Poster ‐ 35: Monitoring patient positioning during deep inspiration breath hold with a distance measuring laser

Purpose: The accuracy of treatment delivery for left breast/chest wall patients using deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) is being monitored using a distance measuring laser (DML) Methods: A commercially available DML (DLS‐C15, Dimetix) was mounted behind a Varian TrilogyTM linac. Relative to the ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Medical Physics
Main Authors: Weston, Mark, Juhasz, Janos
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2016
Subjects:
DML
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.4961809
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1118%2F1.4961809
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1118/1.4961809
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Summary:Purpose: The accuracy of treatment delivery for left breast/chest wall patients using deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) is being monitored using a distance measuring laser (DML) Methods: A commercially available DML (DLS‐C15, Dimetix) was mounted behind a Varian TrilogyTM linac. Relative to the machine isocenter, the laser from the beam was offset by 8 cm to the left and by 1 cm in the superior direction. This position was selected because this point is situated on the sternum for the majority of the left breast/chest‐wall patients treated at our institution. The Varian Real‐Time Positioning Management™ (RPM) guided DIBH treatments at our institution is delivered by placing the system's tracking block on the patient's abdomen. The treatment beam is enabled only when the block is in between a predefined abdomen motion range as determined during the CT simulation process. A LabVIEW program was developed to record both beam status (i.e. on/off) and distance measurements. In this study the DML was only used to monitor the position of a single point on the chest and no clinical decisions/adjustments were made based on these measurements. Results and Conclusions: Thus far, 34 fractions have been recorded for 4 patients. As such, the performance of our DIBH treatment technique cannot be fairly evaluated at this point. However, deviations between expected and measured distances have been observed and if these are found to be reproducible, then modifications in our treatment procedures and policies will have to take place.