Safely achieving single prolonged breath-holds of > 5 minutes for radiotherapy in the prone, front crawl position

Breast cancer radiotherapy is increasingly delivered supine with multiple, short breath-holds. There may be heart and lung sparing advantages for locoregional breast cancer of both prone treatment and in a single breath-hold. We test here whether single prolonged breath-holds are possible in the pro...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of radiology 2021-06, Vol.94 (1122), p.20210079-20210079
Hauptverfasser: Parkes, M J, De Neve, Wilfried, Vakaet, Vincent, Heyes, Geoffrey, Jackson, Timothy, Delaney, Richard, Kirby, Gavin, Green, Stuart, Kilby, Warren, Cashmore, Jason, Ghafoor, Qamar, Clutton-Brock, Thomas
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container_end_page 20210079
container_issue 1122
container_start_page 20210079
container_title British journal of radiology
container_volume 94
creator Parkes, M J
De Neve, Wilfried
Vakaet, Vincent
Heyes, Geoffrey
Jackson, Timothy
Delaney, Richard
Kirby, Gavin
Green, Stuart
Kilby, Warren
Cashmore, Jason
Ghafoor, Qamar
Clutton-Brock, Thomas
description Breast cancer radiotherapy is increasingly delivered supine with multiple, short breath-holds. There may be heart and lung sparing advantages for locoregional breast cancer of both prone treatment and in a single breath-hold. We test here whether single prolonged breath-holds are possible in the prone, front crawl position. 19 healthy volunteers were trained to deliver supine, single prolonged breath-holds with pre-oxygenation and hypocapnia. We tested whether all could achieve the same durations in the prone, front crawl position. 19 healthy volunteers achieved supine, single prolonged breath-holds for mean of 6.2 ± 0.3 min. All were able to hold safely for the same duration while prone (6.1 ± 0.2 min . by paired ANOVA). With prone, the increased weight on the chest did not impede chest inflation, nor the ability to hold air in the chest. Thus, the rate of chest deflation (mean anteroposterior deflation movement of three craniocaudally arranged surface markers on the spinal cord) was the same (1.2 ± 0.2, 2.0 ± 0.4 and 1.2 ± 0.4 mm/min) as found previously during supine prolonged breath-holds. No leakage of carbon dioxide or air was detectable into the facemask. Single prolonged (>5 min) breath-holds are equally possible in the prone, front crawl position. Prolonged breath-holds in the front crawl position are possible and have the same durations as in the supine position. Such training would therefore be feasible for some patients with breast cancer requiring loco-regional irradiation. It would have obvious advantages for hypofractionation.
doi_str_mv 10.1259/bjr.20210079
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There may be heart and lung sparing advantages for locoregional breast cancer of both prone treatment and in a single breath-hold. We test here whether single prolonged breath-holds are possible in the prone, front crawl position. 19 healthy volunteers were trained to deliver supine, single prolonged breath-holds with pre-oxygenation and hypocapnia. We tested whether all could achieve the same durations in the prone, front crawl position. 19 healthy volunteers achieved supine, single prolonged breath-holds for mean of 6.2 ± 0.3 min. All were able to hold safely for the same duration while prone (6.1 ± 0.2 min . by paired ANOVA). With prone, the increased weight on the chest did not impede chest inflation, nor the ability to hold air in the chest. Thus, the rate of chest deflation (mean anteroposterior deflation movement of three craniocaudally arranged surface markers on the spinal cord) was the same (1.2 ± 0.2, 2.0 ± 0.4 and 1.2 ± 0.4 mm/min) as found previously during supine prolonged breath-holds. No leakage of carbon dioxide or air was detectable into the facemask. Single prolonged (&gt;5 min) breath-holds are equally possible in the prone, front crawl position. Prolonged breath-holds in the front crawl position are possible and have the same durations as in the supine position. Such training would therefore be feasible for some patients with breast cancer requiring loco-regional irradiation. 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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Adult
Breast Neoplasms - radiotherapy
Breath Holding
Female
Healthy Volunteers
Humans
Patient Safety
Prone Position
Supine Position
Time Factors
title Safely achieving single prolonged breath-holds of > 5 minutes for radiotherapy in the prone, front crawl position
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