Carbon fiber couch effects on skin dose for volumetric modulated arcs.

Med Phys

Department of Radiation Oncology, Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Rhode Island Hospital, 593 Eddy Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, USA.

Published: May 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates how carbon fiber couches affect radiation doses delivered to the skin during volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) for cancer treatment, specifically looking to identify ways to reduce this skin dose.
  • By analyzing treatment plans for ten patients (five lung and five prostate), the researchers compared VMAT plans that used different photon energy levels and measured the skin doses associated with each plan, noting significant differences in doses as high as 34%.
  • The results suggest that using mixed energy VMAT plans can substantially decrease skin doses compared to using only lower energy photons, indicating potential benefits in sparing skin during hypofractionated treatments.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to evaluate the dosimetric effect of carbon fiber couches (CFCs) on delivered skin dose as well as to explore potential venues for its minimization for volumetric modulated arc (VMAT) treatments.

Methods: A carbon fiber couch (BrainLab) was incorporated in Pinnacle treatment planning system (TPS) by autocontouring. A retrospective investigation on five lung and five prostate patient plans was performed. Targets and organs at risk (OARs), together with a 0.3 cm thick skin contour interfacing the CFC, were outlined in each plan. For each patient, two VMAT plans were generated: a single arc with 6 MV photon energy and two or three arcs with 18 MV photon energy for the posterior arc(s) and 6 MV energy for the anterior arc (mixed energy plans). Both plans for each patient case were normalized such that 95% of the PTV was covered by the same prescription dose, ranging from 7600 to 7800 cGy. For each patient, the prescription doses were escalated to the maximum allowed by the OAR constraints. CFC bolus effects on skin doses were tallied by the highest dose to 1% of skin volume.

Results: With the utilization of higher energy photons for the posterior arcs, the statistically significant differences in skin dose between the two plans were as high as 34% of the prescribed dose, where surface doses changed on average from 3800 to 2940 cGy for 6 MV and mixed energy plans, respectively. In addition, skin doses in excess of 68% and 80% of the prescription doses for mixed and 6 MV energy plans, respectively, were observed in individual cases.

Conclusions: The presented findings indicate that mixed energy VMAT plans would result in a substantial skin sparing of more than approximately 34% compared to VMAT plans with only 6 MV arc(s). Additionally, the high skin doses in some cases (81% of the prescription dose) suggest that in hypofractionated SRS/SRT treatments, the carbon fiber couch effects on skin doses need to be evaluated when arc delivery is considered as a treatment option.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.3576106DOI Listing

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