To our knowledge, the present work represents the first study attempting to reduce the dose to the parotid in patients undergoing elective neck node radiotherapy for head and neck cancer employing helical tomotherapy with IGRT. All patients in our study were treated with Tomotherapy. Tomotherapy provides significant dose reduction to the parotid gland without compromise of target volume dose. In an effort to reduce parotid dose, our main concern was to treat the regional neck nodes at risk for subclinical disease effectively to 56

Gy in 35 fractions. We discovered in a previous study that Tomotherapy-based IGRT has been effective in decreasing laryngeal and pharyngeal dose compared to conventional IMRT in patients with head and neck cancer [
17]. Thus, our initial goal was to achieve a modest reduction of mean parotid dose below 20

Gy with Tomotherapy while covering the elective neck PTV with at least 95% of the prescribed dose. Our parotid dose reduction was based on a review of the literature of normal tissue toxicity following head and neck radiotherapy: QUANTEC recommends a mean parotid dose of 20

Gy or less if only one parotid gland can be spared from radiotherapy [
18]. As we acquired more experience, we gradually developed a technique that provided significant reduction of parotid dose regardless of the cancer anatomic site. In selected patients, a mean parotid dose of 10

Gy or less may be achieved. This is particularly important in patients who underwent concurrent chemoradiation for oral cavity and oropharyngeal tumors with unilateral lymph nodes metastases when the ipsilateral parotid, submandibular, and minor salivary glands received high radiation dose. These patients remained at high risk for severe xerostomia following head and neck radiotherapy because of the tumor location and disease extent. Preserving one parotid gland from excessive radiotherapy may improve patient quality of life without compromising local control.
Many studies have looked into relationships between parotid radiation dose and degree of xerostomia severity. Additionally, other studies have correlated the mean parotid dose with the subsequent reduction of salivary flow. Therefore, we have reviewed studies in which dose-volume histograms were performed with treatment planning head and neck CT scan reporting the mean parotid dose and the associated risk of xerostomia. Eisbruch et al. [
9] reported that maintaining mean parotid dose below 26

Gy lead to recovery of stimulated salivary flow at one year following head and neck radiotherapy. Munter et al. [
19] also corroborated that reducing mean parotid dose below 26

Gy with IMRT significantly preserved salivary function. Chao et al. [
20] reported a direct correlation between the mean parotid dose and the decreased rate of stimulated salivary flow estimated to be 4% per Gy of mean parotid dose. However, other studies have suggested alternated parameters of parotid dose levels for the development of xerostomia following head and neck radiotherapy. Bussels et al. [
3] reported a 50% loss of salivary function with mean parotid dose of 22.5

Gy at 7

months following head and neck cancer IMRT. Roesink et al. [
6] reported increased risk of developing severe xerostomia with mean parotid dose of 39

Gy. Saarilahti et al. [
21] reported minimal reduction of stimulated salivary flow with mean parotid dose of 18

Gy or less and marked decreased of saliva production with parotid dose between 20–30

Gy. Table

summarizes mean parotid dose reported in the literature and radiotherapy effect on salivary gland production.
| Table 4Mean parotid dose in relation to reduction of salivary flow in studies with dose-volume histogram based on planning head and neck computed tomography scans |
The discrepancies between these studies may be due to many factors such as parotid size, heterogeneity of IMRT dose distribution within the parotid glands, inclusion of patients treated with chemoradiation which increased radiosensibility of the salivary glands, and inter-patient variability in loss of salivary function. In patients who underwent ipsilateral neck irradiation for well lateralized oral cavity or oropharyngeal tumors, the mean dose to the contralateral parotid gland was 4.7

Gy [
11]. The low contralateral parotid dose decreased xerostomia severity and improved patient quality of life. Ortholan et al. [
22] also corroborated that reduction of contralateral parotid gland dose lead to recovery of salivary function. If the volume of the contralateral parotid gland receiving 40

