Effectiveness of a simple and real-time baseline shift monitoring system during stereotactic body radiation therapy of lung tumors

•Intrafractional motion of the patient’s body generates a baseline shift of patient’s respiratory waveform.•Patient’s body baseline shift can reduce the accuracy of respiratory-gated treatment.•The baseline shift can be measured accurately in real time using a webcam system.•The manubrium of the ste...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physica medica 2017-11, Vol.43, p.100-106
Hauptverfasser: Uchida, Yukihiro, Tachibana, Hidenobu, Kamei, Yoshiyuki, Kashihara, Kenichi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Intrafractional motion of the patient’s body generates a baseline shift of patient’s respiratory waveform.•Patient’s body baseline shift can reduce the accuracy of respiratory-gated treatment.•The baseline shift can be measured accurately in real time using a webcam system.•The manubrium of the sternum is a good location for measuring the baseline shift.•Independent baseline shift monitoring system may be useful for gated radiotherapy. This study aimed to clinically validate a simple real-time baseline shift monitoring system in a prospective study of consecutive patients undergoing stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) of lung tumors, and to investigate baseline shift due to intrafraction motion of the patient’s body during lung SBRT. Ten consecutive patients with peripheral lung tumors were treated by SBRT consisting of four fractions of 12 Gy each, with a total dose of 48 Gy. During treatment, each patient’s geometric displacement in the anterior–posterior and left–right directions (the baseline shift) was measured using a real-time monitoring webcam system. Displacement between the start and end of treatment was measured using an X-ray fluoroscopic imaging system. The displacement measurements of the two systems were compared, and the measurements of baseline shift acquired by the monitoring system during treatment were analyzed for all patients. There was no significant deviation between the monitoring system and the X-ray imaging system, with the accuracy of measurement being within 1 mm. Measurements using the monitoring system showed that 7 min of treatment generated displacements of more than 1 mm in 50% of the patients. Baseline shift of a patient’s body may be measured accurately in real time, using a monitoring system without X-ray exposure. The manubrium of the sternum is a good location for measuring the baseline shift of a patient’s body at all times. The real-time monitoring system may be useful for measuring the baseline shift of a patient’s body independently of a gating system.
ISSN:1120-1797
1724-191X
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmp.2017.11.001