Ultrafast single breath-hold cone-beam CT lung cancer imaging with faster linac gantry rotation.


Journal

Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology
ISSN: 1879-0887
Titre abrégé: Radiother Oncol
Pays: Ireland
ID NLM: 8407192

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
06 2019
Historique:
received: 15 09 2018
revised: 01 02 2019
accepted: 03 02 2019
pubmed: 25 4 2019
medline: 24 3 2020
entrez: 25 4 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Lung tumors treated with hypo-fractionated deep-inspiration breath-hold stereotactic body radiotherapy benefit from fast imaging and treatment. Single breath-hold cone-beam-CT (CBCT) could reduce motion artifacts and improve treatment precision. Thus, gantry speed was accelerated to 18°/s, limiting acquisition time to 10-20 s. Image quality, dosimetry and registration accuracy were compared with standard-CBCT (3°/s). For proof-of-concept, image quality was analyzed following customer acceptance tests, CT-dose index measured, and registration accuracy determined with an off-centered ball-bearing-phantom. A lung-tumor patient was simulated with differently shaped tumor-mimicking inlays in a thorax-phantom. Signal-to-noise-ratio, contrast-to-noise-ratio and geometry of the inlays quantified image quality. Dose was measured in representative positions. Registration accuracy was determined with inlays scanned in pre-defined positions. Manual, automatic (clinical software) and objective-automatic (in-house-developed) registration was performed on planning-CT, offsets between results and applied shifts were compared. Image quality of ultrafast-CBCT was adequate for high-contrast areas, despite contrast-reduction of ∼80% due to undersampling. Dose-output was considerably reduced by 60-83% in presented setup; variations are due to gantry-braking characteristics. Registration accuracy was maintained better than 1 mm, mean displacement errors were 0.0 ± 0.2 mm with objective-automatic registration. Ultrafast-CBCT showed no significant registration differences to standard-CBCT. This study of first tests with faster gantry rotation of 18°/s showed promising results for ultrafast high-contrast lung tumor CBCT imaging within single breath-hold of 10-20 s. Such fast imaging times, in combination with fast treatment delivery, could pave the way for intra-fractional combined imaging and treatment within one breath-hold phase, and thus mitigate residual motion and increase treatment accuracy and patient comfort. Even generally speaking, faster gantry rotation could set a benchmark with immense clinical impact where time matters most: palliative patient care, general reduction in uncertainty, and increase in patient throughput especially important for emerging markets with high patient numbers.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31015174
pii: S0167-8140(19)30070-2
doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2019.02.004
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

78-85

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Anna Arns (A)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany; Department of Medical Physics and Bioengineering, Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand. Electronic address: anna.arns@cdhb.health.nz.

Hansjoerg Wertz (H)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Judit Boda-Heggemann (J)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Frank Schneider (F)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Manuel Blessing (M)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Yasser Abo-Madyan (Y)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Volker Steil (V)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Frederik Wenz (F)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

Jens Fleckenstein (J)

Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany.

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