Literature DB >> 28339109

Validation of dynamic treatment-couch tracking for prostate SBRT.

Stefanie Ehrbar1, Simon Schmid1, Alexander Jöhl1,2, Stephan Klöck1, Matthias Guckenberger1, Oliver Riesterer1, Stephanie Tanadini-Lang1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: In stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) of prostatic cancer, a high dose per fraction is applied to the target with steep dose gradients. Intrafractional prostate motion can occur unpredictably during the treatment and lead to target miss. This work investigated the dosimetric benefit of motion compensation with dynamic treatment-couch tracking for prostate SBRT treatments in the presence of prostatic motion.
METHODS: Ten SBRT treatment plans for prostate cancer patients with integrated boosts to their index lesion were prepared. The treatment plans were applied with a TrueBeam linear accelerator to a phantom in (a) static reference position, (b) moved with five prostate motion trajectories without any motion compensation, and (c) with real-time compensation using transponder-guided couch tracking. The geometrical position of the electromagnetic transponder was evaluated in the tracked and untracked situation. The dosimetric performance of couch tracking was evaluated, using Gamma agreement indices (GAI) and other dose parameters. These were evaluated within the phantoms biplanar diode array, as well as target- and organ-specific.
RESULTS: The root-mean-square error of the motion traces (range: 0.8-4.4 mm) was drastically reduced with couch tracking (0.2-0.4 mm). Residual motion was mainly observed at abrupt direction changes with steep motion gradients. The phantom measurements showed significantly better GAI1%/1mm with tracked (range: 83.4%-100.0%) than with untracked motion (28.9%-99.7%). Also GAI2%/2mm was significantly superior for the tracked (98.4%-100.0%) than the untracked motion (52.3%-100.0%). The organ-specific evaluation showed significantly better target coverage with tracking. The dose to the rectum and bladder showed a dependency on the anterior-posterior motion direction.
CONCLUSIONS: Couch tracking clearly improved the dosimetric accuracy of prostate SBRT treatments. The treatment couch was able to compensate the prostatic motion with only some minor residual motion. Therefore, couch tracking combined with electromagnetic position monitoring for prostate SBRT is feasible and improves the accuracy in treatment delivery when prostate motion is present.
© 2017 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  couch tracking; motion management; prostate cancer; prostate motion; stereotactic body radiation therapy

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28339109     DOI: 10.1002/mp.12236

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  3 in total

1.  Spatiotemporal fractionation schemes for liver stereotactic body radiotherapy.

Authors:  Jan Unkelbach; Dávid Papp; Melissa R Gaddy; Nicolaus Andratschke; Theodore Hong; Matthias Guckenberger
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2017-09-23       Impact factor: 6.280

2.  Optimization of training periods for the estimation model of three-dimensional target positions using an external respiratory surrogate.

Authors:  Hiraku Iramina; Mitsuhiro Nakamura; Yusuke Iizuka; Takamasa Mitsuyoshi; Yukinori Matsuo; Takashi Mizowaki; Ikuo Kanno
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2018-04-19       Impact factor: 3.481

3.  Experimental investigation of dynamic real-time rotation-including dose reconstruction during prostate tracking radiotherapy.

Authors:  Casper Gammelmark Muurholm; Thomas Ravkilde; Robin De Roover; Simon Skouboe; Rune Hansen; Wouter Crijns; Tom Depuydt; Per R Poulsen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2022-04-25       Impact factor: 4.506

  3 in total

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