Vienna, Austria

ESTRO 2023

Session Item

Monday
May 15
10:30 - 11:30
Stolz 1
Improving the patient experience
Aileen Duffton, United Kingdom;
Joanna McNamara, United Kingdom
3250
Mini-Oral
RTT
10:30 - 11:30
Patient experience of head and neck treatment on a 1.5T MRLinac: is our adaptive solution tolerable?
Helen Barnes, United Kingdom
MO-0789

Abstract

Patient experience of head and neck treatment on a 1.5T MRLinac: is our adaptive solution tolerable?
Authors:

Helen Barnes1, Sophie Alexander2,1, Shreerang Bhide1, Alex Dunlop2,3, Amit Gupta2, Kevin Harrington2,4, Trina Herbert1, Kee Howe Wong1, Helen McNair2,1

1Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Radiotherapy, Sutton, United Kingdom; 2Institute of Cancer Research, Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging, Sutton, United Kingdom; 3Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Joint Department of Physics and Radiotherapy, Sutton, United Kingdom; 4Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Radiotherapy, London, United Kingdom

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Purpose or Objective

Head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment on the MRLinac (MRL) (Unity, Elekta, Sweden) has recently been developed using the novel adapt-to-shape Lite (ATSlite) method to create clinically acceptable plans clinician-free. There are potential benefits over the adapt-to-position (ATP) method of reducing the need to re-set up patients or replan offline (Gupta et al, 2021). While initial analysis of this technique shows good results (Gupta et al. 2021), it is important to fully investigate patient experience and acceptability of this technique in a larger patient population.

Material and Methods

All HNC patients treated with MRI-guided adaptive radiotherapy (MRIG-ART) under the PERMIT trial (NCT03727698), were included in this audit. Data collected included patient demographics, treatment time and patient experience, using an established MRL questionnaire developed and validated by Barnes et al (2021). Questionnaires were completed immediately after fractions 1,2,3 and 30 and a four-point Likert scale (0 – 3, where 2 and 3 represent a positive answer) was used.

All HNC patients in PERMIT have a back-up plan created for use on the conventional linac, to prevent missed fractions if the MRL is unavailable or the patient cannot tolerate MRL treatment. The frequency of back-up plan use was collected from the record and verify system (Mosaiq, Elekta, Sweden) and categorised into scheduled, unscheduled-machine unavailability and unscheduled-patient tolerance/side effects.

Results

Ten of the first 11 HNC patients in the PERMIT trial were included; one patient withdrew from the trial prior to starting radiotherapy. All participants were male with squamous cell carcinomas requiring bilateral neck irradiation. Mean (SD) age was 71.4 (5.2) years. Staging ranged from T2N0M0 to T4aN2M0 (9 oropharynx and 1 larynx) and eight were p16 positive.

The mean total treatment time for ATSlite was 40:27 mins, faster than reported mean ATP data (46:00 mins) (McDonald et al, 2021). The percentage of treatments under 60:00 mins was 98.8% (91% for ATP, McDonald et al, 2021).

Questionnaire response rate was 85% and individual question response rate was 99%. 96% of responses scored 2 or 3, a positive answer. The lowest scoring question was “I forced myself to manage the situation”, with a mean (SD) of 2.4 (0.9).

Three hundred fractions were successfully delivered, 254 (84.7%) on the MRL. The back-up plan was used for 46 fractions: 14 scheduled, 25 unscheduled-machine unavailability and 7 unscheduled-patient tolerance/side effects (n=2 patients). This shows an excellent rate of successful MRL treatment delivery for HNC with minimal disruption attributed to patient tolerance.

Conclusion

Average treatment times for the ATSlite HNC MRIG-ART are acceptable and faster than previously published ATP treatment times. Patient-reported experience was extremely positive. Use of back-up plans associated with patient tolerance was low. This technique can continue to be used with the confidence that patient experience is not negatively impacted.