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Featured researches published by G. Schooneveldt.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2016

Hyperthermia treatment planning for cervical cancer patients based on electrical conductivity tissue properties acquired in vivo with EPT at 3 T MRI

Edmond Balidemaj; H. P. Kok; G. Schooneveldt; Astrid L.H.M.W. van Lier; R. F. Remis; Lukas J.A. Stalpers; Henrike Westerveld; Aart J. Nederveen; Cornelis A.T. van den Berg; J. Crezee

Abstract Introduction The reliability of hyperthermia treatment planning (HTP) is strongly dependent on the accuracy of the electric properties of each tissue. The values currently used are mostly based on ex vivo measurements. In this study, in vivo conductivity of human muscle, bladder content and cervical tumours, acquired with magnetic resonance-based electric properties tomography (MR-EPT), are exploited to investigate the effect on HTP for cervical cancer patients. Methods Temperature-based optimisation of five different patients was performed using literature-based conductivity values yielding certain antenna settings, which are then used to compute the temperature distribution of the patient models with EPT-based conductivity values. Furthermore, the effects of altered bladder and muscle conductivity were studied separately. Finally, the temperature-based optimisation was performed with patient models based on EPT conductivity values. Results The tumour temperatures for all EPT-based dielectric patient models were lower compared to the optimal tumour temperatures based on literature values. The largest deviation was observed for patient 1 with ΔT90 = −1.37 °C. A negative impact was also observed when the treatment was optimised based on the EPT values. For four patients ΔT90 was less than 0.6 °C; for one patient it was 1.5 °C. Conclusions Electric conductivity values acquired by EPT are higher than commonly used from literature. This difference has a substantial impact on cervical tumour temperatures achieved during hyperthermia. A higher conductivity in the bladder and in the muscle tissue surrounding the tumour leads to higher power dissipation in the bladder and muscle, and therefore to lower tumour temperatures.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2016

Thermal dosimetry for bladder hyperthermia treatment. An overview

G. Schooneveldt; Akke Bakker; Edmond Balidemaj; Rajiv Chopra; J. Crezee; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; Josefin Hartmann; Maarten C. C. M. Hulshof; H. Petra Kok; Margarethus M. Paulides; Alejandro Sousa-Escandon; Paul R. Stauffer; Paolo F. Maccarini

Abstract The urinary bladder is a fluid-filled organ. This makes, on the one hand, the internal surface of the bladder wall relatively easy to heat and ensures in most cases a relatively homogeneous temperature distribution; on the other hand the variable volume, organ motion, and moving fluid cause artefacts for most non-invasive thermometry methods, and require additional efforts in planning accurate thermal treatment of bladder cancer. We give an overview of the thermometry methods currently used and investigated for hyperthermia treatments of bladder cancer, and discuss their advantages and disadvantages within the context of the specific disease (muscle-invasive or non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer) and the heating technique used. The role of treatment simulation to determine the thermal dose delivered is also discussed. Generally speaking, invasive measurement methods are more accurate than non-invasive methods, but provide more limited spatial information; therefore, a combination of both is desirable, preferably supplemented by simulations. Current efforts at research and clinical centres continue to improve non-invasive thermometry methods and the reliability of treatment planning and control software. Due to the challenges in measuring temperature across the non-stationary bladder wall and surrounding tissues, more research is needed to increase our knowledge about the penetration depth and typical heating pattern of the various hyperthermia devices, in order to further improve treatments. The ability to better determine the delivered thermal dose will enable clinicians to investigate the optimal treatment parameters, and consequentially, to give better controlled, thus even more reliable and effective, thermal treatments.


Journal of Endourology | 2013

Novel Multisensor Probe for Monitoring Bladder Temperature During Locoregional Chemohyperthermia for Nonmuscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer: Technical Feasibility Study

Ernesto R. Cordeiro; Debby Geijsen; Paul J. Zum Vörde Sive Vörding; G. Schooneveldt; J. Sijbrands; Maarten C. C. M. Hulshof; Jean de la Rosette; Theo M. de Reijke; Hans Crezee

