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To investigate the necessity of rotational shifts by considering dosimetric
impact of rotational errors on stereotactic body radiation therapy
(SBRT).
Materials and methods
20 lung patients with the lesion size <5 cm treated with SBRT have
been selected for dosimetric analysis. Three-dimensional dose has been
rotationally shifted (±1°, ±3°,
±5° for pitch, roll and yaw) and overlaid to the original
computed tomography images. The dose–volume histograms of
18-rotational plans of each patient were compared to those of the original
plan.
Results
No significant dosimetric differences were observed in target coverage. For
all of the cases up to 5° in any couch angle dose differences of
D99 and D95 were
<3%. Variations of conformity index were observed to be less
than 0·05. None of the organ at risk doses exceeded the dose limit.
The V20 differences of the ipsilateral and the
total lungs were less than 0·4%.
Conclusion
It has been found to be unnecessary to perform rotational shifts up to
5° for lung SBRT treatments; the translational shift is sufficient
for the cases used in this study. This method may be applied and tested
after planning and before treatment initiation to rule out exceptionally
extreme cases.
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