Overview of commercial treatment planning systems for targeted radionuclide therapy.
Dose calculation
Dose volume histograms
Kernel
Targeted Radionuclide Therapy
Treatment planning systems
Journal
Physica medica : PM : an international journal devoted to the applications of physics to medicine and biology : official journal of the Italian Association of Biomedical Physics (AIFB)
ISSN: 1724-191X
Titre abrégé: Phys Med
Pays: Italy
ID NLM: 9302888
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
02 Dec 2021
02 Dec 2021
Historique:
received:
15
07
2021
revised:
23
10
2021
accepted:
12
11
2021
pubmed:
6
12
2021
medline:
6
12
2021
entrez:
5
12
2021
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
Targeted Radionuclide Therapy (TRT) is a branch of cancer medicine dealing with the therapeutic use of radioisotopes associated with biological vectors accumulating in the tumors/targets, indicated as Molecular Radiotherapy (MRT), or directly injected into the arteries that supply blood to liver tumour vasculature, indicated as Selective RT (SRT). The aim of this work is to offer a panoramic view on the increasing number of commercially-available TRT treatment planning systems (TPSs). A questionnaire was sent to manufacturers' representatives. Academic software were not considered. Questions were grouped as follows: general information, clinical workflow, calibration procedure, image processing/reconstruction, image registration and segmentation tools, time-activity curve (TAC) fitting and absorbed dose calculation. All software reported have CE-marking. TPSs were divided between SRT-dedicated software [4] and MRT [5] dosimetry software. In SRT, since no kinetic process is involved, absorbed dose calculation does not require TAC fitting, and image registration is not fully developed in all TPS. All software requires a radionuclide-specific calibration. In SRT, a relative image calibration can be obtained by scaling the counts to a known activity. Automated VOI contouring and rigid/deformable propagation between different acquisitions time-points is implemented in most TPSs, although DICOM export is rare. Different TAC fits are available depending on the number of time-points. Voxel S-value and Local deposition methods are the most frequent dosimetric approaches; dose-voxel kernel convolution and semi-Monte Carlo method are also available. Available TPSs allows performing personalized dosimetry in clinical practice. Individual variations in methodology/algorithms must be considered in the standardisation/harmonization processes.
Identifiants
pubmed: 34864422
pii: S1120-1797(21)00338-0
doi: 10.1016/j.ejmp.2021.11.001
pii:
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
52-61Informations de copyright
Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Ltd.