Abstract

120 Background: Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) has not been widely used for breast cancer partly due to: 1) the lack of a suitable immobilization device; and 2) the lack of a delivery system that can concentrate a high radiation dose noninvasively. We have developed a SRS system that effectively addresses these obstacles and demonstrated the dosimetric feasibility of simultaneously ablating the intact tumor and sterilizing the tumor bed. Methods: A breast immobilization device consists of a solid outer cup with embedded stereotactic frame and a porous inner cup; the two cups join at the chest wall side by a soft goggle-like lip for comfort. A negative pressure is applied to the space between the two cups to immobilize the breast tissues. 15 patients with surgical clips in their breast underwent a geometric reproducibility trial, in which the patients received two CT scans spaced 10-60 minutes while wearing the cup. A SRS delivery system uses 36 Co-60 sources that rotate around a focal point to produce 36 non-coplanar arcs. The breast cup is locked on the treatment couch with the patient in prone position. The couch moves dynamically during treatment, allowing the focal spots to “paint” the desired 3D dose distribution. Results: The reproducibility of the 42 available clips was 1.83 mm ± 1.08 mm (2 std) and patients reported good comfort. 8 treatment plans simultaneously delivering an ablative dose of 18Gy to an intact tumor plus a 3mm margin (CTV1) and 10Gy to the tumor bed (CTV2 = CTV1+1cm) have been developed and verified with measurements. The dose-volume histograms showed very uniform dose coverage with 98% of CTV1 receiving 18Gy and 100% of tumor bed receiving 10Gy. On average, only 21% of the normal breast receives greater than 5Gy, safe to deliver 3 fractions of such doses. Conclusions: A breast-specific SRS system has been developed. Dosimetric studies illustrated the feasibility of managing early-stage breast cancer with SRS. Clinical studies that will identify patients in whom current forms of surgery and postoperative radiation may be eliminated are planned, allowing completion of local therapies noninvasively within a few days rather than months.

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