Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1885185 | Medical Dosimetry | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The accuracy and reproducibility of endometrial carcinoma treatment with intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) was assessed by means of in vivo dosimetry. Six patients who had previously undergone radical hysterectomy for endometrial carcinoma were treated with IMRT using a vaginal applicator with radio-opaque fiducial markers. An ion-chamber inserted into the applicator supplied an endocavitary in vivo dosimetry for quality assurance purposes. The ratio R = D/DTPS between the in vivo measured dose D and the predicted dose by the treatment planning system DTPS was determined for every fraction of the treatment. Results showed that 90% and 100% of the ratios resulted equal to 1 within 5% and 10%, respectively. The mean value of the ratios distribution for the 6 patients was R = 0.995 and the SD = 0.034. The ratio R* between the measured and predicted total doses for each patient was near to 1, within 2%. The dosimetric results suggest that the use of a vaginal applicator in an image-guided approach could make the interfractions target position stable and reproducible, allowing a safe use of the IMRT technique in the treatment of postoperative vaginal vault. In vivo dosimetry may supply useful information about the discrimination of random vs. systematic errors. The workload is minimum and this in vivo dosimetry can be applied also in the clinical routine.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Radiation
Authors
Savino Ph.D., Gabriella M.D., Cinzia M.D., Francesco M.D., Domenico Ph.D., Alessio G. M.D., Angelo Ph.D.,