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Impact of the Extremities Positioning on the Set-Up Reproducibility for the Total Marrow Irradiation Treatment.

Nicola LambriSimone Leopoldo AntonettiDamiano DeiLuisa BelluStefania BramantiRicardo Coimbra BriosoCarmello Carlo-StellaIsabella CastiglioniElena ClericiLeonardo CrespiChiara De PhilippisCarmela GaldieriDaniele LoiaconoPierina NavarriaGiacomo ReggioriRoberto RusconiStefano TomatisMarta ScorsettiPietro Mancosu
Published in: Current oncology (Toronto, Ont.) (2023)
Total marrow (lymph node) irradiation (TMI/TMLI) delivery requires more time than standard radiotherapy treatments. The patient's extremities, through the joints, can experience large movements. The reproducibility of TMI/TMLI patients' extremities was evaluated to find the best positioning and reduce unwanted movements. Eighty TMI/TMLI patients were selected (2013-2022). During treatment, a cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) was performed for each isocenter to reposition the patient. CBCT-CT pairs were evaluated considering: (i) online vector shift (OVS) that matched the two series; (ii) residual vector shift (RVS) to reposition the patient's extremities; (iii) qualitative agreement (range 1-5). Patients were subdivided into (i) arms either leaning on the frame or above the body; (ii) with or without a personal cushion for foot positioning. The Mann-Whitney test was considered ( p < 0.05 significant). Six-hundred-twenty-nine CBCTs were analyzed. The median OVS was 4.0 mm, with only 1.6% of cases ranked < 3, and 24% of RVS > 10 mm. Arms leaning on the frame had significantly smaller RVS than above the body (median: 8.0 mm/6.0 mm, p < 0.05). Using a personal cushion for the feet significantly improved the RVS than without cushions (median: 8.5 mm/1.8 mm, p < 0.01). The role and experience of the radiotherapy team are fundamental to optimizing the TMI/TMLI patient setup.
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