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The effectiveness of locoregional hyperthermia combined with intravesical instillation of mitomycin C to reduce the risk of recurrence and progression of intermediate- and high-risk nonmuscle-invasive bladder cancer is currently investigated in clinical trials. Clinically effective locoregional hyperthermia delivery necessitates adequate thermal dosimetry; thus, optimal thermometry methods are needed to monitor accurately the temperature distribution throughout the bladder wall. The aim of the study was to evaluate the technical feasibility of a novel intravesical device (multi-sensor probe) developed to monitor the local bladder wall temperatures during loco-regional C-HT. MATERIALS AND METHODS A multisensor thermocouple probe was designed for deployment in the human bladder, using special sensors to cover the bladder wall in different directions. The deployment of the thermocouples against the bladder wall was evaluated with visual, endoscopic, and CT imaging in bladder phantoms, porcine models, and human bladders obtained from obduction for bladder volumes and different deployment sizes of the probe. Finally, porcine bladders were embedded in a phantom and subjected to locoregional heating to compare probe temperatures with additional thermometry inside and outside the bladder wall. RESULTS The 7.5 cm thermocouple probe yielded optimal bladder wall contact, adapting to different bladder volumes. Temperature monitoring was shown to be accurate and representative for the actual bladder wall temperature. CONCLUSIONS Use of this novel multisensor probe could yield a more accurate monitoring of the bladder wall temperature during locoregional chemohyperthermia.


Medical Physics | 2014

Generic method for automatic bladder segmentation on cone beam CT using a patient-specific bladder shape model

A.J.A.J. Van de Schoot; G. Schooneveldt; S. Wognum; Mischa S. Hoogeman; X Chai; Lukas J.A. Stalpers; Coen R. N. Rasch; A. Bel

PURPOSE The aim of this study is to develop and validate a generic method for automatic bladder segmentation on cone beam computed tomography (CBCT), independent of gender and treatment position (prone or supine), using only pretreatment imaging data. METHODS Data of 20 patients, treated for tumors in the pelvic region with the entire bladder visible on CT and CBCT, were divided into four equally sized groups based on gender and treatment position. The full and empty bladder contour, that can be acquired with pretreatment CT imaging, were used to generate a patient-specific bladder shape model. This model was used to guide the segmentation process on CBCT. To obtain the bladder segmentation, the reference bladder contour was deformed iteratively by maximizing the cross-correlation between directional grey value gradients over the reference and CBCT bladder edge. To overcome incorrect segmentations caused by CBCT image artifacts, automatic adaptations were implemented. Moreover, locally incorrect segmentations could be adapted manually. After each adapted segmentation, the bladder shape model was expanded and new shape patterns were calculated for following segmentations. All available CBCTs were used to validate the segmentation algorithm. The bladder segmentations were validated by comparison with the manual delineations and the segmentation performance was quantified using the Dice similarity coefficient (DSC), surface distance error (SDE) and SD of contour-to-contour distances. Also, bladder volumes obtained by manual delineations and segmentations were compared using a Bland-Altman error analysis. RESULTS The mean DSC, mean SDE, and mean SD of contour-to-contour distances between segmentations and manual delineations were 0.87, 0.27 cm and 0.22 cm (female, prone), 0.85, 0.28 cm and 0.22 cm (female, supine), 0.89, 0.21 cm and 0.17 cm (male, supine) and 0.88, 0.23 cm and 0.17 cm (male, prone), respectively. Manual local adaptations improved the segmentation results significantly (p < 0.01) based on DSC (6.72%) and SD of contour-to-contour distances (0.08 cm) and decreased the 95% confidence intervals of the bladder volume differences. Moreover, expanding the shape model improved the segmentation results significantly (p < 0.01) based on DSC and SD of contour-to-contour distances. CONCLUSIONS This patient-specific shape model based automatic bladder segmentation method on CBCT is accurate and generic. Our segmentation method only needs two pretreatment imaging data sets as prior knowledge, is independent of patient gender and patient treatment position and has the possibility to manually adapt the segmentation locally.


Medical Physics | 2016

Improving hyperthermia treatment planning for the pelvis by accurate fluid modeling.

