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Sci—Sat AM: Stereo — 03: Dosmetric evaluation of single versus multi‐arc VMAT for lung SBRT
Author(s) -
Karan T,
Taremi M,
Allibhai Z,
Ryan M,
Le K,
Comsa D
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.4894964
Subject(s) - arc (geometry) , medicine , nuclear medicine , radiation treatment planning , dosimetry , lung , radiation therapy , mathematics , radiology , geometry
Five non‐small cell lung cancer patients previously treated with stereotactic body radiation therapy using the VMAT (volumetric modulated arc therapy) technique were selected for this retrospective study. Plans were re‐optimized using Pinnacle treatment planning system (v9.0, Philips Medical), with the basis for comparison a two‐arc plan involving a 360° arc in addition to a 90° arc with a couch kick. Additionally a single 360° arc was optimized for comparison, as well as a partial arc covering ∼230°, avoiding the contralateral lung. All plans met target coverage criteria as dictated by RTOG0236. Plans were evaluated based on conformity, sparing of organs at risk and practical considerations of delivery. Conformity was best in the two‐arc plan; however the decrease seen in one‐ and partial arc plans was not statistically significant as tested by the Wilcoxon rank sum test. The partial‐arc plan resulted in the lowest esophagus and trachea dose and the highest heart dose, however none of the plans exceeded organ at risk tolerances for lung SBRT. Partial arcs resulted in plans with slightly cooler dose distributions, a decrease in low dose spillage and an overall lower mean lung dose. The decrease in treatment time was on average 36 and 40 seconds for single and partial arcs, respectively, with partial arcs requiring the lowest number of MUs. The slight decrease in conformity seen in one‐arc plans is offset by an increase in efficiency (optimization and treatment time, MUs) making the implementation of a single or partial‐arc treatment technique clinically desirable.

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