Abstract

Background and purposeFast rotating closed-bore gantry linacs are ideally suited for breath-hold treatments due to reduced imaging and delivery times. We evaluated the reproducibility and stability of spirometer-guided breath-hold breast treatments, using intra-bore surface monitoring and portal imaging on Halcyon (Varian Medical Systems). Materials and methodsSeven left-sided breast cancer patients were treated in breath-hold using the SDX spirometer (Dyn’R) with an integrated boost volumetric arc protocol on Halcyon. A dual depth-camera surface scanning system monitored the left breast. The interfraction, intrafraction and intrabreath-hold motion was determined in the anterior-posterior (AP) and superior-inferior (SI) direction. Portal images (PI), acquired at a tangential gantry angle were manually registered to the planning-CT to determine inter- and intrafraction breath-hold errors for the SI and tangential-anterior-posterior (“AP”) axis. Correlations between PI and surface imaging deviations were investigated. To evaluate workflow efficiency, the total time and the number of breath-holds were recorded. ResultsSystematic and random variability of breath-hold amplitude was below 0.7 mm for the AP and below 1.2 mm for the SI component as detected by surface monitoring (N = 130). Systematic and random errors retrieved from portal images (N = 140) were below 1.2 mm for the “AP” and 2.1 mm for SI axis. A limited correlation was found between PI and surface monitoring deviations for both the SI and “AP” axes (R2 = 0.27/0.38, p < 0.01). 75% of fractions were completed using four breath-holds and 82% within 10 min. ConclusionSurface imaging indicated spirometer-guided breath-hold VMAT breast radiotherapy can be accurately and quickly performed on a closed-bore gantry linac. Intra-bore surface scanning proved a valuable technique for monitoring breathing motion in closed-bore systems.

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