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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://mnclhd.intersearch.com.au/mnclhdjspui/handle/123456789/689
Title: Validation of a weekly imaging protocol for tangential whole breast radiation therapy with a tattoo-less surface-guided setup
Authors: Namba, S.;Steel, J.;Hoffmann, M.;Thompson, H.;Baylis, A.;Hansen, C.;Shakespeare, T.
MNCLHD Author: Namba, Sumie
Steel, Jared G.
Hoffmann, Matthew
Thompson, Hannah
Baylis, Abbey
Hansen, Carmen
Shakespeare, Thomas P.
Issue Date: 13-Jun-2025
Citation: Technical Innovations & Patient Support in Radiation Oncology. 2025 Jun 13:35:100318
Abstract: This study explored whether tattoo-less surface guided setups with a first 4 fractions then weekly imaging schedule (F1-4&W) is a suitable alternative to tattoo alignment setups for adjuvant whole breast radiotherapy (WBRT) patients. The daily CBCT images (n = 450) of 30 patients treated using tattoo-less surface-guided radiation therapy (SGRT) were retrospectively re-matched to a WBRT protocol. The accuracy of the re-match was assessed, and a F1-4&W imaging schedule applied to investigate the percentage of fractions that would have been treated to a 0.5 cm tolerance. The results were compared with the setup accuracy of 100 consecutive patients treated with WBRT using the existing practice of tattoo-based alignment. 95.8 % of the tattoo-less SGRT setup fractions were assessed to be treated within tolerance, with a maximum discrepancy from isocentre of 0.7 cm for a non-imaged fraction. When comparing imaged fractions, 98 % of these patients positioned within 0.5 cm of isocentre, while the tattoo-alignment method achieved this only 80 % of the time. The overall imaging frequency rates per patient were 51 % and 53 % for study (SGRT/CBCT) and control groups (EPI/tattoos) respectively. We conclude that tattoo-less SGRT provides a consistently accurate method to setup supine tangential WBRT patients with a benefit to patient experience. Furthermore, a F1-4&W imaging schedule is sufficient to ensure patients are treated within tolerance, while maintaining appropriate indication for when increased imaging frequency is necessary.
URI: https://mnclhd.intersearch.com.au/mnclhdjspui/handle/123456789/689
PubMed URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40599300/
DOI: 10.1016/j.tipsro.2025.100318
Keywords: Tattooing;Patient Positioning;Breast Neoplasms;Radiation Therapy
Appears in Collections:Oncology / Cancer

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