|
Home > Articles
The use of MRI in planning radiotherapy for gynaecological tumours
Abstract
Parameters that significantly influence results in radiation
treatment of gynaecological malignancies are mainly related to
the tumour characteristics and the radiotherapy technique used.
High-dose radiotherapy requires accurate localisation of the
tumour volume and its relationship to surrounding normal
tissues. For many years the standard technique used for
irradiation of the pelvic area was the four-field box technique
which offered the potential benefit of the lateral fields to
shield the rectum and small bowel. However, this conventional
technique was designed according to bony landmarks and offered
limited information regarding the topography of the tumour and
the flexion of the uterus which are influenced by the tumour
burden and bladder and rectal filling. CT and MRI enable the
visualisation of the cervix, uterus, vagina, iliac vessels and
organs at risk, but MRI allows tumour depiction in all planes.
In the early 1990s, several studies reported on the value of
pelvic MRI in designing the lateral fields of the box technique.
They demonstrated that conventional lateral portals would have
resulted in a marginal tumour miss and incomplete coverage of
the uterine fundus in more than 50% of cases, thus leading to
the conclusion that if a box technique is used its design should
be based on sagittal MRI. CT-based 3D planning systems are now
routinely used in the vast majority of radiotherapy departments.
Target volumes and organs at risk are delineated by the
physician on each CT slice in order to conform the radiotherapy
fields to the tumour volume. For several reasons, such as
distortion and lack of electron density which is essential for
dose calculation, the implementation of MRI into radiation
treatment planning has its limitations. However, MRI can still
be used if planning systems integrate tools for CT/MR image
registration. There is little experience in the literature for
gynaecological malignancies demonstrating that image fusion
allows an improvement of the definition of the target and the
organ at risk compared to CT alone. Only a few papers in the
literature report on the use of CT/MR image registration in
planning the external irradiation of gynaecological tumours.
Most demonstrate feasibility, but they fail to quantify the
improvement for volume definition compared to the use of CT
alone. Finally, recent possibilities offered by MRI technology
are promising in the area of brachytherapy planning as the full
potential of individually defining and evaluating GTV and CTV
based on tumour extent and anatomical structures is exploited.
Author
I Barillot and A Reynaud-Bougnoux
Contact Details
Corresponding address: Dr I Barillot,
Clinique d'Oncologie et Radiotherapie,
Centre Regional Universitaire de Cancerologie Henry S Kaplan,
Hopital Bretonneau, Bd Tonnelle,
37000 Tours, France
Reference
ICIS Cancer Imaging Volume 6 Issue 1
DOI: 10.1102/1470-7330.2006.0016
Date Posted
22 June 2006
Open Access is provided for this article.
Screen PDF
Size
596.19 KB
Minimum Estimated Download Times
ADSL 2Mb/s (Broadband): |
2 seconds |
ADSL 512Kb/s (Broadband): |
9 seconds |
64 Kb/s (ISDN): |
1 minute 14 seconds |
33.3 Kb/s (Typical Modem): |
2 minutes 23 seconds |
Print PDF
Size
1.84 MB
Minimum Estimated Download Times
ADSL 2Mb/s (Broadband): |
7 seconds |
ADSL 512Kb/s (Broadband): |
29 seconds |
64 Kb/s (ISDN): |
3 minutes 55 seconds |
33.3 Kb/s (Typical Modem): |
7 minutes 32 seconds |
|