G. Schooneveldt; H. P. Kok; Edmond Balidemaj; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; F. van Ommen; J. Sijbrands; Akke Bakker; J.J.M.C.H. de la Rosette; M. C. C. M. Hulshof; T.M. De Reijke; J. Crezee

PURPOSE Hyperthermia is an established (neo)adjuvant treatment modality for a number of pelvic malignancies. Optimal treatment of these tumors requires robust treatment planning, but up until now, the urinary bladder was not modeled accurately, making current simulations less reliable. The authors improved the dielectric and thermophysical model of the urinary bladder in their treatment planning system, and showed the improvements using phantom experiments. METHODS The authors suspended a porcine bladder in muscle tissue equivalent gel and filled it with 120 ml 0.9% saline. The authors heated the phantom during 15 min with their deep hyperthermia device, using clinical settings, and measured the temperature both inside and outside the bladder. The authors simulated the experiment, both using the clinically used treatment planning system, and using the improved model featuring correct dielectric properties for the bladder content and an enhanced thermophysical model, enabling the simulation of convection. RESULTS Although the dielectric changes have an impact throughout the phantom, the dominant effect is a higher net heat absorption in the bladder. The effects of changing the thermophysical model are limited to the bladder and its surroundings, but result in a very different temperature profile. The temperatures predicted by the simulations using the new bladder model were in much better agreement with the measurements than those predicted by currently used treatment planning system. CONCLUSIONS Modeling convection in the urinary bladder is very important for accurate hyperthermia treatment planning in the pelvic area.


Archive | 2015

Improved temperature monitoring and treatment planning for loco-regional hyperthermia treatments of Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer (NMIBC)

G. Schooneveldt; H. P. Kok; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; F. van Ommen; Akke Bakker; M.A. Westendarp Zanartu; J.J.M.C.H. de la Rosette; M. C. C. M. Hulshof; T.M. De Reijke; J. Crezee

Introduction– Hyperthermia is a cancer treatment that increases the effectiveness of radiotherapy or chemotherapy by heating the tumor area to 41-43°C. Recently, a multi-center phase III randomized clinical trial comparing adjuvant treatment of NMIBC using Mitomycin C with and without loco-regional hyperthermia has started. This invites careful consideration of the bladder as a treatment site. Optimal treatment and quality control requires reliable thermometry and accurate hyperthermia treatment planning. This study aims to improve the current standard in both areas.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2018

The effect of air pockets in the urinary bladder on the temperature distribution during loco-regional hyperthermia treatment of bladder cancer patients

G. Schooneveldt; H. P. Kok; Akke Bakker; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; M. C. C. M. Hulshof; T.M. De Reijke; J. Crezee

Abstract Purpose: Loco-regional hyperthermia combined with mitomycin C is used for treatment of nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC). Air pockets may be present in the bladder during treatment. The aim of this study is to quantify the effect of air pockets on the thermal dose of the bladder. Methods: We analysed 16 patients treated for NMIBC. Loco-regional hyperthermia was performed with the in-house developed 70 MHz AMC-4 hyperthermia device. We simulated treatments with the clinically applied device settings using Plan2Heat (developed in-house) including the air pockets delineated on CT scans made following treatment, and with the same volume filled with urine. Temperature distributions simulated with and without air pockets were compared. Results: The average air and fluid volumes in the bladder were 6.0 ml (range 0.8 − 19.3 ml) and 183 ml (range 47–322 ml), respectively. The effect of these air pockets varied strongly between patients. Averaged over all patients, the median bladder wall temperature (T50) remained unchanged when an air pocket was present. Temperature changes exceeded ±0.2 °C in, on average, 23% of the bladder wall volume (range 1.3–59%), in 6.0% (range 0.6–20%) changes exceeded ±0.5 °C and in 3.2% (range 0.0–7.4%) changes exceeded ±1.0 °C. There was no correlation between the differences in temperature and the air pocket or bladder volume. There was a positive correlation between air pocket surface and temperature heterogeneity. Conclusion: Presence of air causes more heterogeneous bladder wall temperatures and lower T90, particularly for larger air pockets. The size of air pockets must therefore be minimized during bladder hyperthermia treatments.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2018

Predictive value of simulated SAR and temperature for changes in measured temperature after phase-amplitude steering during locoregional hyperthermia treatments

H. P. Kok; G. Schooneveldt; Akke Bakker; R. de Kroon-Oldenhof; L. Korshuize-van Straten; C. E. de Jong; E. Steggerda-Carvalho; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; Lukas J.A. Stalpers; J. Crezee

