This study is designed to investigate whether or not the use of a customized vacuum immobilization device (CVID) to immobilize rectal cancer patients undergoing preoperative pelvic radiation therapy improves the positional stability of patients during each radiation treatment. This question is more relevant now in the era of image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT). Using state of the art IGRT technologies such as cone beam CT (CBCT) scanning, assessments of the accuracy of treatment delivery can be made during a course of radiation therapy allowing for patient set-up corrective strategies to be implemented. The use of CBCT scanning may minimize any potential benefit of of a CVID if the patient's pretreatment position can be corrected prior to treatment and our current immobilization strategy results in a stable patient position. While it is seemingly intuitive to assume that the use of CVID results in better patient stability, there is actually little data to support this.
Rectal cancer accounts for 5% of all cancers diagnosed in Canada for both men and women between 1995 and 2004 (Public Health agency of Canada \_ Health 2004). Preoperative radiotherapy (RT), with or without chemotherapy, is an accepted treatment for patients with locally advanced rectal carcinoma followed by surgical resection (Bosset and Horiot 2001; Sauer, Fietkau et al. 2003; Birgisson, Talback et al. 2005). The current standard treatment at Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) is preoperative pelvic radiation therapy to a total dose of 50 Gy/25 fractions/5 weeks. The total radiation dose is reduced to 45 Gy/25 fractions/5 weeks when there is a concern about the volume of small bowel within the treatment volume. Radiation therapy is delivered with 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), 225mg/m2/24h, by protracted venous infusion (PVI) or oral capecitabine, 825 mg/m2 BID for 5 weeks, starting the first day and completing the day of last day of radiation therapy.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
20
Patients will lie face down (prone) on a soft cushion made of foam under their face and upper chest. Additionally, there is a foam support placed at the ankles.
This device is a bean bag like cushion that is placed from the abdomen to the thighs. When a patient is comfortably lying on this device, air within the bag is suctioned out resulting in an impression or cast of a patient.
University Health Network, Princess Margaret Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Comparing the use of a prone pillow and simple ankle fixation device vs. the use of a CVID for immobilization rectal patients during the course of preoperative radiation therapy using KV CBCT for IGRT.
Time frame: 2 years
quantify interfractional set-up displacements using either of the two devices;determine a standard planning target volume margin; evaluate the role of soft-tissue image matching for IGRT using CBCT.
Time frame: 2 years
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