4.5 Article

Feasibility of postoperative spine stereotactic body radiation therapy in proximity of carbon and titanium hybrid implants using a robotic radiotherapy device

Journal

RADIATION ONCOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13014-022-02058-7

Keywords

Postoperative SBRT; Spine metastasis; CFP-T implants; Cyberknife; Dosimetry analysis

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This study evaluated the feasibility of postoperative stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) using CyberKnife for patients with hybrid implants consisting of carbon fiber reinforced polyetheretherketone and titanium (CFP-T). The results showed that with CFP-T implants, target volumes could be accurately delineated and dose calculation and delivery of SBRT were feasible.
Background and purpose To assess the feasibility of postoperative stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for patients with hybrid implants consisting of carbon fiber reinforced polyetheretherketone and titanium (CFP-T) using CyberKnife. Materials and methods All essential steps within a radiation therapy (RT) workflow were evaluated. First, the contouring process of target volumes and organs at risk (OAR) was done for patients with CFP-T implants. Second, after RT-planning, the accuracy of the calculated dose distributions was tested in a slab phantom and an anthropomorphic phantom using film dosimetry. As a third step, the accuracy of the mandatory image guided radiation therapy (IGRT) including automatic matching was assessed using the anthropomorphic phantom. For this goal, a standard quality assurance (QA) test was modified to carry out its IGRT part in presence of CFP-T implants. Results Using CFP-T implants, target volumes could precisely delineated. There was no need for compromising the contours to overcome artifact obstacles. Differences between measured and calculated dose values were below 11% for the slab phantom, and at least 95% of the voxels were within 5% dose difference. The comparisons for the anthropomorphic phantom showed a gamma-passing rate (5%, 1 mm) of at least 97%. Additionally the test results with and without CFP-T implants were comparable. No issues concerning the IGRT were detected. The modified machine QA test resulted in a targeting error of 0.71 mm, which corresponds to the results of the unmodified standard tests. Conclusion Dose calculation and delivery of postoperative spine SBRT is feasible in proximity of CFP-T implants using a CyberKnife system.

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