Twenty-six responses were received, 8 did not deliver CSI and 3 were duplicates.
Duplicate answers were clarified, resulting in CSI data presented from 15 UK
radiotherapy centres.
Most centres (13/15) treat paediatric and adult patients. Treatment
under general anaesthetic is typically reserved for children ≤5-years (10/13),
however, the child’s mental capacity and treatment technique used influences
this decision. For patients requiring surgery prior to radiotherapy 5/15
centres allow 1-2 weeks before CT planning, however, this time ranges up to 6
weeks.
Five-point immobilisation shells are favoured for both adult (11/15)
and paediatric (9/13) patients. For paediatric patients 8 centres routinely add
a customisable head and neck cushion to personalise immobilisation. Painting
paediatric shells is popular, 11 centres ‘always or sometimes’ decorate shells.
Torso immobilisation was used by 6/15 centres, utilising vac-bags. Ten
centres ‘always or sometimes’ immobilised the patient’s pelvis, 7 with a knee
rest and 3 with a vac-bag. All centres tattoo patients, most using 3-4 tattoos,
1 centre sometimes used surface-guided radiotherapy as an alternative.
Variable verification protocols presented; 6/15 centres perform daily
imaging with the others favouring an extended no action level approach. Five
centres utilise two different imaging methods, kV-CBCT and 2-dimentional kV
imaging were most popular. Five centres use VMAT, 4 TomoTherapy, 3 IMRT, 2
3D-conformal and 1 proton therapy. A wide range in CTV-PTV margins presented (figure 1).