# A new hyaluronate gel spacer and injection technique for cervical cancer brachytherapy: a technical report

**Authors:** Yusaku Miyata, Etsuyo Ogo, Kenta Murotani, Kazuya Nagahiro, Kento Hoshida, Naotake Tsuda, Shin Nishio, Gaku Shioyama, Nona Fujimoto, Tetsuo Yamasaki, Ryosuke Akeda, Koichiro Muraki, Chiyoko Tsuji, Chikayuki Hattori, Shuichi Tanoue

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/jrr/rraf055 · 2025-09-17

## TL;DR

A new hyaluronate gel spacer is introduced for cervical cancer brachytherapy to improve radiation dose delivery and reduce risks to nearby organs.

## Contribution

A new hyaluronate gel spacer (MEIJI) and injection technique are proposed for cervical cancer brachytherapy.

## Key findings

- The MEIJI hyaluronate gel spacer effectively maintained dose constraints for rectum and bladder during brachytherapy.
- The gel spacer disappeared within 3 to 7 days without adverse events or quality of life deterioration.
- The technique achieved median CTVHRD90% of 9.3 Gy per session and 92.2 Gy-EQD2 overall.

## Abstract

Spacers separating the tumor from adjacent organs help improve irradiation dose parameters. We introduce a new hyaluronate gel spacer with MEIJI (ADANT®) as an alternative to the previously used Suvenyl® and its injection technique for cervical cancer brachytherapy. Five patients with cervical cancer underwent hyaluronate gel injection (HGI) with the MEIJI hyaluronate gel in their rectovaginal and vesicovaginal septa. The minimum doses covering 90% of the high-risk clinical target volume (CTVHRD90%), the most exposed 2 cc (D2cc) of organs at risk per session, as well as the total doses for combined external beam radiotherapy (with a central shield) and brachytherapy, were assessed. The median CTVHRD90% was 9.3 (range, 6.4–9.7) Gy per session and 92.2 Gy in the equivalent dose in 2 Gy fractions (EQD2) (80.3–93.3 Gy-EQD2) overall. The median rectum D2cc was 2.9 (1.8–5.0) Gy per session and 45.4 (43.4–57.1) Gy-EQD2 overall. The median D2cc of the bladder (bladder D2cc) was 4.8 (2.4–6.5) Gy per session and 64.6 (62.3–69.6) Gy-EQD2 overall. The MEIJI spacer disappeared within 3 or 7 days with no adverse events associated with HGI or deterioration of the patients’ quality of life. MEIJI HGI facilitates a sufficient CTVHRD90% while keeping the rectal and bladder D2cc within dose constraints, even when the rectum and bladder are in close proximity to the CTVHR. In conclusion, the MEIJI spacer may help appropriately meet dose constraints, thereby potentially contributing to improving local control and/or reducing adverse events for patients receiving radiotherapy for cervical cancer.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** cervical cancer (MONDO:0002974)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** tumor (MESH:D009369), cervical cancer (MESH:D002583)
- **Chemicals:** ADANT (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12648069/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12648069