AimsThe duodenum is a critical organ at risk while planning radiation for gastrointestinal cancers or para-aortic nodes from gynaecological cancers due to the close proximity to the target volumes. The aim of this study was to assess the dosimetric parameters of the duodenum received during radiotherapy to upper gastrointestinal and gynaecological malignancies and their correlation with clinical toxicity. Materials and methodsAll adult patients who were treated with radiotherapy for primary upper gastrointestinal cancers (liver, stomach, pancreas, gall bladder) and patients with gynaecological cancers who were treated with extended fields in view of para-aortic nodal involvement from 1 January 2010 to 31 July 2015 were considered for the study. The radiation dose prescription was 45 Gy to the elective clinical target volume and 52.5–60 Gy to the gross nodal volume. The planning computed tomography scan was retrieved and the dose–volume histogram parameters for the duodenum were extracted. The relative volumes of duodenum receiving a dose from 40 to 55 Gy in increments of 5 Gy (V40Gy, V45Gy, V50Gy, V55Gy) were also noted. ResultsOf the 258 patients assessed, 30 patients (12.1%) were detected to have grade 2–4 toxicities related to the duodenum as detected on endoscopy. Most had grade 3 toxicity – 18 patients were diagnosed with grade 3 toxicity and four patients had grade 4 toxicity. The most common toxicity noted was duodenal ulceration seen in 16 patients. The other toxicities were duodenal stricture in eight patients, duodenal perforation in five patients and one patient was reported to have duodenal fistula. The patients with duodenum receiving V55Gy ≥ 1 cm3 (7.7% versus 3.8%, P = 0.014) and V50Gy ≥ 4 cm3 (7.7% versus 3.8%, P = 0.014) had higher grade ≥2 duodenal toxicity. ConclusionA threshold level of V55Gy ≥ 1 cm3 and V50Gy ≥ 4 cm3 for the duodenum is predictive of clinically significant grade 2 and higher toxicity and could serve as valid dose constraints for the duodenum.