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Title: Daily online adaptation enhances target coverage in prostate cancer radiotherapy: a retrospective analysis
Author(s): Malygina, Hanna
Salazar Zuniga, Bryan
Auerbach, Hendrik
Ries, Marc
Dzierma, Yvonne
Hecht, Markus
Palm, Jan
Language: English
Title: Frontiers in Oncology
Volume: 15
Publisher/Platform: Frontiers
Year of Publication: 2025
Free key words: prostate cancer
online adaptive radiotherapy (oART)
Varian Ethos
dosimetric impact
dosimetric distribution
organs-at-risk sparing
CBCT
DDC notations: 610 Medicine and health
Publikation type: Journal Article
Abstract: Introduction: Online adaptive radiotherapy aims to improve treatment quality by accounting for inter-fractional variation in anatomy. This study presents a quantitative comparison between adapted and non-adapted scheduled plans with identical margins in a real-world clinical setting. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 422 fractions from 43 patients with prostate cancer treated with the Varian Ethos system. All patients received hypofractionated treatment with 3 Gy per fraction up to a cumulative dose of 60Gy.Foreachfraction, the scheduled plan (planned on planning CT, calculated onsynthetic CT derived from daily cone beam CT) was compared tothe adapted plan (planned and calculated on actual daily anatomy) by means of several dose volume metrics. Comparative statistics regarding dose-volume metrics were performed using Wilcoxon signed-rank test for paired data with a two sided hypothesis. Results: Adapted plans delivered significantly better target coverage, conformality, and homo-geneity than scheduled plans. The constraints D95% ≥ 95% and V95% ≥ 95% were met in 418 out of 422 fractions with the adapted plan, compared to only 41%-84% of fractions with the scheduled plan. Median absolute improvements for these metrics ranged between 1.5 and 6.0 percentage points. Most organ-at-risk metrics remained unchanged or showed only minor differences. Interquartile ranges decreased across all metrics. Conclusions: Adaptation significantly improved target dose metrics compared to non-adapted plans, without compromising organs-at-risk sparing. Interquartile ranges were reduced for all metrics evidencing better repeatability of adapted plans.
DOI of the first publication: 10.3389/fonc.2025.1662671
URL of the first publication: https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2025.1662671
Link to this record: urn:nbn:de:bsz:291--ds-479250
hdl:20.500.11880/41915
ISSN: 2234-943X
Date of registration: 28-May-2026
Description of the related object: Supplementary material
Related object: https://public-pages-files-2025.frontiersin.org/articles/1662671/file/Data_Sheet_1.pdf/1662671_data-sheet_1/1
Faculty: M - Medizinische Fakultät
Department: M - Radiologie
Professorship: M - Prof. Dr. Markus Hecht
M - Prof. Dr. Christian Rübe
Collections:SciDok - Der Wissenschaftsserver der Universität des Saarlandes

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