Background: Radiation-induced hypothyroidism is a common toxicity of head and neck radiation. Our re-planning study aimed to reduce thyroid dose while maintaining target coverage with IMRT.
Methods: We retrospectively identified patients with oral-cavity (n = 5) and oropharyngeal cancer (n = 5). Treatment plans were re-optimized with 45 Gy thyroid mean dose constraint, then we cropped the thyroid out of PTVs and further reduced thyroid dose. Target coverage was delivering 100% dose to ≥ 93% of PTV and 95% of dose to > 99% of PTV.
Results: Originally, average mean dose to thyroid was 5580 cGy. In model I, this dropped to 4325 cGy (p < 0.0001). In model II, average mean dose was reduced to 3154 cGy (p < 0.0001). For PTV low and PTV int, all had acceptable target coverage.
Conclusion: In patients with oral-cavity and oropharyngeal cancers, mean dose could be significantly reduced using a thyroid-optimized or thyroid-sparing IMRT technique with adequate coverage.
Keywords: Hypothyroidism; Intensity-modulated radiotherapy; Radiation toxicity; Thyroid-optimized; Thyroid-sparing.
© 2021 The Authors.