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4D CBCT and Intrafractional Imaging for the Determination of the Most Representative 4D Simulation Planning Technique for Lung SBRT Technique Patients

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cancer of Lung
Interventions
Other: AIP CT
Other: FB (Free-Breathing) CT
Registration Number
NCT04717804
Lead Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Brief Summary

The researchers plan to investigate two ways of visualizing and planning to account for the respiratory motion which takes place while treating lung tumors with radiation therapy. The researchers will determine if a traditional snapshot (free-breathing) CT or a longer-lasting CT encompassing the breathing cycle better matches a patient's breathing during treatment.

Detailed Description

As part of this study the patient will receive the standard of care treatment of Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) approach for treatment of lung cancer. The study will compare whether the quick snapshot or longer-last image is more representative of breathing motion. The standard of care way to verify breathing is to use the Cone Beam Computerized Tomography (CBCT) before each treatment. For this study the researchers will use two other standard of care ways to verify breathing motion during treatment only during the first and last radiation treatment sessions. During the other radiation treatment sessions the CBCT alone will be used. These two other methods are FDA approved, but not routinely being used at the Mays Cancer Center. One method is called 4D-CBCT and is conducted immediately prior to treatment. This will create an image taken over a longer time of the patient's lungs which will be compared with the images from the CT Simulation used to plan the radiation. The other way is called Intrafractional CBCT and is imaging that is done at the same time as the radiation treatment delivery. This will show the researchers how the tumor is moving while the radiation treatment is taking place. These two methods require a longer treatment time, approximately 10 minutes during the first and last treatments.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
12
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age ≥ 18 years.
  • Ability to provide informed written consent in either English or Spanish.
  • Patients with cancer or presumed cancer involving the lung (primary or secondary) planned to undergo lung SBRT technique or IMRT technique with an SBRT setup in 10 or fewer fractions.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Current pregnancy, as this is a contraindication to receiving radiation therapy.
  • Patients to be treated to multiple targets concurrently.
  • Any condition or history as evidenced by patient record and/or self-report that, in the opinion of the investigator, would interfere with adherence to the prescribed pattern of radiation therapy.
  • Poor lung function, as judged by the prescribing radiation oncologist, sufficiently limiting to make the patient not a candidate for 4D imaging (for example major differences between the 4D and free-breathing CT scan).

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
AIP (Average Intensity Projection) CT (Computed Tomagraphy)AIP CTAn image taken over a longer time of the lungs (average intensity projection of 4DCT) will be compared with breathing during treatment.
FB (Free-Breathing) CTFB (Free-Breathing) CTA snapshot of breathing (free-breathing traditional CT) will be used to compare with breathing during treatment.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To investigate radiation therapy treatment tumor localization accuracy by determining whether the FB or AIP images is more representative of the target at treatment.2 weeks

This will be quantitively determined by quantifying the agreement between the two CT scans using the Dice coefficient (DSC) as a metric for localization accuracy.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Mays Cancer Center, UT Health San Antonio

🇺🇸

San Antonio, Texas, United States

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