21 research outputs found
Impact of use of optical surface imaging on initial patient setup for stereotactic body radiotherapy treatments
Purpose
To evaluate the effectiveness of surface image guidance (SG) for preāimaging setup of stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) patients, and to investigate the impact of SG reference surface selection on this process.
Methods and materials
284 SBRT fractions (SGāSBRT = 113, nonāSGāSBRT = 171) were retrospectively evaluated. Differences between initial (preāimaging) and treatment couch positions were extracted from the recordāandāverify system and compared for the two groups. Rotational setup discrepancies were also computed. The utility of orthogonal kVs in reducing CBCT shifts in the SGāSBRT/nonāSGāSBRT groups was also calculated. Additionally, the number of CBCTs acquired for setup was recorded and the average for each cohort was compared. These data served to evaluate the effectiveness of surface imaging in preāimaging patient positioning and its potential impact on the necessity of including orthogonal kVs for setup. Since reference surface selection can affect SG setup, daily surface reproducibility was estimated by comparing cameraāacquired surface references (VRT surface) at each fraction to the external surface of the planning CT (DICOM surface) and to the VRT surface from the previous fraction.
Results
The reduction in all initialātoātreatment translation/rotation differences when using SGāSBRT was statistically significant (RankāSum test, Ī± = 0.05). Orthogonal kV imaging kept CBCT shifts below reimaging thresholds in 19%/51% of fractions for SGāSBRT/nonāSGāSBRT cohorts. Differences in average number of CBCTs acquired were not statistically significant. The reference surface study found no statistically significant differences between the use of DICOM or VRT surfaces.
Conclusions
SGāSBRT improved preāimaging treatment setup compared to ināroom laser localization alone. It decreased the necessity of orthogonal kV imaging prior to CBCT but did not affect the average number of CBCTs acquired for setup. The selection of reference surface did not have a significant impact on initial patient positioning