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Image guidance during breast radiotherapy: A phantom dosimetry and radiation-induced second cancer risk study

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posted on 2024-11-15, 14:17 authored by A Quinn, Lois HollowayLois Holloway, Peter MetcalfePeter Metcalfe
Imaging procedures utilised for patient position verification during breast radiotherapy can add a considerable dose to organs surrounding the target volume on top of therapeutic scatter dose. This study investigated the dose from a breast kilovoltage cone-beam CT (kV-CBCT), a breast megavoltage fan-beam CT (MV-FBCT), and a TomoDirectTM breast treatment. Thermoluminescent dosimeters placed within a female anthropomorphic phantom were utilised to measure the dose to various organs and tissues. The contralateral breast, lungs and heart received 0.40 cGy, 0.45 cGy and 0.40 cGy from the kV-CBCT and 1.74 cGy, 1.39 cGy and 1.73 cGy from the MV-FBCT. In comparison to treatment alone, daily imaging would increase the contralateral breast, contralateral lung and heart dose by a relative 12%, 24% and 13% for the kV-CBCT, and 52%, 101% and 58% for the MV-FBCT. The impact of the imaging dose relative to the treatment dose was assessed with linear and linear-quadratic radiation-induced secondary cancer risk models for the contralateral breast. The additional imaging dose and risk estimates presented in this study should be taken into account when considering an image modality and frequency for patient position verification protocols in breast radiotherapy.

History

Citation

Quinn, A., Holloway, L. & Metcalfe, P. (2013). Image guidance during breast radiotherapy: A phantom dosimetry and radiation-induced second cancer risk study. Journal of Physics: Conference Serie, 444 (1), 1-4.

Journal title

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Volume

444

Issue

1

Language

English

RIS ID

82337

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