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Intracranial stereotactic radiosurgery with an adapted linear accelerator vs. robotic radiosurgery: Comparison of dosimetric treatment plan quality.
- Source :
-
Strahlentherapie und Onkologie : Organ der Deutschen Rontgengesellschaft ... [et al] [Strahlenther Onkol] 2015 Jun; Vol. 191 (6), pp. 470-6. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Nov 22. - Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Background and Purpose: Stereotactic radiosurgery with an adapted linear accelerator (linac-SRS) is an established therapy option for brain metastases, benign brain tumors, and arteriovenous malformations. We intended to investigate whether the dosimetric quality of treatment plans achieved with a CyberKnife (CK) is at least equivalent to that for linac-SRS with circular or micromultileaf collimators (microMLC).<br />Patients and Methods: A random sample of 16 patients with 23 target volumes, previously treated with linac-SRS, was replanned with CK. Planning constraints were identical dose prescription and clinical applicability. In all cases uniform optimization scripts and inverse planning objectives were used. Plans were compared with respect to coverage, minimal dose within target volume, conformity index, and volume of brain tissue irradiated with ≥ 10 Gy.<br />Results: Generating the CK plan was unproblematic with simple optimization scripts in all cases. With the CK plans, coverage, minimal target volume dosage, and conformity index were significantly better, while no significant improvement could be shown regarding the 10 Gy volume. Multiobjective comparison for the irradiated target volumes was superior in the CK plan in 20 out of 23 cases and equivalent in 3 out of 23 cases. Multiobjective comparison for the treated patients was superior in the CK plan in all 16 cases.<br />Conclusion: The results clearly demonstrate the superiority of the irradiation plan for CK compared to classical linac-SRS with circular collimators and microMLC. In particular, the average minimal target volume dose per patient, increased by 1.9 Gy, and at the same time a 14% better conformation index seems to be an improvement with clinical relevance.
- Subjects :
- Cranial Irradiation
Humans
Radiosurgery methods
Radiotherapy Dosage
Retrospective Studies
Robotics methods
Surgery, Computer-Assisted methods
Treatment Outcome
Brain Neoplasms surgery
Particle Accelerators instrumentation
Radiosurgery instrumentation
Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted methods
Robotics instrumentation
Surgery, Computer-Assisted instrumentation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1439-099X
- Volume :
- 191
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Strahlentherapie und Onkologie : Organ der Deutschen Rontgengesellschaft ... [et al]
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 25416146
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00066-014-0786-y