A new approach to quantifying lung damage after stereotactic body radiation therapy
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/0284186X.2010.541934Abstract
Radiological pneumonitis and fibrosis are common after stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) but current scoring systems are qualitative and subjective. We evaluated the use of CT density measurements and a deformable registration tool to quantitatively measure lung changes post-SBRT. Material and methods. Four-dimensional CT datasets from 25 patients were imported into an image analysis program. Deformable registration was done using a B-spline algorithm (VelocityAI) and evaluated by landmark matching. The effects of respiration, contrast, and CT scanner on density measurements were evaluated. The relationship between density and clinician-scored radiological pneumonitis was assessed. Results. Deformable registration resulted in more accurate image matching than rigid registration. CT lung density was maximal at end-expiration, and most deformation with breathing occurred in the lower thorax. Use of contrast increased mean lung density by 18 HU (range 16–20 HU; p = 0.004). Diagnostic scans had a lower mean lung density than planning scans (mean difference 57 HU in lung contralateral to tumor; p = 0.048). Post-treatment CT density measurements correlated strongly with clinician-scored radiological pneumonitis (r = 0.75; p < 0.001). Conclusions. Quantitative analysis of changes in lung density correlated strongly with physician-assigned radiologic pneumonitis scores. Deformable registration and CT density measurements permit objective assessment of treatment toxicity.