Modalities and techniques used for stereotactic radiotherapy, intensity-modulated radiotherapy, and image-guided radiotherapy: A 2018 survey by the Japan Society of Medical Physics

•We investigated the current status of radiotherapy in Japan.•VMAT was used at a level comparable to that of static gantry IMRT.•Target-based registration using integrated CT was the modality most frequently used.•Breath holding was the most commonly used technique. Over the last several decades, th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physica medica 2019-08, Vol.64, p.182-187
Hauptverfasser: Akino, Yuichi, Tohyama, Naoki, Akita, Kazuhiko, Ishikawa, Masayori, Kawamorita, Ryu, Kurooka, Masahiko, Sumida, Iori, Nakaguchi, Yuji, Miyaura, Kazunori, Nakamura, Mitsuhiro
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•We investigated the current status of radiotherapy in Japan.•VMAT was used at a level comparable to that of static gantry IMRT.•Target-based registration using integrated CT was the modality most frequently used.•Breath holding was the most commonly used technique. Over the last several decades, there have been great advances in radiotherapy with the development of new technologies and modalities, and radiotherapy trends have changed rapidly. To comprehend the current state of radiotherapy in Japan, the QA/QC 2016–2017 Committee of the Japan Society of Medical Physics set up an intensity-modulated radiotherapy/image-guided radiotherapy (IMRT/IGRT) working group and performed a Web-based survey to show the current status of radiotherapy in Japan. The Web-based questionnaire, developed using Google Forms, contained 42 items: 7 on stereotactic radiotherapy implementation, 4 on IMRT, 24 on IGRT, and 7 on respiratory motion management. The survey was conducted from 17 January to 9 March of 2018; in total, 335 institutions provided data. The results show that volumetric modulated arc therapy was used at a level comparable to that of static gantry IMRT. For IGRT, machine-integrated computed tomography (CT), including kilovoltage or megavoltage cone-beam CT and megavoltage CT, was used at many institutions in conjunction with target-based image registration. For respiratory motion management, breath holding was the most commonly used technique. Our hope is that multi-institutional surveys such as this one will be conducted periodically to elucidate the current status of radiotherapy and emerging developments in this field. If our questionnaire was distributed worldwide, in the same format, then global trends in radiotherapy could be better understood.
ISSN:1120-1797
1724-191X
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmp.2019.07.009