Purpose: To compare the dosimetric accuracy of surface-guided radiation therapy (SGRT) and cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) setups in proton breast treatment plans.
Methods: Data from 30 patients were retrospectively analyzed in this IRB-approved study. Patients were prescribed 4256-5040 cGy in 16-28 fractions. CBCT and AlignRT (SGRT; Vision RT Ltd.) were used for treatment setup during the first three fractions, then daily AlignRT and weekly CBCT thereafter. Each patient underwent a quality assurance CT (QA-CT) scan midway through the treatment course to assess anatomical and dosimetric changes. To emulate the SGRT and CBCT setups during treatment, the planning CT and QA-CT images were registered in two ways: (1) by registering the volume within the CTs covered by the CBCT field of view; and (2) by contouring and registering the surface surveyed by the AlignRT system. The original plan was copied onto these two datasets and the dose was recalculated. The clinical treatment volume (CTV): V ; heart: V , V , and mean dose; and ipsilateral lung: V , V , and V , were recorded. Multi and univariate analyses of variance were performed to assess the differences in dose metric values between the planning CT and the SGRT and CBCT setups.
Results: The CTV V and lung V , V , and V dose metrics were all significantly (p < 0.01) lower on the QA-CT in both the CBCT and SGRT setup. The differences were not clinically significant and were, on average, 1.4-1.6% lower for CTV V and 1.8%-6.0% lower for the lung dose metrics. When comparing the lung and CTV V dose metrics between the CBCT and SGRT setups, no significant difference was observed. This indicates that the SGRT setup provides similar dosimetric accuracy as CBCT.
Conclusion: This study supports the daily use of SGRT systems for the accurate dose delivery of proton breast treatment plans.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/acm2.13357 | DOI Listing |
Appl Radiat Isot
January 2025
Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece. Electronic address:
Purpose: Surface Guided Radiation Treatment (SGRT) is a new method of positioning and monitoring patients on the linear accelerator's couch, using visual light cameras to monitor the skin's surface. The purpose of this study was to compare the SGRT with the conventional method, based on lasers and tattoos, in terms of accuracy and time expenditure, on patients with pelvic malignancies.
Materials And Methods: A group of 34 patients were enrolled in this study, 24 males who underwent radiotherapy prostate treatment and 10 females who underwent gynecological radiation therapy.
Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol)
November 2024
Department of Radiation Oncology, Odette Cancer Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Electronic address:
Aims: Breath holding can reduce the cardiac dose in radiotherapy for left-sided breast cancer. We evaluated whether any of the existing commonly used breath-hold techniques was superior in maintaining a more reproducible mean heart dose (MHD) during treatment.
Materials And Methods: This was a single-institution, interventional, nonrandomised, three-armed prospective trial, comparing the reproducibility of MHD in breath-hold radiotherapy using voluntary deep inspiration breath hold (vDIBH), active breathing control (ABC), and surface-guided radiotherapy (SGRT).
Cureus
November 2024
Medical Physics, BC Cancer Kelowna, Kelowna, CAN.
Linac-based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) with planning target volume (PTV) margins <1 mm has become increasingly common in recent years. Optical surface imaging for surface-guided radiation therapy (SGRT) is often used for intra-fraction motion monitoring during these treatments to facilitate the use of a smaller PTV margin by providing real-time quantitative patient positioning information. However, rotating the couch introduces errors to SGRT-reported translations and rotations that can be problematic for SRS treatments with non-coplanar arcs and very small PTV margins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrahlenther Onkol
December 2024
Klinik für Strahlentherapie und Radioonkologie, Klinikum Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany.
Objective: The precise daily positioning of patients during radiation therapy determines the quality of the entire treatment. To avoid additional radiation exposure from regular cone-beam CT (CBCT) scans, surface-guided radiotherapy systems (SGRT) are increasingly used. The aim of this prospective clinical study was to evaluate the advantages, feasibility, and pitfalls of SGRT using the surface tracking recorder prototype of the camera component of ExacTrac Dynamic (Brainlab AG, Munich, Germany).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArXiv
November 2024
Department of Radiation Oncology and Winship Cancer Institute, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
In this work, we present a new imaging system to support real-time tumor tracking for surface-guided radiotherapy (SGRT). SGRT uses optical surface imaging (OSI) to acquire real-time surface topography images of the patient on the treatment couch. This serves as a surrogate for intra-fractional tumor motion tracking to guide radiation delivery.
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