The different dose-volume effects of normal tissue complication probability using lasso for acute small-bowel toxicity during radiotherapy in gynecological patients with or without prior abdominal surgery

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Abstract

Purpose. To develop normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) model with least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) to analyze dose-volume effects that influence the incidence of acute diarrhea among gynecological patients with/without prior abdominal surgery. Methods and Materials. Ninety-five patients receiving gynecologic radiotherapy (RT) were enrolled. The endpoint was defined as the grade 2+ acute diarrhea toxicity during treatment. We obtained the range of small-bowel volume in V4 Gy to V40 Gy of dose. Results. The number of patients experiencing grade 2+ acute diarrhea toxicity was 23/61 (38%) in the group without abdominal surgery (group 0) and 17/34 (50%) patients with abdominal surgery (group 1). The most significant predictor was found for the logistic NTCP model with V16 Gy as the cutoff dose for group 0 and V40 Gy for group 1. Logistic regression NTCP model parameters were TV≈ 290 cc for V16 Gy and TV≈ 75 cc for V40 Gy, respectively. Conclusion. To keep the incidence of grade 2+ acute small-bowel toxicity below 10%, we suggest that small-bowel volume above the prescription dose (V16 Gy) should be held to <290 cc for patients without abdominal surgery, and the prescription dose (V40 Gy) should be maintained <75 cc for patients with abdominal surgery.

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Lee, T. F., & Huang, E. Y. (2014). The different dose-volume effects of normal tissue complication probability using lasso for acute small-bowel toxicity during radiotherapy in gynecological patients with or without prior abdominal surgery. BioMed Research International, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/143020

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