Magnetic resonance imaging assessment of the suitability and consistency of radiotherapy treatment positioning achieved using intra-oral stents
Abstract
As head-and-neck radiotherapy treatments grow more complex and precise, it becomes increasingly important to assess the anatomical separations that can be achieved using intra-oral stents. A series of twenty T2-weighted turbo spin echo magnetic resonance images (MRI) were acquired of one healthy participant, with a range of different wax and 3D printed intra-oral stents in situ. The resulting measurements showed that a 3D printed modular stent containing hard polylactic acid (PLA) and flexible thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) components made the largest and most reproducible separation between the cheeks (70.8 +/- 0.3 mm), two hard PLA stents designed to exactly fit the participant's teeth produced the poorest positioning reproducibility (standard deviations of up to 3 mm between a range of landmarks measured in repeated images). Most stents were described as ``comfortable'' although the wax stents left small pieces of wax attached to the teeth after use. This MRI based comparison demonstrated that the materials and designs used for intra-oral stents can have substantial effects on the level of anatomical separation and positioning reproducibility that they produce.
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