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Variations in Head and Neck Treatment Plan Quality Assessment Among Radiation Oncologists and Medical Physicists in a Single Radiotherapy Department

Authors :
Elisabetta Cagni
Andrea Botti
Linda Rossi
Cinzia Iotti
Mauro Iori
Salvatore Cozzi
Marco Galaverni
Ala Rosca
Roberto Sghedoni
Giorgia Timon
Emiliano Spezi
Ben Heijmen
Radiotherapy
Source :
Frontiers in Oncology, Frontiers in Oncology, 11:706034. Frontiers Media S.A., Frontiers in Oncology, Vol 11 (2021), Frontiers in Oncology-Radiation Oncology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BackgroundAgreement between planners and treating radiation oncologists (ROs) on plan quality criteria is essential for consistent planning. Differences between ROs and planning medical physicists (MPs) in perceived quality of head and neck cancer plans were assessed.Materials and MethodsFive ROs and four MPs scored 65 plans for in total 15 patients. For each patient, the clinical (CLIN) plan and two or four alternative plans, generated with automated multi-criteria optimization (MCO), were included. There was always one MCO plan aiming at maximally adhering to clinical plan requirements, while the other MCO plans had a lower aimed quality. Scores were given as follows: 1–7 and 1–2, not acceptable; 3–5, acceptable if further planning would not resolve perceived weaknesses; and 6–7, straightway acceptable. One MP and one RO repeated plan scoring for intra-observer variation assessment.ResultsFor the 36 unique observer pairs, the median percentage of plans for which the two observers agreed on a plan score (100% = 65 plans) was 27.7% [6.2, 40.0]. In the repeat scoring, agreements between first and second scoring were 52.3% and 40.0%, respectively. With a binary division between unacceptable (scores 1 and 2) and acceptable (3–7) plans, the median inter-observer agreement percentage was 78.5% [63.1, 86.2], while intra-observer agreements were 96.9% and 86.2%. There were no differences in observed agreements between RO–RO, MP–MP, and RO–MP pairs. Agreements for the highest-quality, automatically generated MCO plans were higher than for the CLIN plans.ConclusionsInter-observer differences in plan quality scores were substantial and could result in inconsistencies in generated treatment plans. Agreements among ROs were not better than between ROs and MPs, despite large differences in training and clinical role. High-quality automatically generated plans showed the best score agreements.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2234943X
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c6997569e1375ba7a20b139a2f55a856
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.706034