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- Title
Visualising the proximal urethra by MRI voiding scan: results of a prospective clinical trial evaluating a novel approach to radiotherapy simulation for prostate cancer.
- Authors
Blitzer, Grace C.; Yadav, Poonam; Ko, Huaising C.; Kuczmarska-Haas, Aleksandra; Burr, Adam M.; Bassetti, Michael F.; Steinhoff, Daniel J.; Borchert, Kailee N.; Meudt, Jason J.; Hebel, Dustin J.; Bailey, Stephanie K.; Morris, Zachary S.
- Abstract
Background: Delineating the proximal urethra can be critical for radiotherapy planning but is challenging on computerised tomography (CT) imaging. Materials and methods: We trialed a novel non-invasive technique to allow visualisation of the proximal urethra using a rapid sequence magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) protocol to visualise the urinary flow in patients voiding during the simulation scan. Results: Of the seven patients enrolled, four were able to void during the MRI scan. For these four patients, direct visualisation of urinary flow through the proximal urethra was achieved. The average volume of the proximal urethra contoured on voiding MRI was significantly higher than the proximal urethra contoured on CT, 4·07 and 1·60 cc, respectively (p = 0·02). The proximal urethra location also differed; the Dice coefficient average was 0·28 (range 0–0·62). Findings: In this small, proof-of-concept prospective clinical trial, the volume and location of the proximal urethra differed significantly when contoured on a voiding MRI scan compared to that determined by a conventional CT simulation. The shape of the proximal urethra on voiding MRI may be more anatomically correct compared to the proximal urethra shape determined with a semi-rigid catheter in place.
- Subjects
URETHROGRAPHY; URETHRA; PREDICTIVE tests; CLINICAL trials; URINATION; MAGNETIC resonance imaging; COMPUTED tomography; PROSTATE tumors; RADIATION dosimetry; LONGITUDINAL method
- Publication
Journal of Radiotherapy in Practice, 2022, Vol 21, Issue 4, p472
- ISSN
1460-3969
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S1460396921000157