Abstract

We performed a treatment planning study in order to gather basic insight in the effect of setup errors and breathing motion on the cumulative proton dose to a lung tumor. We used a simplified geometry that simulates a 50 mm diameter gross tumor volume (GTV) located centrally inside lung tissue. The GTV was expanded with a uniform 5 mm margin into a clinical target volume (CTV) and into a variety of planning target volume (PTV's). Proton beam apertures were designed to conform the prescribed dose laterally to the PTV while the range compensator was designed to provide distal coverage of the CTV. Different smearing distances were applied to the range compensators, and the cumulative dose in the CTV was evaluated for different combinations of breathing motion and systematic setup errors. Evaluation parameters were the dose to 99% of the CTV (D99) and the equivalent uniform dose (EUD), with a surviving fraction at 2 Gy of SF2 = 0.5. For a single proton field designed to a 15 mm expansion of the CTV and without smearing applied to the range compensator, D99 of the CTV reduced from 96% for no tumor displacement to 41% and 13% for systematic setup errors of 5 and 10 mm, respectively. For a representative clinical combination, of 5 mm systematic error and 10 mm breathing amplitude, the EUD of the CTV was about 40 Gy (prescribed dose 70 Gy) regardless the CTV to PTV margin, and without smearing. Smearing the range compensator increases the dose to the CTV substantially with a lateral margin and smearing distance of 7.5 mm providing ample tumor coverage. In this latter case, D99 of the target volume increased to 87% for a single field treatment plan. Smearing does, however, lead to an increase in dose to normal tissues distal to the clinical target volume. Next to countering geometric mismatches due to patient setup, smearing can also be used to counter the detrimental effects of breathing motion on the dose to the clinical target volume. We show that the lateral margin and smearing distance can be substantially smaller than the maximum tumor displacement due to setup errors and patient breathing, as measured by the D99 and the EUD.

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