scholarly journals Inverse planned constant dose rate volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) as an efficient alternative to five-field intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) for prostate

2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Conor K. McGarry ◽  
Stephen J. McMahon ◽  
David Craft ◽  
Joe M. O'Sullivan ◽  
Kevin M. Prise ◽  
...  

AbstractPurposeThe aim of this work was to determine if volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) plans, created for constant dose-rate (cdrVMAT) delivery are a viable alternative to step and shoot five-field intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT).Materials and methodsThe cdrVMAT plans, inverse planned on a treatment planning system with no solution to account for couch top or rails, were created for delivery on a linear accelerator with no variable dose rate control system. A series of five-field IMRT and cdrVMAT plans were created using dual partial arcs (gantry rotating between 260° and 100°) with 4° control points for ten prostate patients with the average rectal constraint incrementally increased. Pareto fronts were compared for the planning target volume homogeneity and average rectal dose between the two techniques for each patient. Also investigated were tumour control probability and normal tissue complication probability values for each technique. The delivery parameters [monitor units (MU) and time] and delivery accuracy of the IMRT and VMAT plans were also compared.ResultsPareto fronts showed that the dual partial arc plans were superior to the five-field IMRT plans, particularly for the clinically acceptable plans where average rectal doses were less for rotational plans (p = 0·009) with no statistical difference in target homogeneity. The cdrVMAT plans had significantly more MU (p = 0·005) but the average delivery time was significantly less than the IMRT plans by 42%. All clinically acceptable cdrVMAT plans were accurate in their delivery (gamma 99·2 ± 1·1%, 3%3 mm criteria).ConclusionsAccurate delivery of dual partial arc cdrVMAT avoiding the couch top and rails has been demonstrated.

2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
pp. 175-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annamaria Didona ◽  
Valentina Lancellotta ◽  
Claudio Zucchetti ◽  
Bianca Moira Panizza ◽  
Alessandro Frattegiani ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2070 (1) ◽  
pp. 012011
Author(s):  
D Kumar ◽  
A Pradhan ◽  
L M Singh

Abstract A study has been carried out to explore the impact by varying the number of arcs and beam arrangement on dose distributions. For this volumetric modulated arc therapy and 7-field, intensity-modulated radiation therapy plans have use for prostate cancer cases. The eclipse treatment planning system version 13.6 (Varian California, USA) was used to assess dosimetry data for 20 patients. All patients received intensity-modulated radiation therapy and volumetric modulated arc therapy plans with a varying number of arcs. 6MV X-Ray photon beam energy uses for each patient. Statistical plan assessments have been carried out for various dosimetric parameters to evaluate execution efficiency. There were no statistically significant changes (p>0.05) observed in D98% dose coverage while D2%, conformity index, homogeneity index, monitor unit, and treatment delivery time were showing statistically significant changes (p<0.05). In contrast to six arc volumetric modulated arc therapy and 7 field-intensity-modulated radiation therapy plans, Single arc volumetric modulated arc therapy plans showed 23.28 % and 25.96 % less monitor unit, 97.52 % and 137.53 % less treatment delivery time. It concluded that using a higher number of arcs in volumetric modulated arc therapy plans for prostate cancer improves plan efficiency. The four arc volumetric modulated arc therapy plans appeared to provide a reasonable trade-off between enhanced treatment delivery time and high treatment plan quality.


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