Time and dose-related changes in lung perfusion after definitive radiotherapy for NSCLC

Authors Farr KP, Khalil AA, Møller DS, Bluhme H, Kramer S, Morsing A, Grau C.
Source Radiother Oncol. 2018 Feb;126(2):307-311 Publicationdate 01 Dec 2017
Abstract

Abstract

Background and purpose: To examine radiation-induced changes in regional lung perfusion per dose level in 58 non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients treated with intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT).

Material and methods: NSCLC patients receiving chemo-radiotherapy (RT) of minimum 60 Gy were included prospectively in the study. Lung perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT/CT) was performed before and serially after RT. Changes (relative to baseline, %) in regional lung perfusion were correlated with regional dose. Toxicity outcome was radiation pneumonitis (RP) CTC grades 2-5.

Results: Perfusion changes were associated with dose. Dose-dependent reduction in regional perfusion was observed at 3, 6 and 12 months of follow-up. Relative perfusion loss per dose bin was 4% at 1 month, 14% at 3 months, 13% at 6 months and 21% at 12 months after RT. In patients with RP, perfusion reduction was larger in high dose lung regions, compared to those without RP. Low dose regions, on the contrary, revealed perfusion gain in the patients with RP.

Conclusion: Progressive dose dependent perfusion loss is manifested on SPECT up to 12 months following IMRT. These findings suggest that the dynamic change in perfusion may have prognostic value in predicting radiation pneumonitis in NSCLC patients treated with IMRT.