Clinical Experience of the Importance of Daily Portal Imaging for Head and Neck IMRT Treatments
Abstract
For all patients, pretreatment isocenter discrepancies 3mm or smaller were recorded for a median of 92.5% of fractions (range: 71.4 – 100%). Patients were repositioned in the immobilization mask before treatment for a median of 14% of fractions (3-34%). Thirty percent of these were for shoulder shifts of 1cm or larger. Twenty percent of patients needed shoulder shifts of 1cm or more for more than 7/35 fractions, meaning that without setup based on daily imaging, parts of the CTV would have received less than 95% of the prescribed dose. In conclusion, with our current immobilization, isocenter positioning accuracy is excellent, while correct shoulder position is more variable, particularly for a small subset of patients. Frequent imaging of head and neck IMRT patients is essential to accurate delivery of therapy, with shoulder position an important factor.