Proton arc therapy and associated improvements in quality-adjusted life expectancy for head-and-neck cancer patients compared to volumetric modulated arc therapy and intensity-modulated proton therapy.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-17-2025

Publication Title

Physics in medicine and biology

Abstract

Objective.Proton arc therapy (PAT), which relies on target irradiation from arc trajectories rather than just a few angles, is currently under investigation and has demonstrated dosimetric benefits over current clinical intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT) in numerousin silicostudies. However, the resulting impact on the patient's quality-adjusted life expectancy (QALE), which takes into account quality-of-life reductions resulting from e.g. healthy tissue toxicities, remains to be investigated. This study aims to compare photon-based volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) to IMPT and PAT with respect to the associated QALE.Approach.For each of 20 patients with head-and-neck cancer, three treatment plans (VMAT, IMPT, and PAT) were generated, and a Markov model was constructed to simulate the associated QALE. The model-iterations of which have previously been used for comparisons of photon and proton therapy (but not PAT)-considered the calculated tumor control probability, the probability of healthy tissue toxicities, metastases, and/or secondary cancer, and death from primary cancer, secondary cancer, metastases, or unrelated causes. For all patients and treatment plans, 10 000 simulations of the patient's entire lifespan subsequently to treatment were performed.Main results.Mean values and standard deviations of IMPT and PAT QALE improvements relative to VMAT were (0.1 ± 0.2) quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and (0.3 ± 0.2) QALY, respectively. The highest benefits observed were 0.5 QALY in the case of IMPT and 1.0 QALYs in the case of PAT, equivalent to 6.0 months and 12.0 months of life in perfect health. Compared to IMPT, PAT improved QALE by up to 0.8 QALYs (9.6 months; (0.2 ± 0.2) QALY).Significance.PAT was associated with higher QALE values in all 20 cases compared to VMAT and IMPT. In 12 cases, the QALE benefits of utilizing PAT rather than IMPT consistently exceeded the benefits of utilizing IMPT rather than VMAT.

Volume

70

Issue

24

DOI

10.1088/1361-6560/ae2739

ISSN

1361-6560

PubMed ID

41330265

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