3.8 Article

Same-day consultation, simulation and lung Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy delivery on a Magnetic Resonance-linac

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PHYSICS & IMAGING IN RADIATION ONCOLOGY
卷 24, 期 -, 页码 76-81

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.phro.2022.09.010

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Lung SBRT; Same-day treatment; Single Fraction; MR-guided; Intra-fraction; Motion Management; Breath-hold

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The study investigated the clinical feasibility, patient satisfaction, and delivery accuracy of single-fraction MR-guided SABR in a single day. All 10 patients completed the one-stop-shop procedure in a single day and reported satisfaction with the process. The accuracy of SABR delivery was high with little impact of system-latency.
Background and Purpose: Magnetic resonance-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) with real-time intra-fraction tumor motion monitoring allows for high precision Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy (SABR). This study aimed to investigate the clinical feasibility, patient satisfaction and delivery accuracy of single-fraction MR-guided SABR in a single day (one-stop-shop, OSS).Methods and Materials: Ten patients with small lung tumors eligible for single fraction treatments were included. The OSS procedure consisted of consultation, treatment simulation, treatment planning and delivery. Following SABR delivery, patients completed a reported experience measure (PREM) questionnaire. Prescribed doses ranged 28-34 Gy. Median GTV was 2.2 cm3 (range 1.3-22.9 cm3). A gating boundary of 3 mm, and PTV margin of 5 mm around the GTV, were used with auto-beam delivery control. Accuracy of SABR delivery was studied by analyzing delivered MR-cines reconstructed from machine log files.Results: All 10 patients completed the OSS procedure in a single day, and all reported satisfaction with the process. Median time for the treatment planning step and the whole procedure were 2.8 h and 6.6 h, respectively. With optimization of the procedure, treatment could be completed in half a day. During beam-on, the 3 mm tracking boundary encompassed between 78.0 and 100 % of the GTV across all patients, with corresponding PTV values being 94.4-100 % (5th-95th percentiles). On average, system-latency for triggering a beam-off event comprised 5.3 % of the delivery time. Latency reduced GTV coverage by an average of-0.3 %. Duty-cycles during treatment delivery ranged from 26.1 to 64.7 %.Conclusions: An OSS procedure with MR-guided SABR for lung cancer led to good patient satisfaction. Gated treatment delivery was highly accurate with little impact of system-latency.

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