Author:
Gaya Andrew,Brulinski Patryk,Morris Stephen L.,Ball Kim A.,Greener Anthony G.,Corcoran Sue,Henrys Anthony,Landau David B.,Mikhaeel George,Leslie Martin D.,Winship Anna Z.
Abstract
AbstractPurposeTo evaluate the efficacy of a Belly Board immobilisation device for rectal cancer patients.Materials and methodsA randomised trial in patients receiving neo-adjuvant chemoradiation for rectal carcinoma was established. Patients were treated, prone with control arm, according to standard departmental protocol and experimental arm with the use of a Belly Board. All treatments were planned using a three-field technique. The primary endpoints were reproducibility and irradiated small bowel volume. Questionnaires were used to assess secondary endpoints of patient comfort, ease of set-up and acute toxicities.ResultsPre-planned interim analysis was performed after recruiting 30 patients. In all, 348 portal images were analysed retrospectively. Around 8 out of 12 parameters measuring set-up reproducibility were in favour of the Belly Board arm. Random error in the anterior–posterior direction was improved and statistically significant in the experimental arm (95% CI; p≤0·05). Small bowel V15 was significantly lower in the Belly Board position (mean V15=14·5%) compared with the standard position (mean V15=21·4%), paired t-test 95% CI; p=0·035. Also, patients’ comfort satisfaction was greater in the Belly Board arm.ConclusionsSet-up reproducibility, small bowel V15, patient comfort and satisfaction were all significantly improved by the use of the Belly Board.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Oncology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging
Cited by
3 articles.
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