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Single‐institution report of setup margins of voluntary deep‐inspiration breath‐hold ( DIBH ) whole breast radiotherapy implemented with real‐time surface imaging
Author(s) -
Xiao Annie,
Crosby Jennie,
Malin Martha,
Kang Hyejoo,
Washington Maxine,
Hasan Yasmin,
Chmura Steven J.,
AlHallaq Hania A.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of applied clinical medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.83
H-Index - 48
ISSN - 1526-9914
DOI - 10.1002/acm2.12368
Subject(s) - reproducibility , nuclear medicine , medicine , percentile , breast cancer , radiation therapy , radiology , mathematics , cancer , statistics
Purpose We calculated setup margins for whole breast radiotherapy during voluntary deep‐inspiration breath‐hold ( vDIBH ) using real‐time surface imaging ( SI ). Methods and Materials Patients ( n  = 58) with a 27‐to‐31 split between right‐ and left‐sided cancers were analyzed. Treatment beams were gated using Align RT by registering the whole breast region‐of‐interest to the surface generated from the simulation CT scan. Align RT recorded (three‐dimensional) 3D displacements and the beam‐on‐state every 0.3 s. Means and standard deviations of the displacements during vDIBH for each fraction were used to calculate setup margins. Intra‐ DIBH stability and the intrafraction reproducibility were estimated from the medians of the 5th to 95th percentile range of the translations in each breath‐hold and fraction, respectively. Results A total of 7269 breath‐holds were detected over 1305 fractions in which a median dose of 200 cGy was delivered. Each fraction was monitored for 5.95 ± 2.44 min. Calculated setup margins were 4.8 mm (A/P), 4.9 mm (S/I), and 6.4 mm (L/R). The intra‐ DIBH stability and the intrafraction reproducibility were ≤0.7 mm and ≤2.2 mm, respectively. The isotropic margin according to SI (9.2 mm) was comparable to other institutions’ calculations that relied on x‐ray imaging and/or spirometry for patients with left‐sided cancer (9.8–11.0 mm). Likewise, intra‐ DIBH variability and intrafraction reproducibility of breast surface measured with SI agreed with spirometry‐based positioning to within 1.2 and 0.36 mm, respectively. Conclusions We demonstrated that intra‐ DIBH variability, intrafraction reproducibility, and setup margins are similar to those reported by peer studies who utilized spirometry‐based positioning.

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