Medical Dosimetry
Volume 35, Issue 3 , Pages 226-229, Autumn 2010

Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) Treatment Planning for Superficial Tumors

  • Albert S. Zacarias, Ph.D.

      Affiliations

    • James Graham Brown Cancer Center, University of Louisville Healthcare, Louisville, KY
  • ,
  • Mellonie F. Brown, M.E.T., C.M.D.

      Affiliations

    • James Graham Brown Cancer Center, University of Louisville Healthcare, Louisville, KY
    • Radiation Therapist School, University of Louisville Healthcare, Louisville, KY
    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests to: Mellonie F. Brown, M.E.T., C.M.D., University of Louisville Healthcare, Radiation Therapist School, James Graham Brown Cancer Center, 529 South Jackson Street, Louisville, KY 40202
  • ,
  • Michael D. Mills, Ph.D., M.S.P.H.

      Affiliations

    • James Graham Brown Cancer Center, University of Louisville Healthcare, Louisville, KY

Received 13 April 2009; accepted 16 June 2009. published online 13 August 2009.

Abstract 

The physician's planning objective is often a uniform dose distribution throughout the planning target volume (PTV), including superficial PTVs on or near the surface of a patient's body. Varian's Eclipse treatment planning system uses a progressive resolution optimizer (PRO), version 8.2.23, for RapidArc dynamic multileaf collimator volumetric modulated arc therapy planning. Because the PRO is a fast optimizer, optimization convergence errors (OCEs) produce dose nonuniformity in the superficial area of the PTV. We present a postsurgical cranial case demonstrating the recursive method our clinic uses to produce RapidArc treatment plans. The initial RapidArc treatment plan generated using one 360° arc resulted in substantial dose nonuniformity in the superficial section of the PTV. We demonstrate the use of multiple arcs to produce improved dose uniformity in this region. We also compare the results of this superficial dose compensation method to the results of a recursive method of dose correction that we developed in-house to correct optimization convergence errors in static intensity-modulated radiation therapy treatment plans. The results show that up to 4 arcs may be necessary to provide uniform dose to the surface of the PTV with the current version of the PRO.

Key Words: IMRT, VMAT, Surface dose, Optimization, Cranium

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PII: S0958-3947(09)00057-0

doi:10.1016/j.meddos.2009.06.006

Medical Dosimetry
Volume 35, Issue 3 , Pages 226-229, Autumn 2010