Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5498163 | Medical Dosimetry | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to commission and clinically test a robotic stereotactic delivery system (CyberKnife, Sunnyvale, CA) to treat early-stage glottic laryngeal cancer. We enrolled 15 patients with cTis-T2N0M0 carcinoma of the glottic larynx onto an institutional review board (IRB)-approved clinical trial. Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) plans prescribed 45âGy/10 fractions to the involved hemilarynx. SBRT dosimetry was compared with (1) standard carotid-sparing laryngeal intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and (2) selective hemilaryngeal IMRT. Our results demonstrate that SBRT plans improved sparing of the contralateral arytenoid (mean 20.0âGy reduction, pâ<0.001), ipsilateral carotid Dmax (mean 20.6âGy reduction, pâ<0.001), contralateral carotid Dmax (mean 28.1âGy reduction, pâ<0.001), and thyroid Dmean (mean 15.0âGy reduction, pâ<0.001) relative to carotid-sparing IMRT. SBRT also modestly improved dose sparing to the contralateral arytenoid (mean 4.8âGy reduction, pâ=â0.13) and spinal cord Dmax (mean 4.9âGy reduction, pâ=â0.015) relative to selective hemilaryngeal IMRT plans. This “phantom-to-clinic” feasibility study confirmed that hypofractionated SBRT treatment for early-stage laryngeal cancer can potentially spare dose to adjacent normal tissues relative to current IMRT standards. Clinical efficacy and toxicity correlates continue to be collected through an ongoing prospective trial.
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Authors
Chuxiong Ph.D., Stephen G. M.D., Baran D. M.D., Lucien A. M.D., Ramzi E. M.D., John S. M.D., Ph.D., Pam C.M.D., Brian Ph.D., Timothy D. Ph.D., Chul Ph.D., Robert D. M.D., F.A.C.R., David L. M.D., F.A.C.R.,