Abstract
To evaluate the respiratory motion influence on the tridimensional (3D) dose delivery to breast-shaped phantoms using conformal radiotherapy (3D-RT), Field-in Field (FiF), and IMRT planning techniques. This study used breast-shaped phantoms filled with MAGIC-f gel dosimeter to simulate the breast, and an oscillation platform to simulate the respiratory motion. The platform allowed motion in the anterior-posterior direction with oscillation amplitudes of 0.34cm, 0.88cm, and 1.22cm. CT images of the static phantom were used for the 3D-RT, FiF, and IMRT treatment planning. Five phantoms were prepared and irradiated for each planning technique evaluated. Phantom 1 was irradiated static, phantoms 2-4 were irradiated moving with the three different motion amplitudes, and phantom 5 was used as a reference. The 3D dose distributions were obtained by relaxometry of magnetic resonance imaging, and the respiratory motion influence in the doses distribution was accessed by gamma evaluations (3%/3mm/15% threshold) comparing the measurements of the phantoms irradiated under movement with the static ones. The mean gamma approvals for three oscillatory amplitudes were 96.44%, 93.23%, and 91.65%; 98.42%, 95.66%, and 94.31%; and 94.49%, 93.51%, and 86.62% respectively for 3D-RT, FiF and IMRT treatments. A gamma results profile per slice along the phantom showed that for FiF and IMRT irradiations, most of the failures occurred in the central region of the phantom. By increasing the respiratory motion movement, the dose distribution variations for the three planning techniques were more pronounced, being the FiF technique variations the smallest one.
Published Version
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