A dosimetric comparison of real-time adaptive and non-adaptive radiotherapy: A multi-institutional study encompassing robotic, gimbaled, multileaf collimator and couch tracking

  • Emma Colvill
  • Jeremy Booth
  • Simeon Nill
  • Martin Fast
  • James Bedford
  • Uwe Oelfke
  • Mitsuhiro Nakamura
  • Per Poulsen
  • Esben Worm
  • Rune Hansen
  • Thomas Ravkilde
  • Jonas Scherman Rydhög
  • Tobias Pommer
  • Per Munck Af Rosenschold
  • Stephanie Lang
  • Matthias Guckenberger
  • Christian Groh
  • Christian Herrmann
  • Dirk Verellen
  • Kenneth Poels
  • Lei Wang
  • Michael Hadsell
  • Thilo Sothmann
  • Oliver Blanck
  • Paul Keall

Abstract

PURPOSE: A study of real-time adaptive radiotherapy systems was performed to test the hypothesis that, across delivery systems and institutions, the dosimetric accuracy is improved with adaptive treatments over non-adaptive radiotherapy in the presence of patient-measured tumor motion.

METHODS AND MATERIALS: Ten institutions with robotic(2), gimbaled(2), MLC(4) or couch tracking(2) used common materials including CT and structure sets, motion traces and planning protocols to create a lung and a prostate plan. For each motion trace, the plan was delivered twice to a moving dosimeter; with and without real-time adaptation. Each measurement was compared to a static measurement and the percentage of failed points for γ-tests recorded.

RESULTS: For all lung traces all measurement sets show improved dose accuracy with a mean 2%/2mm γ-fail rate of 1.6% with adaptation and 15.2% without adaptation (p<0.001). For all prostate the mean 2%/2mm γ-fail rate was 1.4% with adaptation and 17.3% without adaptation (p<0.001). The difference between the four systems was small with an average 2%/2mm γ-fail rate of <3% for all systems with adaptation for lung and prostate.

CONCLUSIONS: The investigated systems all accounted for realistic tumor motion accurately and performed to a similar high standard, with real-time adaptation significantly outperforming non-adaptive delivery methods.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0167-8140
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 04.2016
PubMed 27016171