Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology (May 2021)

Prolonging deep inspiration breath-hold time to 3 min during radiotherapy, a simple solution

  • Vincent Vakaet,
  • Hans Van Hulle,
  • Max Schoepen,
  • Els Van Caelenberg,
  • Annick Van Greveling,
  • Jeroen Holvoet,
  • Chris Monten,
  • Luc De Baerdemaeker,
  • Wilfried De Neve,
  • Marc Coppens,
  • Liv Veldeman

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
pp. 10 – 16

Abstract

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Background and purpose: Deep inspiration breath-hold is an established technique to reduce heart dose during breast cancer radiotherapy. However, modern breast cancer radiotherapy techniques with lymph node irradiation often require long beam-on times of up to 5 min. Therefore, the combination with deep inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) becomes challenging. A simple support technique for longer duration deep inspiration breath-hold (L-DIBH), feasible for daily use at the radiotherapy department, is required to maximize heart sparing. Materials and methods: At our department, a new protocol for multiple L-DIBH of at least 2 min and 30 s was developed on 32 healthy volunteers and validated on 8 breast cancer patients during radiotherapy treatment, using a pragmatic process of iterative development, including all major stakeholders. Each participant performed 12 L-DIBHs, on 4 different days. Different methods of pre-oxygenation and voluntary hyperventilation were tested, and scored on L-DIBH duration, ease of use, and comfort. Results: Based on 384 L-DIBHs from 32 healthy volunteers, voluntary hyperventilation for 3 min whilst receiving high-flow nasal oxygen at 40 L/min was the most promising technique. During validation, the median L-DIBH duration in prone position of 8 breast cancer patients improved from 59 s without support to 3 min and 9 s using the technique (p < 0.001). Conclusion: A new and simple L-DIBH protocol was developed feasible for daily use at the radiotherapy center.

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