[HTML][HTML] Application of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure for Thoracic Respiratory Motion Management: An Assessment in a Magnetic Resonance Imaging–Guided …

E Liang, JL Dolan, ED Morris, J Vono, LF Bazan… - Advances in Radiation …, 2022 - Elsevier
E Liang, JL Dolan, ED Morris, J Vono, LF Bazan, M Lu, CK Glide-Hurst
Advances in Radiation Oncology, 2022Elsevier
Purpose Patient tolerability of magnetic resonance (MR)–guided radiation treatment delivery
is limited by the need for repeated deep inspiratory breath holds (DIBHs). This volunteer
study assessed the feasibility of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) with and
without DIBH for respiratory motion management during radiation treatment with an MR-
linear accelerator (MR-linac). Methods and Materials MR imaging safety was first addressed
by placing the CPAP device in an MR-safe closet and configuring a tube circuit via …
Purpose
Patient tolerability of magnetic resonance (MR)–guided radiation treatment delivery is limited by the need for repeated deep inspiratory breath holds (DIBHs). This volunteer study assessed the feasibility of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) with and without DIBH for respiratory motion management during radiation treatment with an MR-linear accelerator (MR-linac).
Methods and Materials
MR imaging safety was first addressed by placing the CPAP device in an MR-safe closet and configuring a tube circuit via waveguide to the magnet bore. Reproducibility and linearity of the final configuration were assessed. Six healthy volunteers underwent thoracic imaging in a 0.35T MR-linac, with one free breathing (FB) and 2 DIBH acquisitions being obtained at 5 pressures from 0 to 15 cm-H2O. Lung and heart volumes and positions were recorded; repeatability was assessed by comparing 2 consecutive DIBH scans. Blinded reviewers graded images for motion artifact using a 3-point grading scale. Participants completed comfort and perception surveys before and after imaging sessions.
Results
Compared with FB alone, FB-10, FB-12, and FB-15 cm H2O significantly increased lung volumes (+23%, +34%, +44%; all P <.05) and inferiorly displaced the heart (0.86 cm, 0.96 cm, 1.18 cm; all P < . 05). Lung volumes were significantly greater with DIBH-0 cm H2O compared with FB-15 cm H2O (+105% vs +44%, P = .01), and DIBH-15 cm H2O yielded additional volume increase (+131% vs +105%, P = .01). Adding CPAP to DIBH decreased lung volume differences between consecutive breath holds (correlation coefficient 0.97 at 15 cm H2O vs 0.00 at 0 cm H2O). The addition of 15 cm H2O CPAP reduced artifact scores (P = .03) compared with FB; all DIBH images (0-15 cm H2O) had less artifact (P < .01).
Conclusions
This work demonstrates the feasibility of integrating CPAP in an MR-linac environment in healthy volunteers. Extending this work to a larger patient cohort is warranted to further establish the role of CPAP as an alternative and concurrent approach to DIBH in MR-guided radiation therapy.
Elsevier