Abstract

AbstractPurpose: To investigate the dosimetric consequences of rectal distension at the time of the planning computed tomography (CT) scan and any resultant prostate movement on the planned dose delivery for patients receiving three-dimensional conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT) to the prostate.Methods and materials: 25 prostate cancer patients whose planning CT scan demonstrated a full rectum were rescanned after following a laxative protocol. Rectal dimensions on the two scans and 3DCRT treatment plans produced on each plan were compared. The dosimetric implications of changes in rectal size on the treatment plans and the delivered dose were determined. Statistical significance was evaluated with the Wilcoxon signed ranks test.Results: Significant differences in rectal size were found between the initial CT scan and the rescan. The corresponding median change in prostate position was 4.7 mm. The use of planning scans with a full rectum, that is unrepresentative of the rectum, during treatment causes significant reductions in planning target volume (PTV) minimum dose (median reduction 33.7%) and coverage by the 95% isodose (median reduction 3.7% of the PTV).Conclusion: Rectal distension on the initial planning scan can lead to significant PTV underdosage. Patients presenting with large initial rectal fillings must be rescanned in order to avoid a systematic underdosing of the PTV.

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