Purpose: Adjuvant radiotherapy of breast cancer using a photon tangential field incurs a risk of late heart and lung toxicity. The use of free breathing (FB), expiration breath hold (EBH), and deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) during tangential breast radiotherapy as a means of reducing irradiated lung and heart volume was evaluated. Methods: In 10 women with left-sided breast cancer (mean age, 44 years) post-operative computed tomography (CT) scanning was done under different respiratory conditions using FB, EBH, and DIBH in 3 CT scans. For each scan, an optimized radiotherapy plan was designed with 6 MV photon tangential fields encompassing the clinical target volume after breast-conserving surgery. Results: The results of dose-volume h...
Adjuvant radiation therapy is a critical component of breast cancer management. However, when breast...
Purpose: To investigate the possibility to be able to offer left sided breast cancer patients, not s...
Background: There is a potential for adverse cardiovascular effects in long-term breast cancer survi...
Cardiac toxicity is an important concern in tangential field breast radiotherapy. In this study, the...
Background: Several studies have investigated cardiac dose reduction when utilizing the deep inspira...
Background: The aim of this study was to compare dose-volume histogram (DVH) with dose-mass histogra...
Introduction: Deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) has been proven to reduce cardiac dose for women r...
Purpose/Objective(s): The deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) approach has been thoroughly researche...
A dosimetric study to evaluate the use of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), with free-brea...
PURPOSE: Voluntary deep inhalation breath hold (VDIBH) reduces heart dose during left breast irradia...
Background: The aim of our study is to determine whether deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) is effe...
INTRODUCTION: Despite technical advancements in breast radiation therapy, cardiac structures are sti...
Background: We developed, applied, and prospectively evaluated a novel deep-inspiration breath-hold ...
BACKGROUND: The addition of regional nodal radiation (RNI) to whole breast irradiation for high risk...
Patients with left breast cancer who undergo radiotherapy have a non-negligible risk of developing r...
Adjuvant radiation therapy is a critical component of breast cancer management. However, when breast...
Purpose: To investigate the possibility to be able to offer left sided breast cancer patients, not s...
Background: There is a potential for adverse cardiovascular effects in long-term breast cancer survi...
Cardiac toxicity is an important concern in tangential field breast radiotherapy. In this study, the...
Background: Several studies have investigated cardiac dose reduction when utilizing the deep inspira...
Background: The aim of this study was to compare dose-volume histogram (DVH) with dose-mass histogra...
Introduction: Deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) has been proven to reduce cardiac dose for women r...
Purpose/Objective(s): The deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) approach has been thoroughly researche...
A dosimetric study to evaluate the use of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP), with free-brea...
PURPOSE: Voluntary deep inhalation breath hold (VDIBH) reduces heart dose during left breast irradia...
Background: The aim of our study is to determine whether deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) is effe...
INTRODUCTION: Despite technical advancements in breast radiation therapy, cardiac structures are sti...
Background: We developed, applied, and prospectively evaluated a novel deep-inspiration breath-hold ...
BACKGROUND: The addition of regional nodal radiation (RNI) to whole breast irradiation for high risk...
Patients with left breast cancer who undergo radiotherapy have a non-negligible risk of developing r...
Adjuvant radiation therapy is a critical component of breast cancer management. However, when breast...
Purpose: To investigate the possibility to be able to offer left sided breast cancer patients, not s...
Background: There is a potential for adverse cardiovascular effects in long-term breast cancer survi...