institutions using either photon or proton radiation therapy. Methods and materials: Seven international institutions with dedicated pediatric expertise completed a 53-item survey evaluating patterns of IGRT use in definitive radiation therapy for patients ≤. 21 years old. Two institutions use proton therapy for children and all others use IG photon therapy. Descriptive statistics including frequencies of IGRT use and means and standard deviations for planning target volume (PTV) margins by institution and treatment site were calculated. Results: Approximately 750 pediatric patients were treated annually across the 7 institutions. IGRT was used in tumors of the central nervous system (98%), abdomen or pelvis (73%), head and neck (100%), lung (83%), and liver (69%). Photon institutions used kV cone beam computed tomography and kV- and MV-based planar imaging for IGRT, and all proton institutions used kV-based planar imaging; 57% of photon institutions used a specialized pediatric protocol for IGRT that delivers lower dose than standard adult protocols. Immobilization techniques varied by treatment site and institution. IGRT was utilized daily in 45% and weekly in 35% of cases. The PTV margin with use of IGRT ranged from 2 cm to 1 cm across treatment sites and institution. Conclusions: Use of IGRT in children was prevalent at all consortium institutions. There was treatment site-specific variability in IGRT use and technique across institutions, although practices varied less at proton facilities. Despite use of IGRT, there was no consensus of optimum PTV margin by treatment site. Given the desire to restrict any additional radiation exposure in children to instances where the exposure is associated with measureable benefit, prospective studies are warranted to optimize IGRT protocols by modality and treatment site.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)336-341
Number of pages6
JournalPractical Radiation Oncology
Volume4
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2014

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 The Authors.

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