Pediatric Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Radiotherapy Delivery in Deep Inspiration for Pediatric Patients: TEDDI - a NOPHO Feasibility Study
TEDDI is a non-randomised phase II trial in Scandinavia. All pediatric patients, referred for
radiotherapy in the thorax or abdomen and irrespective of diagnosis, are eligible.
Deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) is a simple radiotherapy technique, which could have a
dramatic impact on the risk of late effects in children. In DIBH, the radiotherapy is
delivered while the patient holds his/her breath (4-6 sequential breath-holds). The anatomy
is changed and imaging artifacts from respiratory movement are diminished. DIBH is widely
used in adult patients with breast cancer and mediastinal lymphoma to minimize the risk of
radiation-induced late effects due to a reduced dose to the healthy organs. Also, the
technique is simple and cost-efficient.
For pediatric patients, the investigators aim to:
- Estimate the dosimetric benefit of radiotherapy using DIBH compared to free-breathing
- Establish the compliance of DIBH
- Determine if DIBH is an accurate and reproducible strategy
- Optimize treatment planning considering the risk from loss of tumour control as well as
the risk of late effects.
Background:
The majority (approximately 80%) of pediatric patients with cancer become long-term
survivors. Long-term follow-up of childhood cancer survivors has documented a substantial
treatment-induced increased mortality and morbidity, primarily from cardiovascular disease
and second cancers. Specifically, cardiac mortality has been shown to be 5-fold higher,
cardiac morbidity 2-fold to 6-fold higher, and the incidence of second cancers 8-fold higher
in childhood cancer survivors compared to the general population or siblings. Due to the
young age at diagnosis and corresponding long life expectancy of pediatric patients the
impact of late effect(s) on patient quality of life, morbidity, and ultimately mortality is
non-trivial.
Radiotherapy-induced late effects are severe, yet difficult to assess and quantify as they
occur late and, therefore, often are the results of treatment regimens now considered
outdated. Nonetheless, the risk of radiation-induced late effects is known to be influenced
by both the radiation dose and the volume of irradiated tissue. In adults, the use of more
conformal radiotherapy delivery techniques and breathing adaptation has been introduced in
order to limit the irradiation of the surrounding healthy organs. However, there has been a
reluctance to implement new radiotherapy delivery techniques in the treatment of pediatric
patients as late effects data are not available for these new techniques and for the fear of
a low compliance with breathing instructions.
Deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) is a simple radiotherapy technique, which could have a
dramatic impact on late effects in children. In DIBH, the radiotherapy is delivered while the
patient holds his/her breath (defined as 4 to 6 sequential breath-holds of ≥20 sec). In deep
inspiration, the patient anatomy is changed and imaging artifacts from respiratory movement
are diminished as the organs are not moving. Radiotherapy in DIBH can reduce the irradiation
of the heart, breasts, and lungs without impacting the delivered radiation dose to the tumor
and with no detriment to other healthy organs. Also, the technique is simple and
cost-efficient. DIBH is widely used throughout the world in adult patients with left-sided
breast cancer and with mediastinal lymphoma to minimize the risk of radiation-induced late
effects.
The Department of Radiation Oncology at Rigshospitalet has pioneered the use of DIBH in the
treatment of patients with breast cancer and mediastinal lymphoma [Korreman et al., Pedersen
et al.] and is currently prospectively testing the DIBH technique in a more frail population
of lung cancer patients. The department has extensive experience in the daily delivery and
patient coaching of adult patients. While the experience from several centers confirms that
the compliance of adult patients to DIBH is excellent, no reports exist of the applicability
of DIBH to pediatric patients, especially the very young.
The investigators hypothesize that TEDDI is a feasible and reproducible strategy which will
result in a 25% reduction in the mean radiation dose to the heart in pediatric patients
referred for radiotherapy to tumors in the thorax or abdomen. This is expected to be true for
all pediatric patients, regardless of age.
Through TEDDI, the investigators specifically aim to:
- Estimate the dosimetric benefit of radiotherapy using DIBH compared to free-breathing in
pediatric patients.
- Establish the compliance of DIBH in pediatric patients in all age groups.
- Determine if DIBH is an accurate and reproducible strategy for pediatric patients.
Key research questions:
1. What is the extent of the dosimetric benefit of DIBH compared to free-breathing
radiotherapy? For adult patients with breast cancer, malignant lymphoma, and lung
cancer, radiotherapy delivered in DIBH compared to free-breathing significantly lowers
the dose to the heart, lungs, and stomach. However, for very young patients the
anatomical changes (i.e. inflation of the lungs, increased separation of the heart and
the tumor) might be less pronounced than for adults hampering the dosimetric advantage
of DIBH.
Hypothesis 1 (H1): For more than 75% of patients, treatment in DIBH will be
dosimetrically superior to treatment in free-breathing.
2. Is DIBH well tolerated by pediatric patients throughout their treatment? At present, the
information material regarding DIBH and the visual feedback equipment (consisting of
video goggles) is designed for and aimed at adult patients. In TEDDI, all aspects of the
current DIBH workflow will be adapted in order to provide a comfortable setting for
pediatric patients. Based on preliminary tests on healthy volunteers, children as young
as 5 years are able to comply with the DIBH instructions given by the present visual
feedback equipment.
Hypothesis 2 (H2): over 90% of pediatric patients older than 5 years can perform a
stable and comfortable DIBH (in the form of 4 to 6 sequential breath-holds of ≥20 sec)
through their course of radiotherapy.
3. Can the prescribed radiation dose be delivered accurately and reproducibly to the tumor
in DIBH? Interfraction monitoring will ensure reliable treatment between treatment days
using the RPM system, and intrafraction monitoring will assess the stability of the
patient positioning/breath-hold during the treatment. Image acquisition parameters will
be optimized to provide sufficient image quality at the lowest possible radiation
exposure.
Hypothesis 3 (H3): The tumor position will be reproducible from day to day, as well as from
breath-hold to breath-hold. Variations in position will be less than 5 mm over the whole
treatment course.
Treatment planning:
All diagnostic imaging during treatment and treatment planning will be performed according to
national guidelines (as per cancer diagnosis). For the radiotherapy planning, a planning CT
scan will be performed in DIBH as well as in free-breathing for each patient. On both scans
the gross tumor volume (GTV), the clinical target volume (CTV) which comprises the GTV
adjusted for normal tissue, and the planning target volume (PTV) which is the CTV including a
planning margin, will be defined. All relevant, healthy organs at risk from radiation
exposure will be contoured (e.g. heart, female breasts, lungs, esophagus, thyroid, salivary
glands, spinal cord, bone marrow, stomach, spleen, kidneys, liver). A DIBH and a
free-breathing radiotherapy plan will be calculated, both with similar planning objectives
for the tumor and organs at risk. All DIBH treatment plans will be designed to keep the
number of breath-holds per fraction as low as reasonably achievable (including image
guidance) for patient comfort.
Whenever a PET scanning is considered an integral part of the radiotherapy planning, a PET
scanning should also be performed in the treatment position in both DIBH and in
free-breathing for optimal image fusion. However, for institutions where this is not
feasible, participation in TEDDI is still possible.
Treatment delivery:
Patients will be treated in DIBH, if the calculated treatment plan in DIBH is superior to the
treatment plan in free-breathing with respect to the lowest overall dose to the organs at
risk while maintaining acceptable tumor coverage. Coverage of the CTV and PTV will have the
highest priority, as per ICRU83 guidelines.
Follow-up:
Enrollment in TEDDI will not affect the standard follow-up program of pediatric patients
which is diagnosis specific.
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