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To evaluate and develop an image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) protocol for the effective treatment of prostate and pelvic lymph nodes.
Methods and materials
This study comprised of nine patients receiving radiotherapy for node negative prostate cancer, who had a pair of planar kV images taken for 37 treatment fractions. The positioning accuracy for both implanted fiducial markers and pelvic bony anatomy (surrogate for pelvic node position) was calculated using random and systematic errors. Appropriate margins were also determined. All patients followed a strict bladder and bowel protocol before computed tomography planning and treatment.
Results
In total, 292 sets of images were used for fiducial marker and pelvic bone registration. A discrepancy of >5 mm between the fiducial markers and the anatomical pelvic bone was seen in 4% of treatment sessions. The maximum displacement observed between the fiducial match and the bone match was 7, 10 and 4 mm in the A/P (anterior/posterior), S/I (superior/inferior) and R/L (right/left) directions, respectively.
Conclusion
The margins used in combination with an online IGRT strategy ensure both the fiducial match and the bone match correlate within 5 mm thus allows good coverage of both prostate and nodal target volumes. It is essential that this is combined with a strict bladder and rectal preparation protocol to ensure accuracy and reproducibility.
The rarity of vulval cancer has meant that few, if any, robust randomised trials have been performed. Women with predisposing conditions should be counselled with regard to risk. This rarity, combined with the modesty that women might feel owing to the intimate location of the problem means that cancer might be easily overlooked, misdiagnosed or ignored. Diagnosis of vulval cancer is made based on biopsy. The major factors that influence treatment planning are the need to assess nodal status, the extent of the disease and the woman's suitability for treatment. Pelvic node involvement tends to follow inguinofemoral spread of disease. Preoperative radiotherapy should be considered if primary surgery is likely to compromise sphincter function. The requirement for reconstruction should be considered in all patients undergoing surgery for vulval cancer. Sentinel node sampling is a recent innovation, which provides diagnostic information to direct further care while minimising morbidity.
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