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1.
Cureus ; 16(5): e59638, 2024 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38832192

RESUMEN

We have clinically implemented gated stereotactic body radiotherapy under abdominal compression using an Anzai laser-based gating device with visual guidance in combination with an Elekta linear accelerator. To ensure accuracy, we configured the gating window for each patient by correlating the respiratory curve from the laser sensor and the tumor positions from the 4D computed tomography (CT) images reconstructed with the aid of the respiratory curve. This allowed us to define a patient-specific gating window to keep the tumor displacement below 5 mm from the end-expiration, assuming the reproducibility of the tumor trajectories and the laser-based body surface measurements. Results are summarized as follows: 1) A patient-specific gating window internal target volume (ITV) with a prespecified maximum tumor displacement relative to the end-expiration was obtained by acquiring a 4D CT consisting of 20 phase CT sets and a respiratory curve from the Anzai system. 2) Respiratory hysteresis was managed by setting two different thresholds on the respiratory curve based on the predetermined maximum tumor displacement relative to end-expiration. 3) Abdominal compression increased gating window width, thereby presumably leading to faster gated-beam delivery. 4) Gamma index pass rates in sliding-window gated intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) were superior to those in gated volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT). 5) Intrafraction gated cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) demonstrated that the tumor appeared to remain within the gating window ITV during the stereotactic gated sliding-window IMRT. In conclusion, we have successfully implemented gated stereotactic body radiotherapy at our clinic and achieved a favorable clinical validation result. More cases need to be evaluated to increase the validity.

2.
Cureus ; 16(1): e53183, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38420106

RESUMEN

Background Left-sided breast cancer radiotherapy may increase the risk of cardiovascular death due to possible heart irradiation. The reproducibility of the chest wall to heart distance in deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) was studied using a laser sensor with visual feedback. Methodology A total of 10 consecutive postoperative left-sided breast cancer cases receiving DIBH radiotherapy between December 2022 and September 2023 were retrospectively investigated. The prescribed dose was 50 Gy in 25 fractions. An Anzai respiratory gating system, AZ-733VI (Anzai, Tokyo, Japan), was employed that has a laser displacement sensor and a visual feedback device. An Elekta linac with a cone-beam CT unit, Axesse (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden), was used in this study. The interfractional changes in the chest wall to heart distance among 25 fractions were analyzed for each of the 10 patients in each coordinate axis. In addition, the median with the 95% confidence interval (CI) and interquartile range (IQR) for all 250 fractions were calculated in each axis to assess the reproducibility of our DIBH technique. Results The medians of the interfractional changes in the chest wall to heart distance in each of the 10 patients ranged from -2 mm to 3 mm, -1 mm to 3 mm, and -2 mm to 1 mm in the lateral (X), superior-inferior (Y), and anterior-posterior (Z) directions, respectively. For all 10 cases, the medians were 1 mm (95% CI = 0.72 to 1.28 mm) in X, 1 mm (95% CI = 0.76 to 1.24 mm) in Y, and 0 mm (95% CI = -0.20 to 0.20 mm) in Z directions, whereas the IQRs were 4 mm in X, 2 mm in Y and 2 mm in Z directions. The measured IQRs were two to three times smaller than those shown in a previous report without visual feedback, suggesting a clinical advantage of the visual feedback in DIBH for left-sided breast cancer radiotherapy. The DIBH solution shown in this study required approximately 10 minutes from room-in to room-out, thereby not reducing the daily number of patients. Conclusions Our DIBH approach with visual feedback achieved better distance reproducibility between the chest wall and heart by a factor of two to three in terms of IQR compared to the previously reported data without visual feedback. Patient throughput was also favorable. To our knowledge, this is the first report demonstrating the chest wall to heart distance reproducibility in DIBH with visual feedback.

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