Background: This treatment planning study analyzes dose coverage and dose to organs at risk (OAR) in intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) of rectal cancer and compares prone vs. supine positioning as well as the effect of dose optimization for the small bowel (SB) by additional dose constraints in the inverse planning process. Patients and methods: Based on the CT datasets of ten male patients in both prone and supine position, a total of four different IMRT plans were created for each patient. OAR were defined as the SB, bladder, and femoral heads. In half of the plans, two additional SB cost functions were used in the inverse planning process. Results: There was a statistically significant dose reduction for the SB in prone p...
Background and purpose Organ preservation strategies are increasingly being explored for early re...
AbstractPurposeThis review analyses the literature concerning the influence of the patient position ...
Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine whether and where the radiotherapy (RT) clinical tar...
Background: This treatment planning study analyzes dose coverage and dose to organs at risk (OAR) in...
Patients undergoing radiotherapy for rectal cancer are generally treated in a prone position, with a...
Background: Irradiation is a standard adjuvant treatment for rectal cancer, but there is no standard...
INTRODUCTION: No consensus exists regarding the optimal treatment setup for neoadjuvant radiotherapy...
Abstract Background A strong dose-volume relationship exists between the amount of small bowel recei...
Background:The patient positioning in pelvic radiotherapy (RT) should be decided based on both repro...
Abstract Background and purpose To compare organ-at-risk doses and setup reproducibility using the p...
Background and purpose: In rectal cancer patients, radiotherapy in prone position using a belly boar...
Background: To compare target coverage and dose to the organs at risk in two approaches to rectal ca...
BackgroundNeoadjuvant radio- or chemoradiation (nIRT) therapy is the standard treatment for loco-reg...
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to determine whether and where the radiotherapy (RT) clinical tar...
Abstract Background Neoadjuvant radio- or chemoradiation (nIRT) therapy is the standard treatment fo...
Background and purpose Organ preservation strategies are increasingly being explored for early re...
AbstractPurposeThis review analyses the literature concerning the influence of the patient position ...
Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine whether and where the radiotherapy (RT) clinical tar...
Background: This treatment planning study analyzes dose coverage and dose to organs at risk (OAR) in...
Patients undergoing radiotherapy for rectal cancer are generally treated in a prone position, with a...
Background: Irradiation is a standard adjuvant treatment for rectal cancer, but there is no standard...
INTRODUCTION: No consensus exists regarding the optimal treatment setup for neoadjuvant radiotherapy...
Abstract Background A strong dose-volume relationship exists between the amount of small bowel recei...
Background:The patient positioning in pelvic radiotherapy (RT) should be decided based on both repro...
Abstract Background and purpose To compare organ-at-risk doses and setup reproducibility using the p...
Background and purpose: In rectal cancer patients, radiotherapy in prone position using a belly boar...
Background: To compare target coverage and dose to the organs at risk in two approaches to rectal ca...
BackgroundNeoadjuvant radio- or chemoradiation (nIRT) therapy is the standard treatment for loco-reg...
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to determine whether and where the radiotherapy (RT) clinical tar...
Abstract Background Neoadjuvant radio- or chemoradiation (nIRT) therapy is the standard treatment fo...
Background and purpose Organ preservation strategies are increasingly being explored for early re...
AbstractPurposeThis review analyses the literature concerning the influence of the patient position ...
Purpose: The aim of this study was to determine whether and where the radiotherapy (RT) clinical tar...