Abstract Introduction: On-line adaptive hyperthermia treatment planning can be useful to suppress treatment limiting hot spots and improve tumor temperatures during locoregional hyperthermia. This requires adequate prediction of changes in heating patterns after phase-amplitude steering. We investigated the predictive value of simulated SAR and temperature for changes in measured temperature after phase-amplitude steering during locoregional hyperthermia. Methods: All treatment sessions of 75 patients with pelvic malignancies treated between September 2013 and March 2018 were evaluated. Phase-amplitude adaptations during the 60 min steady-state period were analyzed. Treatment planning was performed using Plan2Heat, based on CT scans with (thermometry) catheters in the vagina, rectum, and bladder in situ. The predicted SAR and temperature along the thermometry tracks were extracted from the simulated distributions. Correlations between changes in average measured temperature and the simulated SAR and temperature were evaluated for single phase-amplitude steering events, unaccompanied by other (steering) actions. Results: A total of 67 phase-amplitude steering events were suitable for analysis. Simulated changes in both SAR and temperature correlated with the measured temperature changes. For the vagina, R2 = 0.44 and R2 = 0.55 for SAR and temperature, respectively. For the rectum, these values were 0.53 for SAR and 0.66 for temperature. Correlations for the bladder were weaker: R2 = 0.15 and R2 = 0.14 for SAR and temperature, respectively. This can be explained by convection in the bladder fluid, unaccounted for by present treatment planning. Conclusion: Treatment planning can predict changes in an average temperature after phase-amplitude steering. This allows on-line support with phase-amplitude steering to optimize hyperthermia treatments.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2016

OC-0548: Hyperthermia treatment planning in the pelvis using thermophysical fluid modelling of the bladder

G. Schooneveldt; H. P. Kok; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; Akke Bakker; Edmond Balidemaj; J.J.M.C.H. de la Rosette; M. C. C. M. Hulshof; T.M. De Reijke; J. Crezee

Conclusion: Proton-beam grids with 3 mm beam elements produce dose distributions in water for which the grid pattern is preserved down to large depths. PBGT could be carried out at proton therapy centers, equipped with spot-scanning possibilities, using existing tools. However, smaller beams than those currently available could be advantageous for biological reasons. With PBGT, it is also possible to create a more uniform target dose than what has been possible to produce with photon-beam grids. We anticipate that PBGT could be a useful technique to reduce both shortand longterm side effects after radiotherapy.


Medical Physics | 2016

SU-F-J-05: The Effect of Air Pockets in the Urinary Bladder During Bladder Hyperthermia Treatment

G. Schooneveldt; H. P. Kok; A. Bakker; Elisabeth D. Geijsen; T.M. De Reijke; J. Crezee

PURPOSE Hyperthermia combined with Mitomycin C is used for the treatment of non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC), using a phased array system of microwave antennas for bladder heating. Often some air is present in the bladder, which effectively blocks the microwave radiation, potentially preventing proper treatment of that part of the bladder. Air can be a relevant fraction of the bladder content and large air pockets are expected to have a noticeable influence on achieved temperatures. METHODS We analysed 14 NMIBC patients treated at our institute with our AMC-4 hyperthermia device with four 70MHz antennas around the pelvis. A CT scan was made after treatment and a physician delineated the bladder on the CT scan. On the same scan, the amount of air present in the bladder was delineated. Using our in-house developed hyperthermia treatment planning system, we simulated the treatment using the clinically applied device settings. We did this once with the air pocket delineated on the CT scan, and once with the same volume filled with bladder tissue. RESULTS The patients had on average 4.2ml (range 0.8-10.1ml) air in the bladder. The bladder volume was delineated by the physician, that is including air pocket and bladder wall, was on average 253ml (range 93-452ml). The average volume in which changes exceeded 0.25°C was 22ml (range 0-108 ml), with the bladder being up to 2°C cooler when an air pocket was present. Except for extreme cases, there was no evident relation between the quantity of air and the difference in temperature. CONCLUSION The effect of an air pocket in the bladder during bladder hyperthermia treatment varies strongly between patients. Generally, this leads to lower temperatures in the bladder, potentially affecting treatment quality, and suggesting that care need be taken to minimise the size of air pockets during hyperthermia treatments. The KWF Dutch Cancer Society financially supported this work, grant UVA 2012-5539.

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J. Crezee

University of Amsterdam

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H. P. Kok

University of Amsterdam

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Akke Bakker

University of Amsterdam

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