A radiotherapy technique for palliative total scalp irradiation
Introduction
Total scalp irradiation is used to treat different conditions: melanoma, lymphoma, angiosarcoma, mycosis fungoides, basal, and squamous cell carcinoma. Treatment of the total scalp is typically reserved for diffuse disease presentations and its intent, therefore, is most commonly palliative. Planning and delivering total scalp irradiation is technically challenging, in order to deliver a homogeneous dose to the scalp and meanwhile sparing the brain and all its healthy structures. Many techniques and different approaches have been described in the literature (1-8). More of these have been developed by photons obtaining a good conformation of dose to target and protection of surrounding normal tissue as well (9-13). However, despite new technology and technical solutions, megavoltage electron beams remain the traditional and most common choice for total scalp irradiation in elderly patients (13). To achieve a homogeneous dose distribution, the latter requires normal incidence with respect to the treatment surface. Thus, because of the scalp’s shape does not permit normal incidence by a single electron field, several electron beams techniques have been developed to solve the problem of the electron beam junctions (1-5).
Hereby we describe a 3D conformal radiotherapy technique using electron beams when the treatment has a palliative intent.
Case report
A 77-year-old patient with previous stroke, cardiological and pneumological comorbidities, suffering from squamous cell carcinoma of the scalp (G1 infiltrating the dermis and hypodermis), presented to our department for radiation therapy. Based on the clinical condition and on the spread of tumoral disease, the intent of radiotherapy was palliative.
On clinical examination of the scalp, there was various skin lesions covered with crusts from which confluent serous material and blood emerged.
The patient was placed in prone position with a head holder and the arms along the body. An immobilizer for the feet has been used too. For the treatment planning, the scalp was divided into five regions, each of which was irradiated with 40 Gy (16 fractions, 2.5 Gy/day). The treatment planning consists in five 6 MV electron fields with 1 cm junction: two lateral fields [gantry angle (GA), 90° and 270° with couch rotation (CR) =0°] and three “apical” fields placed as: GR 270°, 300°, 0° with CR =270°, 270°, 0° respectively (Figure 1). The electron beams were delivered by using an A15 applicator and, for each field, personalized lead screens were employed (Figure 2). The field junctions were placed in healthy cutaneous tissue, to avoid the GTV underdosage.
Setup and treatment took about 10 minutes per day. Compared to other conformal techniques it is a standard treatment time, while using intensity-modulated radiotherapy techniques the delivery time can be a little higher, even if the volumetric-modulated arc therapy offer a shorter treatment time comparable to conformal techniques (11,13).
Before starting and at the end of radiation, the numerical scale of pain was used: no pain was grade 0, maximum pain was graded 10.
The 90% of the gross tumor volume (GTV) was covered by 85% of the prescribed dose, even if the field borders were not shifted during the course of the treatment. The axial dose distribution is showed in Figure 3. The 6 MV electron beams allow the sparing of the whole brain tissue (mean dose: 1.4 Gy).
Before RT, the patient had a normal blood count despite the scalp bleeding but declared a scalp pain (numeric scale 8) and no drugs for pain were used because the patient refused them. At the end of radiation treatment, he experienced a sorrow decrease (numeric scale 5). Moreover, radiotherapy stopped the bleeding and the serous material.
At the first follow-up (3 months after RT), the patient declared a stable of pain (VAS 4) without bleeding and a normal blood count. No drugs for pain were used.
Subsequently we have no more follow ups because the patient died due to cardiological problems.
Discussion
Basal cell and squamous cell carcinomas are common cutaneous epithelial cancers, but the scalp is one of the less common sites of appearance. Usually, the typical patient affected by this tumor is aged over 65 years old. The radiotherapy of the scalp is a very complex technique and different approaches have been described in the literature. Locke et al. (9) performed a treatment planning study by comparing the lateral photon-electron technique with serial tomotherapy planned for delivery on the Peacock system (Best Nomos Radiation Oncology, Sewickley, USA). The study concluded that although serial tomotherapy provided a more homogeneous dose distribution throughout the target volume, the doses to the eyes and brain were much higher. Orton et al. (10) compared helical tomotherapy (Tomotherapy, Inc., Madison, USA) with the lateral photon-electron technique. This study produced tomotherapy plans with a more uniform dose to the scalp and lower doses to the brain and eyes than the more conventional technique. Bedford et al. (11) compared IMRT with five fixed gantry angles to static electron and arcing electron techniques. As expected, the results indicated that IMRT provided superior target coverage of the treatment volume while the doses to the brain and eyes were higher, although clinically acceptable. Recently, Chan et al. (12) showed that the combined static electron fields with photon IMRT improved the target coverage homogeneity and reduced normal tissue doses when compared to the electron beam-only approach or photon IMRT alone. Wojcicka et al. (13) performed a treatment planning study by comparing the dosimetry of the lateral photon-electron, segmental photon IMRT and helmet mold-based HDR brachytherapy techniques. They found that IMRT provided the best target dose homogeneity and coverage, and delivered clinically acceptable doses to normal structures. HDR produced the most conformal plan, but the total dose delivered was limited by doses to the brain and eyes.
At the moment, although the different available techniques, the electron field radiotherapy is still considered as therapeutic modality (13). In particular, when multiple fields are needed, the normal approach is to shift the field borders during the course of treatment to match the adjacent electron fields and avoid target underdosage (2-5). Analyzing the few literature data about that kind of solution, a dose coverage ranging from 75% to 120% of prescribed dose was found (2,14). Zavgorodni et al. (14) achieved a dose covering range 85% to 110% by the application of a compensated SXR field eliminating low dose zones in the junction region and reduced high dose zones to 110%.
To our knowledge, this report is the first one that analyzed the palliative irradiation of the scalp, with the aim of reducing symptoms without using a very complex technique (saving time and labor). Thus, due to the palliative intent, the junctioning problems were not considered. Nevertheless, the obtained results demonstrated that the GTV was covered by the 85% of prescription dose and that the patient did not interrupted the planned treatment, experiencing a significant reduction of pain and interruption of bleeding.
Despite the spread of new technologies and the considerable problem of the adjacent fields matching, the scalp irradiation with electron field remains a useful treatment modality. Considering the lack of literature data about the palliative treatment approach, our data revealed that the palliative electron beam scalp irradiation, without considering the junction problem, is easy and effective in elderly patients for treating symptom and improving quality of life. Anyway, it is necessary to pay attention in positioning the field junction: it has not to be placed in critical regions, to avoid the GTV underdosage.
Acknowledgements
Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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