faculty

Publications

Optimal technique of radiotherapy for carcinoma cervix in developing countries: Dosimetric and logistic comparison

Groups and Associations T R Arul Ponni , H U Avinash, S Nirmala, M G Janaki , A S Kirthi Koushik
Journal of Cancer Research and Therapeutics 2018

Purpose: Carcinoma cervix is the most common malignancy affecting women in developing countries. Radical radiotherapy is the mainstay of treatment in more than 90% of patients. The present study is a dosimetric and logistic comparison of various techniques of radiotherapy, namely two-dimensional conventional radiotherapy (2DCRT), three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT), and intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT).

Methods: All the patients underwent contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) scans for simulation. 2DCRT, 3DCRT, and IMRT plans were generated in 24 patients and dosimetrically compared. Radiotherapy treatment time involved in each technique was analyzed in 27 treated patients.

Results: The planning target volume (PTV) coverage was best in 3DCRT technique with a median coverage of 99.9% as compared to IMRT (99.3%) and 2DCRT (82.2%). There was progressive sparing of all the organs at risk in IMRT as compared to 3DCRT. The total planning time was longest in IMRT (332.1 min) and shortest in 2DCRT (11.7 min). The mean treatment time for the delivery of each fraction of 2DCRT, 3DCRT, and IMRT were 14.3, 13.6, and 24.7 min, respectively.

Conclusion: 3DCRT technique is the most optimal technique for radical radiotherapy of cervical cancers with optimum PTV coverage, acceptable planning time, and minimal treatment time as compared to IMRT. 2DCRT technique should be limited to the setting where CT simulation is unavailable.