Dose prescription for stereotactic body radiotherapy

  • Thomas B Brunner
  • Judit Boda-Heggemann
  • Daniel Bürgy
  • Stefanie Corradini
  • Ute Karin Dieckmann
  • Ahmed Gawish
  • Sabine Gerum
  • Eleni Gkika
  • Maximilian Grohmann
  • Juliane Hörner-Rieber
  • Simon Kirste
  • Rainer J Klement
  • Christos Moustakis
  • Ursula Nestle
  • Maximilian Niyazi
  • Alexander Rühle
  • Stephanie-Tanadini Lang
  • Peter Winkler
  • Brigitte Zurl
  • Andrea Wittig-Sauerwein
  • Oliver Blanck

Abstract

PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVE: To develop expert consensus statements on multiparametric dose prescriptions for stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) aligning with ICRU report 91. These statements serve as a foundational step towards harmonizing current SBRT practices and refining dose prescription and documentation requirements for clinical trial designs.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Based on the results of a literature review by the working group, a two-tier Delphi consensus process was conducted among 24 physicians and physics experts from three European countries. The degree of consensus was predefined for overarching (OA) and organ-specific (OS) statements (≥ 80%, 60-79%, < 60% for high, intermediate, and poor consensus, respectively). Post-first round statements were refined in a live discussion for the second round of the Delphi process.

RESULTS: Experts consented on a total of 14 OA and 17 OS statements regarding SBRT of primary and secondary lung, liver, pancreatic, adrenal, and kidney tumors regarding dose prescription, target coverage, and organ at risk dose limitations. Degree of consent was ≥ 80% in 79% and 41% of OA and OS statements, respectively, with higher consensus for lung compared to the upper abdomen. In round 2, the degree of consent was ≥ 80 to 100% for OA and 88% in OS statements. No consensus was reached for dose escalation to liver metastases after chemotherapy (47%) or single-fraction SBRT for kidney primaries (13%). In round 2, no statement had 60-79% consensus.

CONCLUSION: In 29 of 31 statements a high consensus was achieved after a two-tier Delphi process and one statement (kidney) was clearly refused. The Delphi process was able to achieve a high degree of consensus for SBRT dose prescription. In summary, clear recommendations for both OA and OS could be defined. This contributes significantly to harmonization of SBRT practice and facilitates dose prescription and reporting in clinical trials investigating SBRT.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0179-7158
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 09.2024

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2024. The Author(s).

PubMed 38997440