Med Phys
-
In prostate brachytherapy, post implant dosimetry quality parameters may be strongly affected by edema brought on by the trauma of the implant procedure since the amount of edema and the time course of its resolution are highly variable from patient to patient. Edema was simulated from preplans on three prostates which had ultrasound prostate volumes of 18.7, 40.7 and 60.2 cm3 expanded to planning volumes of 32.9, 60.0 and 87.8 cm3, respectively. The preplans were designed so that identical seed distributions for a given prostate gave virtually identical target dose coverage of 99.7+/-0.3% of the planning volume when using either 125I or 103Pd. ⋯ A greater fraction of the defined prostate volume received doses in the range of likely therapeutic significance, from 75% to 125% of the prescribed minimal peripheral dose (mPD), from 125I implants than from 103Pd implants. These differences in dosimetric quality arise from two differences in the physical properties of the isotopes: more rapid attenuation of 103Pd photons with distance creates cool spots in an edematous prostate, and the shorter half-life of 103Pd causes a greater fraction of the isotope decay to consist of the prostate in an edematous state. An increase in 103Pd seed strength by about 10% beyond that required to achieve equal coverage with an identical seed distribution using 125I should minimize the differences brought on by edema.