Background and purpose Total marrow and lymphoid irradiation (TMLI) planning is challenging. This study evaluates whether a knowledge-based (KB) model for TMLI delivered using volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) can achieve clinically acceptable dose distributions through fully or semi-automated optimization and whether a single model is effective across varying patient anatomies. Materials and methods Fifty-one consecutive VMAT-TMLI patients were selected. A KB model was trained using 30 patients treated with standard configurations (5 body isocenters). Validation included two cohorts: 10 standard patients and 11 patients with a larger anatomy treated using separate isocenters for the arms (4 body and 2 arms isocenters). Two planning approaches were explored: fully automated (AutoKB), and KB with manual adjustments (HybridKB) by a planner with no prior experience in TMLI. KB plans were evaluated against clinical plans (CPs) using paired t-tests. Results The KB model reduced mean doses to major organs-at-risk (OARs). For standard configurations, mean OAR doses were 71% +/- 2%, 66% +/- 2%, and 66% +/- 2% for CP, AutoKB, and HybridKB (both p < 0.01). For larger patients, the corresponding values were 75% +/- 3%, 69% +/- 2%, and 68% +/- 2% (both p < 0.01). D2% of the planning target volume increased in AutoKB, reaching 122% +/- 2% (p < 0.001) vs. 117% +/- 3% in CP for standard configurations, and 126% +/- 2% (p < 0.001) vs. 117% +/- 3% in CP for arms configurations. HybridKB was on par with CPs. Conclusions A single KB model enabled effective planning for multi-isocenter TMLI, including anatomies requiring separate isocenters for the arms. Fully automated KB provided suboptimal dose distributions. KB with manual refinements reduced planner dependence and improved plan quality.
Knowledge-based model for automated multi-isocenter total marrow and lymphoid irradiation planning across standard and large patient anatomies
Lambri, Nicola;Dei, Damiano;Franzese, Ciro;Scorsetti, Marta;Mancosu, Pietro
2025-01-01
Abstract
Background and purpose Total marrow and lymphoid irradiation (TMLI) planning is challenging. This study evaluates whether a knowledge-based (KB) model for TMLI delivered using volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) can achieve clinically acceptable dose distributions through fully or semi-automated optimization and whether a single model is effective across varying patient anatomies. Materials and methods Fifty-one consecutive VMAT-TMLI patients were selected. A KB model was trained using 30 patients treated with standard configurations (5 body isocenters). Validation included two cohorts: 10 standard patients and 11 patients with a larger anatomy treated using separate isocenters for the arms (4 body and 2 arms isocenters). Two planning approaches were explored: fully automated (AutoKB), and KB with manual adjustments (HybridKB) by a planner with no prior experience in TMLI. KB plans were evaluated against clinical plans (CPs) using paired t-tests. Results The KB model reduced mean doses to major organs-at-risk (OARs). For standard configurations, mean OAR doses were 71% +/- 2%, 66% +/- 2%, and 66% +/- 2% for CP, AutoKB, and HybridKB (both p < 0.01). For larger patients, the corresponding values were 75% +/- 3%, 69% +/- 2%, and 68% +/- 2% (both p < 0.01). D2% of the planning target volume increased in AutoKB, reaching 122% +/- 2% (p < 0.001) vs. 117% +/- 3% in CP for standard configurations, and 126% +/- 2% (p < 0.001) vs. 117% +/- 3% in CP for arms configurations. HybridKB was on par with CPs. Conclusions A single KB model enabled effective planning for multi-isocenter TMLI, including anatomies requiring separate isocenters for the arms. Fully automated KB provided suboptimal dose distributions. KB with manual refinements reduced planner dependence and improved plan quality.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.