Ash D, Bates T
Yorkshire Regional Centre for Cancer Treatment, Cookridge Hospital, Leeds, UK.
Clin Oncol (R Coll Radiol). 1994;6(4):214-26. doi: 10.1016/s0936-6555(05)80290-0.
Between Autumn 1982 and Winter 1991, 1045 patients received lower doses of radiation than were prescribed for the treatment of their cancers because of a miscalculation of radiation doses. This occurred as a result of the introduction of a new technique of treatment planning. An error in the application of the planning system lead to an underdosage of radiation of between 5 and 35%. In patients who received radiation alone for radical treatment a dose reduction of 20% or more resulted in a lower than expected local control rate. The effects were less marked in patients who were treated by combinations of surgery and radiation and in those with a very high rate of distant metastases. In 1991, a new computer planning system was installed and a discrepancy was discovered between the new plans and those from the previous system. Further investigation revealed that the original planning system already contained within it a correction factor for the tumour to skin distance and that systematically reapplying this correction had resulted in underdoses of radiation being delivered to patients for nearly 10 years. During the 9-year period of this dose miscalculation only 6% of patients treated in the department were treated with the isocentric technique; for many of those it formed only a part of their treatment.