Independent 6D quality assurance of stereotactic radiotherapy repositioning on linacs.

2020 
Abstract Purpose A high level of accuracy while positioning the patient is mandatory for frameless stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT), as large doses in multiple fractions can be delivered near organs at risk. The objective of this study is to propose an end-to-end quality assurance method to verify that submillimetre alignment can be achieved with stereotactic conventional linacs. Methods We used a TrueBeam® linear accelerator equipped with a 6DOF robotic couch. The “ISO Cube” phantom was used with a homemade stand designed to generate known translational and rotational offsets. A reference CT scan was performed with straight alignment of the phantom. The procedure introduced 1.6° angular offset for the couch pitch and roll, at various gantry angles. The couch base was also moved between 0° and 270°. We compared the results with the daily machine performance check tests (MPC, Varian). Results The mean isocentre size, MV and kV imager offsets were found to agree to within 0.1 mm, 0.1 mm and 0.3 mm respectively, and were in close agreement between the methods. For a total four months data collection period, the mean deviation between requested and measured 6DOF couch shifts was 0.6 mm and 0.2°. Errors on field size were smaller than 1 mm for 97.7% of the 324 data points. Conclusion Results demonstrate that the linac equipped with a 6DOF robotic positioner and CBCT imaging satisfies requirements for SRT. Our methodology, based on a modified Winston-Lutz quality control, allowed us to quantitatively assess end-to-end accuracy of a linac in order to safely deliver SRT.
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