A randomized control trial evaluating fluorescent ink versus dark ink tattoos for breast radiotherapy.

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Authors

Landeg, SJ
Kirby, AM
Lee, SF
Bartlett, F
Titmarsh, K
Donovan, E
Griffin, CL
Gothard, L
Locke, I
McNair, HA

Document Type

Journal Article

Date

2016-12-01

Date Accepted

2016-09-29

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this UK study was to evaluate interfraction reproducibility and body image score when using ultraviolet (UV) tattoos (not visible in ambient lighting) for external references during breast/chest wall radiotherapy and compare with conventional dark ink. METHODS: In this non-blinded, single-centre, parallel group, randomized control trial, patients were allocated to receive either conventional dark ink or UV ink tattoos using computer-generated random blocks. Participant assignment was not masked. Systematic (∑) and random (σ) setup errors were determined using electronic portal images. Body image questionnaires were completed at pre-treatment, 1 month and 6 months to determine the impact of tattoo type on body image. The primary end point was to determine that UV tattoo random error (σsetup) was no less accurate than with conventional dark ink tattoos, i.e. <2.8 mm. RESULTS: 46 patients were randomized to receive conventional dark or UV ink tattoos. 45 patients completed treatment (UV: n = 23, dark: n = 22). σsetup for the UV tattoo group was <2.8 mm in the u and v directions (p = 0.001 and p = 0.009, respectively). A larger proportion of patients reported improvement in body image score in the UV tattoo group compared with the dark ink group at 1 month [56% (13/23) vs 14% (3/22), respectively] and 6 months [52% (11/21) vs 38% (8/21), respectively]. CONCLUSION: UV tattoos were associated with interfraction setup reproducibility comparable with conventional dark ink. Patients reported a more favourable change in body image score up to 6 months following treatment. Advances in knowledge: This study is the first to evaluate UV tattoo external references in a randomized control trial.

Citation

The British journal of radiology, 2016, 89 (1068), pp. 20160288 - ?

Source Title

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

ISSN

0007-1285

eISSN

1748-880X

Research Team

Clinical Trials & Statistics Unit
Breast Cancer Radiotherapy
Translational Breast Radiobiology

Notes