| Content Provider | Springer Nature : BioMed Central |
|---|---|
| Author | Sheikh, Khadija Daniel, Bruce L. Roumeliotis, Michael Lee, Junghoon Hrinivich, William T. Benkert, Thomas Bhat, Himanshu Seethamraju, Ravi T. Viswanathan, Akila N. Schmidt, Ehud J. |
| Abstract | Purpose To evaluate the relationship between delivered radiation (RT) and post-RT inversion-recovery ultrashort-echo-time (IR-UTE) MRI signal-intensity (SI) in gynecologic cancer patients treated with high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy (BT). Methods Seven patients underwent whole-pelvis RT (WPRT) followed by BT to the high-risk clinical target volume (HR-CTV). MR images were acquired at three time-points; pre-RT, post-WPRT/pre-BT, and 3–6 months post-BT. Diffuse-fibrosis (FDiffuse) was imaged with a non-contrast dual-echo IR (inversion time [TI] = 60 ms) UTE research application, with image-subtraction of the later echo, only retaining the ultrashort-echo SI. Dense-fibrosis (FDense) imaging utilized single-echo Late-Gadolinium-Enhanced IR-UTE, acquired ∼ 15 min post-Gadavist injection. Resulting FDiffuse and FDense SI were normalized to the corresponding gluteal-muscle SI. Images were deformably registered between time-points based on normal tissue anatomy. The remnant tumor at both time-points was segmented using multi-parametric MRI. Contours corresponding to the 50%, 100%, 150%, and 200% isodose lines (IDLs) of the prescription BT-dose were created. Mean FDiffuse and FDense SI within (i) each IDL contour and (ii) the remnant tumor were calculated. Post-BT FDiffuse and FDense SI were correlated with prescribed BT-dose. To determine the relationship between BT-dose and IR-UTE SI, the differences in the post-BT FDense across IDLs was determined using paired t-tests with Bonferroni correction. Results FDense was higher in regions of higher dose for 6/7 patients, with mean ± SD values of 357 ± 103% and 331 ± 97% (p = .03) in the 100% and 50% IDL, respectively. FDense was higher in regions of higher dose in the responsive regions with mean ± SD values of 380 ± 122% and 356 ± 135% (p = .03) in the 150% and 50% IDL, respectively. Within the segmented remnant tumor, an increase in prescribed dose correlated with an increase in FDense post-BT (n = 5, r = .89, p = .04). Post-BT FDiffuse inversely correlated (n = 7, r = -.83, p = .02) with prescribed BT-dose within the 100% IDL. Conclusions Results suggest that FDense SI 3–6 months post-BT is a sensitive measure of tissue response to heterogeneous BT radiation-dose. Future studies will validate whether FDiffuse and FDense are accurate biomarkers of fibrotic radiation response. |
| Related Links | https://ro-journal.biomedcentral.com/counter/pdf/10.1186/s13014-024-02499-2.pdf |
| Ending Page | 10 |
| Page Count | 10 |
| Starting Page | 1 |
| File Format | HTM / HTML |
| DOI | 10.1186/s13014-024-02499-2 |
| Journal | Radiation Oncology |
| Issue Number | 1 |
| Volume Number | 19 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | BioMed Central |
| Publisher Date | 2024-08-06 |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Subject Keyword | Cancer Research Oncology Radiotherapy Imaging Radiology |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |
| Subject | Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging Oncology |
| Journal Impact Factor | 3.3/2023 |
| 5-Year Journal Impact Factor | 3.6/2023 |
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