Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Education in Radiation Oncology
5500
Poster (digital)
Interdisciplinary
A national program for the implementation of lung Stereotactic Ablative Body Radiotherapy (SABR)
Patricia Diez, United Kingdom
PO-1034

Abstract

A national program for the implementation of lung Stereotactic Ablative Body Radiotherapy (SABR)
Authors:

Patricia Diez1, Anoop Haridass2, John Lilley3, Rushil Patel1, Elizabeth Miles1, Alison Tree4,5, Catharine Clark6,7, Christopher Dean8, Kim Fell9, Fiona McDonald10

1National Radiotherapy Trials Quality Assurance Group, Mount Vernon Cancer Centre, Radiotherapy Physics, Northwood, United Kingdom; 2Clatterbridge Cancer Centre, Clinical Oncology, Liverpool, United Kingdom; 3Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Radiotherapy Physics, Leeds, United Kingdom; 4The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Department of Urology, Sutton, United Kingdom; 5Institute of Cancer Research, Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging, Sutton, United Kingdom; 6National Physical Laboratory, Metrology for Medical Physics, Teddington, United Kingdom; 7UCLH NHS Foundation Trust, Radiotherapy Physics, London, United Kingdom; 8Barts Health NHS Trust, Radiotherapy Physics, London, United Kingdom; 9NHS England and NHS Improvement, Cancer Programme of Care, Specialised Commissioning, London, United Kingdom; 10The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Lung Unit, London, United Kingdom

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Purpose or Objective

Following completion of an evaluation program of SABR for primary lung cancer and metachronous extracranial oligometastatic disease, NHS England & NHS Improvement funded a SABR expansion program to increase SABR provision to 50 radiotherapy centres. With reduced access to surgery due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, efforts were focussed on implementing SABR for lung primary and oligometastatic disease in the first instance.

Material and Methods

The program consisted of 3 elements, delivered by multi-disciplinary SABR experts from the SABR Consortium and the National Radiotherapy Trials Quality Assurance (RTTQA) Group: Education; Mentorship of RT centres new to SABR by those with extensive experience; QA to ensure the safe and consistent implementation of the technique.

A contouring workshop for radiation oncologists was developed by the SABR Consortium Steering Committee. In addition, educational sessions were provided within the SABR Consortium Online Conference, offered free of charge to enable wide access to education and professional development.

The Committee produced a Guide for SABR Mentorship, setting out a consistent framework under which mentorship would proceed (Table 1). Mentoring and local protocols followed implementation guidance from the UK SABR Consortium Guidelines.

In parallel, RTTQA developed a comprehensive RT QA program (Table 2). Two radiation oncologists and one treatment platform were assessed per hospital. Credentialed clinicians then provided cascade training and education within their departments, formally documenting peer reviews through standard templates provided by RTTQA.


Results

54 radiation oncologists participated in the contouring workshop. The conference had 1335 registrants, 65% of whom were UK multi-professionals.

15 experienced centres were invited to mentor 24 new SABR sites. Mentors were assigned by equipment for planning and delivery. The mentoring framework was adjusted to accommodate visiting restrictions due to the pandemic and performed remotely through email and video-conferencing instead.

The RT QA program commenced in June 2020 with circulation of the facility questionnaire, collecting data on equipment, technique, intention to treat and expected level of mentoring. Responses were used to tailor mentoring and inform what components of the QA program were required for each centre. Contouring submissions were received from 46 radiation oncologists and planning benchmarks were completed by all 24 centres, 22 of which underwent the dosimetry audit. All assessments were reported through standard templates to ensure consistent feedback.

Conclusion

The implementation of lung SABR was completed in June 2021. Collaboration amongst all stakeholders ensured centres were trained and supported to safely deliver high-quality SABR for lung primary and oligometastatic disease. The education, mentoring and QA program proved effective and has now been rolled out to other oligometastatic sites.