Radiotherapy & Oncology
Volume 93, Issue 1 , Pages 8-13, October 2009

On-line cone beam CT image guidance for vocal cord tumor targeting

  • Sarah O.S. Osman

      Affiliations

    • Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics, Erasmus MC-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics, Erasmus MC – Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Groene Hilledijk 301, 3075 EA Rotterdam, P.O. Box 5201, 3008 AE Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
  • ,
  • Hans C.J. de Boer

      Affiliations

    • Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics, Erasmus MC-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • ,
  • Eleftheria Astreinidou

      Affiliations

    • Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics, Erasmus MC-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • ,
  • Anne Gangsaas

      Affiliations

    • Radiation Oncology, Erasmus MC-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • ,
  • Ben J.M. Heijmen

      Affiliations

    • Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics, Erasmus MC-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
  • ,
  • Peter C. Levendag

      Affiliations

    • Radiation Oncology, Erasmus MC-Daniel den Hoed Cancer Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Received 4 December 2008; received in revised form 12 May 2009; accepted 17 May 2009. published online 15 June 2009.

Abstract 

Background and purpose

We are developing a technique for highly focused vocal cord irradiation in early glottic carcinoma to optimally treat a target volume confined to a single cord. This technique, in contrast with the conventional methods, aims at sparing the healthy vocal cord. As such a technique requires sub-mm daily targeting accuracy to be effective, we investigate the accuracy achievable with on-line kV-cone beam CT (CBCT) corrections.

Materials and methods

CBCT scans were obtained in 10 early glottic cancer patients in each treatment fraction. The grey value registration available in X-ray volume imaging (XVI) software (Elekta, Synergy) was applied to a volume of interest encompassing the thyroid cartilage. After application of the thus derived corrections, residue displacements with respect to the planning CT scan were measured at clearly identifiable relevant landmarks. The intra- and inter-observer variations were also measured.

Results

While before correction the systematic displacements of the vocal cords were as large as 2.4±3.3mm (cranial–caudal population mean±SD Σ), daily CBCT registration and correction reduced these values to less than 0.2±0.5mm in all directions. Random positioning errors (SD σ) were reduced to less than 1mm. Correcting only for translations and not for rotations did not appreciably affect this accuracy. The residue random displacements partly stem from intra-observer variations (SD=0.2–0.6mm).

Conclusion

The use of CBCT for daily image guidance in combination with standard mask fixation reduced systematic and random set-up errors of the vocal cords to <1mm prior to the delivery of each fraction dose. Thus, this facilitates the high targeting precision required for a single vocal cord irradiation.

Keywords: IGRT, Glottic carcinoma, Cone beam CT, On-line corrections, Voice preservation

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 Part of this material was presented in a poster at the 2008, ESTRO 27 Meeting in Gothenburg, Sweden.

PII: S0167-8140(09)00265-5

doi:10.1016/j.radonc.2009.05.015

Radiotherapy & Oncology
Volume 93, Issue 1 , Pages 8-13, October 2009