Gy (V40) was kept below 33%, complete salivary production recovered after two years. It was postulated that sparing of the contralateral parotid gland allowed it to compensate for the low salivary production of the ipsilateral gland. The feasibility of this approach has been demonstrated in improving patient quality of life [
23]. Thus, because a large proportion of the study population received concurrent chemotherapy for locally advanced head and neck cancer which had an additive effect on salivary flow, we devised a new policy to preserve salivary gland function by reducing mean contralateral parotid dose with Tomotherapy.
Helical Tomotherapy has been proven to deliver a sharper dose gradient compared to conventional IMRT, thus reducing radiation dose to the parotids without compromising target coverage [
13,
24]. Mean and V40 contralateral parotid dose was respectively 14.1

Gy and 24.7

Gy and 5.5% and 18.2% for the study and historical control populations (
p
<

0.0001). Even though we lack information on salivary flow following radiotherapy with parotid sparing Tomotherapy, our study demonstrates the feasibility of this new technique to potentially improve patient quality of life because of low radiation dose to the contralateral parotid gland. In a pilot study, Voordeckers et al. [
25] reported the feasibility of Tomotherapy to conserve salivary function if 46% of the unilateral parotid volume received a dose less than 60

Gy. Maes et al. [
26] demonstrated that salivary gland function may be preserved if the contralateral parotid gland received 20

Gy or less. Using scintigraphy to measure salivary flow following radiotherapy with 3-dimensional (3-D) conformal radiotherapy, 70% of the parotid function may recover six months following treatment. Thus, as the study mean parotid dose was 14.1

Gy and only a minimal volume of the parotid gland received more than 40

Gy (5.5%), we can expect that our patients may benefit from significant xerostomia reduction. We emphasize that parotid dose reduction does not compromise target coverage as there was no difference in PTV coverage between the two groups. In addition, daily megavoltage computed tomography (MVCT) imaging for patient set up allows for on-line correction of patient positioning variation and insures accurate dose delivery and sparing of the parotid glands [
27]. We demonstrate that reduction of contralateral parotid dose was achieved without any increase of radiation dose to the ipsilateral parotid gland, spinal cord, or mandible. In patients with no cervical lymph nodes metastases, mean parotid dose in the study group was significantly lower than the historical control group. Even though the patient number with N0 node was small, we postulate that Tomotherapy provides optimal sparing of the parotid gland while preserving target coverage because of the high number of beamlets associated with dynamic rotational IMRT and sharp dose gradient [
16]. Our clinical study also confirmed the dosimetric experience of other investigators about the potential of Tomotherapy for improving target coverage while minimizing radiation dose to the normal tissues in head and neck cancer patients. Lee et al. [
28] compared the dose volume histogram (DVH), conformity index (CI), homogeneity index (HGI) and minimal dose to 1

cc (Dmin-1

cc) of 20 nasopharyngeal cancer patients treated with Tomotherapy and re-planned with step-and-shoot IMRT. Tomotherapy significantly improved CI and HI of the PTV while significantly reduced radiation dose to the other organs at risk for complications. Mean dose to the parotid glands was 28% less compared to IMRT. Jacob et al. [
29] also corroborated the superiority of Tomotherapy in providing better coverage to the target volume (higher minimum dose) compared to RapidArc and dynamic IMRT. Parotid dose was lowest with Tomotherapy. The improved therapeutic ratio of Tomotherapy was also reported in two other dosimetric studies [
30,
31], thus arguing that Tomotherapy may be best suited to reduce xerostomia compared to other IMRT techniques if significant constraint was placed on parotid dose. The limitations of the present study include the retrospective nature of the study, the small number of patients, and the lack of information on salivary production before and after radiotherapy. We also did not have information on the impact of parotid sparing on the severity of xerostomia and patient quality of life. Nevertherless, we hope that our study will encourage other institutions to investigate the potential of Tomotherapy to spare the parotid gland from possible excessive morbidity of radiotherapy, thus improving quality of life in cancer survivors.