Abstract

BackgroundWith the large-scale introduction of volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), selection of optimal beam angles for coplanar static-beam IMRT has increasingly become obsolete. Due to unavailability of VMAT in current MR-linacs, the problem has re-gained importance. An application for automated IMRT treatment planning with integrated, patient-specific computer-optimization of beam angles (BAO) was used to systematically investigate computer-aided generation of beam angle class solutions (CS) for replacement of computationally expensive patient-specific BAO. Rectal cancer was used as a model case.Materials and Methods23 patients treated at a Unity MR-linac were included. BAOx plans (x=7-12 beams) were generated for all patients. Analyses of BAO12 plans resulted in CSx class solutions. BAOx plans, CSx plans, and plans with equi-angular setups (EQUIx, x=9-56) were mutually compared.ResultsFor x>7, plan quality for CSx and BAOx was highly similar, while both were superior to EQUIx. E.g. with CS9, bowel/bladder Dmean reduced by 22% [11%, 38%] compared to EQUI9 (p<0.001). For equal plan quality, the number of EQUI beams had to be doubled compared to BAO and CS.ConclusionsComputer-generated beam angle CS could replace individualized BAO without loss in plan quality, while reducing planning complexity and calculation times, and resulting in a simpler clinical workflow. CS and BAO largely outperformed equi-angular treatment. With the developed CS, time consuming beam angle re-optimization in daily adaptive MR-linac treatment could be avoided. Further systematic research on computerized development of beam angle class solutions for MR-linac treatment planning is warranted.

Highlights

  • With the large-scale introduction of volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), the problem of selecting a set of optimal beam directions in treatment planning for coplanar IMRT with static beam configurations has increasingly become obsolete

  • Computerized beam angle selection has been investigated for coplanar IMRT treatments [10,11,12]

  • Several generated CS7 plans had PTV coverages as low as 90%, requiring major re-scaling to arrive at the desired 99% coverage, which sometimes resulted in too large hot spots in the PTV (See Discussion)

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Summary

Introduction

With the large-scale introduction of volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), the problem of selecting a set of optimal beam directions in treatment planning for coplanar IMRT with static beam configurations has increasingly become obsolete. Current MR-linac (MRL) systems [1,2,3,4] do not offer VMAT and only allow coplanar treatment, meaning that the beam angle selection problem for coplanar treatments has re-gained importance. This could have an impact on daily adaptive re-.

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