Background & purpose: Involved internal iliac and obturator lateral lymph nodes (LLNs) are a known risk factor for ipsi-lateral local recurrences (LLR) in rectal cancer. This study examined... Show moreBackground & purpose: Involved internal iliac and obturator lateral lymph nodes (LLNs) are a known risk factor for ipsi-lateral local recurrences (LLR) in rectal cancer. This study examined coverage of LLNs with routine radiotherapy practice in the Netherlands and associated LLR rates. Materials & methods: Patients with a primary tumor ≤8cm of the anorectal junction, cT3-4 stage and at least one internal iliac or obturator LLN with short-axis ≥5mm who received neoadjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy, were selected from a national, cross-sectional study of rectal cancer patients treated in the Netherlands in 2016. MR-images and radiotherapy treatment plans were reviewed regarding segmented LLNs as gross-tumor volume (GTV), location of LLNs within clinical target volume (CTV), and received proportion of the planned radiotherapy dose. Results: A total of 223 out of 3057 patients with at least one LLN ≥5mm were selected. Of those, 180 (80.7%) LLNs were inside the CTV, of which 60 (33.3%) were segmented as GTV. Overall, 202 LLNs (90.6%) received >95% of the planned dose. Four-year LLR rates were not significantly higher for LLNs situated outside the CTV compared to inside (4.0% vs. 12.5%, p=.092) or when receiving <95% versus >95% of the planned radiotherapy dose (7.1% vs. 11.3%, p=.843), respectively. Two of seven patients who received a dose-escalation of 60Gy developed a LLR (4-year LLR rate 28.6%). Conclusion: This evaluation of routine radiotherapy practice showed that adequate coverage of LLNs was still associated with considerable 4-year LLR rates. Techniques resulting in better local control for patients with involved LLNs need to be explored further. Show less
Background and purposeAccurate delineation of the primary tumour is vital to the success of radiotherapy and even more important for successful boost strategies, aiming for improved local control... Show moreBackground and purposeAccurate delineation of the primary tumour is vital to the success of radiotherapy and even more important for successful boost strategies, aiming for improved local control in oesophageal cancer patients. Therefore, the aim was to assess delineation variability of the gross tumour volume (GTV) between CT and combined PET-CT in oesophageal cancer patients in a multi-institutional study.Materials and methodsTwenty observers from 14 institutes delineated the primary tumour of 6 cases on CT and PET-CT fusion. The delineated volumes, generalized conformity index (CIgen) and standard deviation (SD) in position of the most cranial/caudal slice over the observers were evaluated. For the central delineated region, perpendicular distance between median surface GTV and each individual GTV was evaluated as in-slice SD.ResultsAfter addition of PET, mean GTVs were significantly smaller in 3 cases and larger in 1 case. No difference in CIgen was observed (average 0.67 on CT, 0.69 on PET-CT). On CT cranial-caudal delineation variation ranged between 0.2 and 1.5 cm SD versus 0.2 and 1.3 cm SD on PET-CT. After addition of PET, the cranial and caudal variation was significantly reduced in 1 and 2 cases, respectively. The in-slice SD was on average 0.16 cm in both phases.ConclusionIn some cases considerable GTV delineation variability was observed at the cranial-caudal border. PET significantly influenced the delineated volume in four out of six cases, however its impact on observer variation was limited. Show less