RESUMEN
Using Monte Carlo simulation and a realistic patient model, it is shown that the volume of healthy tissue irradiated at therapeutic doses can be drastically reduced using a combination of standard megavoltage and kilovoltage X-ray beams with a contrast agent previously loaded into the tumor, without the need to reduce standard treatment margins. Four-dimensional computed tomography images of 2 patients with a centrally located and a peripherally located tumor were obtained from a public database and subsequently used to plan robotic stereotactic body radiotherapy treatments. Two modalities are assumed: conventional high-energy stereotactic body radiotherapy and a treatment with contrast agent loaded in the tumor and a kilovoltage X-ray beam replacing the megavoltage beam (contrast-enhanced radiotherapy). For each patient model, 2 planning target volumes were designed: one following the recommendations from either Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) 0813 or RTOG 0915 task group depending on the patient model and another with a 2-mm uniform margin determined solely on beam penumbra considerations. The optimized treatments with RTOG margins were imparted to the moving phantom to model the dose distribution that would be obtained as a result of intrafraction motion. Treatment plans are then compared to the plan with the 2-mm uniform margin considered to be the ideal plan. It is shown that even for treatments in which only one-fifth of the total dose is imparted via the contrast-enhanced radiotherapy modality and with the use of standard treatment margins, the resultant absorbed dose distributions are such that the volume of healthy tissue irradiated to high doses is close to what is obtained under ideal conditions.