Abstract

BackgroundVentricular tachycardia is an irregular heartbeat conventionally treated using invasive cardiac catheter ablation and medication. However, when standard treatments have been exhausted, cardiac SABR provides a final treatment option to this high-mortality condition. Complex diagnostic mapping and planning scans enable multi-disciplinary target delineation for a 25Gy single fraction. However, organs at risk (OAR) near the target make this treatment challenging to plan and deliver. Publications from cardiologists report the efficacy of cardiac SABR, however there is limited data on the treatment delivery and image matching of this complex procedure. MethodsFour specialist therapeutic radiographers experienced in cardiac SABR reviewed 40 CBCTs from 10 patients treated in the UK. Each therapeutic radiographer conducted five image matches: a manual match (manual), an automatic match to the heart structure (auto) and the auto match followed by manual adjustment to the PTV (PTV), all using three degrees of freedom (DoF) only. The auto and PTV matches were also repeated using 6DoF. Inter-observer variability was quantified using 95% limits of agreement from a modified Bland-Altman analysis. ResultsThe limits of agreement were smallest in the automatic matches suggesting the algorithm is reliable. A manual adjustment from the auto match to the PTV is clinically appropriate to optimise target coverage. The limits of agreement were smaller in the 6DoF PTV match 1.06 mm, 1.24 mm, 1.68 mm than the 3DoF PTV match 1.57 mm, 2.06 mm, 2.11 mm (lateral, vertical, longitudinal). ConclusionThe 6DoF CBCT image match has less variability and therefore suggest using a 6DoF couch for treatment delivery. Implications for practiceCardiac SABR CBCT image matching at treatment delivery is complex, optimisation of CBCT acquisition parameters and therapeutic radiographer training is essential prior to implementation.

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