Abstract

Through geometrical simulation, we evaluated the effect of rotational error in patient setup on geometrical coverage and calculated the maximum distance between the isocenter and target, where the clinical PTV margin secures geometrical coverage with a single-isocenter technique. We used simulated spherical GTVs with diameters of 1.0 (GTV 1), 1.5 (GTV 2), 2.0 (GTV 3), and 3.0cm (GTV 4). The location of the target center was set such that the distance between the target and isocenter ranged from 0 to 15cm. We created geometrical coverage vectors so that each target was entirely covered by 100% of the prescribed dose. The vectors of the target positions were simultaneously rotated within a range of 0°-2.0° around the x-, y-, and z-axes. For each rotational error, the reduction in geometrical coverage of the targets was calculated and compared with that obtained for a rotational error of 0°. The tolerance value of the geometrical coverage reduction was defined as 5% of the GTV. The maximum distance that satisfied the 5% tolerance value for different values of rotational error at a clinical PTV margin of 0.1cm was calculated. When the rotational errors were 0.5° for a 0.1cm PTV margin, the maximum distances were as follows: GTV 1: 7.6cm; GTV 2: 10.9cm; GTV 3: 14.3cm; and GTV 4: 21.4cm. It might be advisable to exclude targets that are > 7.6cm away from the isocenter with a single-isocenter technique to satisfy the tolerance value for all GTVs.

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