Reducing cardiac dose in post-operative irradiation of breast cancer patients: the relative importance of patient positioning and CT scan planning.
- 1 October 1999
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The British Journal of Radiology
- Vol. 72 (862) , 986-993
- https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr.72.862.10673950
Abstract
Left-sided post-operative radiotherapy fields for the treatment of breast cancer inevitably encompass the heart within the treatment volume, resulting in late mortality which may negate the cause-specific survival advantage of the therapy. The effect of positioning was studied in 11 patients with left-sided tumours and five with right-sided tumours receiving routine post-operative radiotherapy to the breast or chest wall as part of primary therapy for breast cancer. Using the same arrangement of glancing fields for each patient treatment position, the optimum patient positioning resulted in a reduction in cardiac dose compared to our standard patient treatment position. On the left side the reduction in mean cardiac dose was 60% (p < 0.001) and the reduction in maximum dose was 32% (p < 0.001); on the right it was 17% and 31%, respectively. The volume of cardiac tissue irradiated was also reduced for all patients. Using this optimum treatment position, cardiac dose was investigated in a further 10 patients with left-sided tumours and our standard glancing field set-up was compared with 3-dimensional planning. A further reduction of 12% in the mean cardiac dose was achieved. 5 of 10 patients had a further small reduction of 4.6% in the maximum dose and one patient had a further reduction in maximum dose of 58%. In conclusion, sophisticated radiotherapy planning can reduce cardiac doses, but optimum patient positioning is of greater importance. The general application of such relatively simple measures could have a significant positive effect on overall survival from breast cancer.Keywords
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