Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Monday
May 09
09:00 - 10:00
Poster Station 1
17: Treatment planning
Christoph Schneider, The Netherlands
3160
Poster Discussion
Physics
Parameters influencing inter-Institute variability in KB plan prediction models for whole breast RT
PD-0733

Abstract

Parameters influencing inter-Institute variability in KB plan prediction models for whole breast RT
Authors:

alessia tudda1, Roberta Castriconi1, Giovanna Benecchi2, Elisabetta Cagni3, Francesca Dusi4, Pier Giorgio Esposito1, Giulia Rambaldi Guidasci5, Marika Guernieri6, Anna Ianiro7, Valeria Landoni7, Aldo Mazzilli2, Eugenia Moretti6, Caterina Oliviero8, Lorenzo Placidi9, Tiziana Rancati10, Valeria Trojani3, Alessandro Scaggion4, Claudio Fiorino1

1IRCCS San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Medical Physics, milan, Italy; 2University Hospital of Parma AOUP, Medical Physics, parma, Italy; 3Azienda USL-IRCCS di Reggio Emilia, Medical Physics Unit, Department of Advanced Technology, reggio emilia, Italy; 4veneto institute of oncology IOV-IRCCS, Medical Physics, padova, Italy; 5Amethyst Radioterapia Italia, San Giovanni Calibita Fatebenefratelli Hospital, Medical Physics, rome, Italy; 6University Hospital of Udine, Medical Physics, udine, Italy; 7IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori Regina Elena, Medical Physics, rome, Italy; 8University Hospital Federico II, Medical Physics, naples, Italy; 9Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Agostino Gemelli IRCCS, Medical Physics, rome, Italy; 10Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Medical Physics, milan, Italy

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Purpose or Objective

Knowledge-based (KB) plan prediction models were used to assess differences of plan performances between institutes in the context of right whole breast (RWB) irradiation using tangential-fields (TF). The aim of the current investigation was to assess major quantitative parameters that influence inter-Institute variability, possibly suggesting robust and efficient metrics to estimate KB-model transferability. 

Material and Methods

Ten Institutions set RWB-TF KB models by using RapidPlan (Varian Inc., V.16.1 and earlier), following previously shared methods as same, number of patients (> 70), contouring (national guidelines for CTV/PTV/OARs), techniques (wedged or FiF) and outlier elimination criteria. Two patients of each center (in total n=20, external from the training sets) were used to perform cross validation test using a dedicated Eclipse research station (V.16.1): DVH’s prediction bands of OARs (heart, ipsilateral lung, contralateral lung, contralateral breast) predicted from the 10 models (normalized to 40Gy/15 fraction scheme) were exported and inter-institute variability was quantified by looking to SD of several DVH and dose/statistics parameters. Varian Model Analytics, software was used for seven models (only available for earlier V16.1 version) to quantify the distribution of anatomical (PTV/OARs volumes: Vol) and dosimetric (PTV V95%, D99%, Dmax, SD: PTV_dose) parameters referred to the original training data sets. Then, the Principal Component (PC) of GED (Geometry-based Expected Dose) was derived from a “test KB model” based on the 20 patients considered in the cross-validation; in the same patients, the portion of the right lung in field (dC) along the isocentric axial slice was also quantified. The association between inter-institute variability of the predicted mean ipsilateral lung doses (Dmean) and Vol, PTV_dose and PC, PTV_dose and dC was investigated

Results


Dosimetry/anatomical parameters showed different distributions for the seven models in the original data sets. In particular, one center always showed no overlap between PTV and ipsilateral lung. For the remaining 6 models, there was a clear association between ipsilateral lung average Dmean value and the PTV median value of D99%, as shown in Figure 1 (R2=0.78), with average values of Dmean ranging between 4.7 and 6.1 Gy. PC and dC analyses didn’t show correlation between individual geometrical/anatomical features and inter-institute SD of Dmean, as summarized in Figure 2: the mean value of SD was 13.2%. 

Conclusion

The different attitudes in handling PTV dose coverage in RWB-TF reflects into mild/moderate differences in sparing ipsilateral lung between Institutes. Inter-institute variability in lung dose prediction appears to have no relevant dependence on patient's anatomy. This result, in addition to the limited variability between models in predicting ipsilateral lung DVH, suggests promising potential applications in multi-institutional benchmark models. This study is supported by an AIRC grant (IG23150).