» Articles » PMID: 34609744

Technical Note: Break-even Dose Level for Hypofractionated Treatment Schedules

Overview
Journal Med Phys
Specialty Biophysics
Date 2021 Oct 5
PMID 34609744
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Purpose: To derive the isodose line R relative to the prescription dose below which irradiated normal tissue (NT) regions benefit from a hypofractionated schedule with an isoeffective dose to the tumor. To apply the formalism to clinical case examples.

Methods: From the standard biologically effective dose (BED) equation based on the linear-quadratic (LQ) model, the BED of an NT that receives a relative proportion r of the prescribed dose per fraction for a given α/β-ratio of the tumor, (α/β) , and NT, (α/β) , is derived for different treatment schedules while keeping the BED to the tumor constant. Based on this, the "break-even" isodose line R is then derived. The BED of NT regions that receive doses below R decreases for more hypofractionated treatment schedules, and hence a lower risk for NT injury is predicted in these regions. To assess the impact of a linear behavior of BED for high doses per fraction (>6 Gy), we evaluated BED also using the LQ-linear (LQ-L) model.

Results: The formalism provides the equations to derive the BED of an NT as function of dose per fraction for an isoeffective dose to the tumor and the corresponding break-even isodose line R. For generic α/β-ratios of (α/β) = 10 Gy and (α/β) = 3 Gy and homogeneous dose in the target, R is 30%. R is doubling for stereotactic treatments for which tumor control correlates with the maximum dose of 100% instead of the encompassing isodose line of 50%. When using the LQ-L model, the notion of a break-even dose level R remains valid up to about 20 Gy per fraction for generic α/β-ratios and .

Conclusions: The formalism may be used to estimate below which relative isodose line R there will be a differential sparing of NT when increasing hypofractionation. More generally, it allows to assess changes of the therapeutic index for sets of isoeffective treatment schedules at different relative dose levels compared to a reference schedule in a compact manner.

Citing Articles

The minimal FLASH sparing effect needed to compensate the increase of radiobiological damage due to hypofractionation for late-reacting tissues.

Bohlen T, Germond J, Bourhis J, Bailat C, Bochud F, Moeckli R Med Phys. 2022; 49(12):7672-7682.

PMID: 35933554 PMC: 10087769. DOI: 10.1002/mp.15911.


Technical Note: Break-even dose level for hypofractionated treatment schedules.

Bohlen T, Germond J, Bourhis J, Vozenin M, Bailat C, Bochud F Med Phys. 2021; 48(11):7534-7540.

PMID: 34609744 PMC: 9298418. DOI: 10.1002/mp.15267.

References
1.
Brenner D, Hall E . Fractionated high dose rate versus low dose rate regimens for intracavitary brachytherapy of the cervix. I. General considerations based on radiobiology. Br J Radiol. 1991; 64(758):133-41. DOI: 10.1259/0007-1285-64-758-133. View

2.
Saberian F, Ghate A, Kim M . Optimal fractionation in radiotherapy with multiple normal tissues. Math Med Biol. 2015; 33(2):211-52. DOI: 10.1093/imammb/dqv015. View

3.
Bohlen T, Germond J, Bourhis J, Vozenin M, Bailat C, Bochud F . Technical Note: Break-even dose level for hypofractionated treatment schedules. Med Phys. 2021; 48(11):7534-7540. PMC: 9298418. DOI: 10.1002/mp.15267. View

4.
Yang Y, Xing L . Optimization of radiotherapy dose-time fractionation with consideration of tumor specific biology. Med Phys. 2006; 32(12):3666-77. DOI: 10.1118/1.2126167. View

5.
Kuperman V, Lubich L . Effect of reoxygenation on hypofractionated radiotherapy of prostate cancer. Med Phys. 2020; 47(10):5383-5391. DOI: 10.1002/mp.14343. View