Abstract

The goal of radiation therapy is to administer a therapeutic dose of radiation to a target while limiting the side effects caused by delivering the dose to surrounding tissues and vital organs. The ongoing pursuit to achieve an optimal dose distribution has prompted the radiation therapy profession to develop new techniques that incorporate advances in technology. In radiation therapy today, modern techniques that include three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy (3D-CRT) and intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) are routinely used in the treatment of cancers. Compared with 3D-CRT, IMRT is capable of producing dose distributions that conform to the planning treatment volume and deliver a reduced dose to surrounding tissues and vital organs. This has come with the cost of increased treatment time and a larger volume of normal tissue receiving low radiation doses. Most recently, there has been considerable interest in the rotating gantry IMRT techniques, tomotherapy and volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT). Tomotherapy is a dedicated treatment system that is best described as a combination of a computed tomography scanner and a linear accelerator. In tomotherapy, treatment is delivered using a rotating fan beam. A therapeutic dose is delivered when a patient is translated smoothly through the bore of the machine as its gantry continuously rotates. Tomotherapy is capable of producing high-quality plans that increasingly spare dose to surrounding organs at risk. In VMAT, treatment is delivered on a linear accelerator using a cone beam that rotates around the patient. The cone beam is modulated by dynamic multileaf collimation, variable dose rate and variable gantry speed to generate IMRT-quality dose distributions in a single optimized arc around the patient. VMAT treatments can significantly reduce the time and monitor units required to deliver a patient’s treatment. Conventional IMRT, tomotherapy and VMAT typically produce dose distributions of similar quality. Which technique is most suited to treat a patient will depend on considerations such as the availability of the specific treatment type and its impact on the utilization of departmental planning and treatment resources.

Highlights

  • Within one year of Roentgen’s discovery of X-rays in 1895, radiation was being used for the treatment of various malignant diseases 1.From the 1950s to the late 1980s the approach to radiation therapy was largely a two-dimensional (2D) approach

  • The cone beam is modulated by dynamic multi-leaf collimator (MLC), variable dose rate, and variable gantry speed to generate IMRTquality dose distributions in a single optimized arc around the patient

  • Compared with fixed gantry intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), the potential advantage of volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) include a large reduction in treatment time and concomitant reduction in the number of MUs required to deliver a given fraction size 25

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Summary

Introduction

Within one year of Roentgen’s discovery of X-rays in 1895, radiation was being used for the treatment of various malignant diseases 1. Tomotherapy is a complex rotational method of treatment delivery that may improve the dose conformity of a treatment plan compared with the fixed gantry method of IMRT that uses a limited number of beam directions 21. Compared with fixed gantry IMRT, the potential advantage of VMAT include a large reduction in treatment time and concomitant reduction in the number of MUs required to deliver a given fraction size 25. The significance of this is discussed in more detail

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