The ESTRO Breur Lecture 2009. From population to voxel-based radiotherapy: Exploiting intra-tumour and intra-organ heterogeneity for advanced treatment of non-small cell lung cancer☆
Received 23 March 2010; received in revised form 7 July 2010; accepted 7 July 2010. published online 21 July 2010.
Abstract
Evidence is accumulating that radiotherapy of non-small cell lung cancer patients can be optimized by escalating the tumour dose until the normal tissue tolerances are met. To further improve the therapeutic ratio between tumour control probability and the risk of normal tissue complications, we firstly need to exploit inter patient variation. This variation arises, e.g. from differences in tumour shape and size, lung function and genetic factors. Secondly improvement is achieved by taking into account intra-tumour and intra-organ heterogeneity derived from molecular and functional imaging. Additional radiation dose must be delivered to those parts of the tumour that need it the most, e.g. because of increased radio-resistance or reduced therapeutic drug uptake, and away from regions inside the lung that are most prone to complication. As the delivery of these treatments plans is very sensitive for geometrical uncertainties, probabilistic treatment planning is needed to generate robust treatment plans. The administration of these complicated dose distributions requires a quality assurance procedure that can evaluate the treatment delivery and, if necessary, adapt the treatment plan during radiotherapy.
aDepartment of Radiation Oncology (MAASTRO), GROW-School for Oncology and Developmental Biology, Maastricht University Medical Centre, The Netherlands
bDepartment of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
cDepartment of Nuclear Medicine and PET Research, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
dDepartment of Nuclear Medicine, Institut Jules Bordet, Université Libre De Bruxelles (ULB), Brussels, Belgium
Corresponding author. Address: Department of Radiation Oncology (MAASTRO Clinic), GROW – School for Oncology and Developmental Biology, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Dr. Tanslaan 12, NL-6229 ET Maastricht, The Netherlands.
☆ Data presented during the Breur Lecture in Berlin (ECCO meeting 2009).