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Objective.In myeloablative total body irradiation (TBI), lung shielding blocks are used to reduce the dose to the lungs and hence decrease the risk of radiation pneumonitis. Some centers are still using mega-Volt (MV) imaging with dedicated silver halide-based films during simulation and treatment for lung delineation and position verification. However, the availability of these films has recently become an issue. This study examines the clinical performance of a computed radiography (CR) solution in comparison to radiographic films and potential improvement of image quality by filtering and post-processing.Approach.We compared BaFBrI-based CR plates to radiographic films. First, images of an aluminum block were analyzed to assess filter impact on scatter reduction. Secondly, a dedicated image quality phantom was used to assess signal linearity, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), contrast and spatial resolution. Ultimately, a clinical performance study involving two impartial observers was conducted on an anthropomorphic chest phantom, employing visual grading analysis (VGA). Various filter materials and positions as well as post-processing were examined, and the workflow between CR and film was compared.Main results.CR images exhibited high SNR and linearity but demonstrated lower spatial and contrast resolution when compared to film. However, filtering improved contrast resolution and SNR, while positioning filters inside the cassette additionally enhanced sharpness. Image processing improved VGA scores, while additional filtering also resulted in higher spine visibility scores. CR shortened TBI simulation by over 10 minutes for one patient, alongside a dose reduction by order of 0.1 Gy.Significance.This study highlights potential advantages of shifting from conventional radiographic film to CR for TBI. Overall, CR with the incorporation of processing and filtering proves to be suitable for TBI chest imaging. When compared to radiographic film, CR offers advantages such as reduced simulation time and dose delivery, re-usability of image plates and digital workflow integration.
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Estudos de Viabilidade , Imagens de Fantasmas , Radiografia Torácica , Razão Sinal-Ruído , Irradiação Corporal Total , Humanos , Irradiação Corporal Total/métodos , Radiografia Torácica/métodos , Pulmão/diagnóstico por imagem , Pulmão/efeitos da radiação , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/métodos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodosRESUMO
Background and purpose: This work reports on the results of a survey performed on the use of computed tomography (CT) imaging for motion management, surface guidance devices, and their quality assurance (QA). Additionally, it details the collected user insights regarding professional needs in CT for radiotherapy. The purpose of the survey is to understand current practice, professional needs and future directions in the field of fan-beam CT in radiation therapy (RT). Materials and methods: An online institutional survey was conducted between 1-Sep-2022 and 10-Oct-2022 among medical physics experts at Belgian and Dutch radiotherapy institutions, to assess the current status, challenges, and future directions of motion management and surface image-guided radiotherapy. The survey consisted of a maximum of 143 questions, with the exact number depending on participants' responses. Results: The response rate was 66 % (31/47). Respiratory management was reported as standard practice in all but one institution; surface imaging during CT-simulation was reported in ten institutions. QA procedures are applied with varying frequencies and methodologies, primarily with commercial anatomy-like phantoms. Surface guidance users report employing commercial static and dynamic phantoms. Four main subjects are considered clinically important by the respondents: surface guidance, CT protocol optimisation, implementing gated imaging (4DCT, breath-hold), and a tattoo-less workflow. Conclusions: The survey highlights the scattered pattern of QA procedures for respiratory motion management, indicating the need for well-defined, unambiguous, and practicable guidelines. Surface guidance is considered one of the most important techniques that should be implemented in the clinical radiotherapy simulation workflow.
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Background and purpose: To obtain an understanding of current practice, professional needs and future directions in the field of fan-beam CT in RT, a survey was conducted. This work presents the collected information regarding the use of CT imaging for dose calculation and structure delineation. Materials and methods: An online institutional survey was distributed to medical physics experts employed at Belgian and Dutch radiotherapy institutions to assess the status, challenges, and future directions of QA practices for fan-beam CT. A maximum of 143 questions covered topics such as CT scanner availability, CT scanner specifications, QA protocols, treatment simulation workflow, and radiotherapy dose calculation. Answer forms were collected between 1-Sep-2022 and 10-Oct-2022. Results: A 66 % response rate was achieved, yielding data on a total of 58 CT scanners. For MV photon therapy, all single-energy CT scans are reconstructed in Hounsfield Units for delineation or dose calculation, and a direct- or stoichiometric method was used to convert CT numbers for dose calculation. Limited use of dual-energy CT is reported for photon (N = 3) and proton dose calculations (N = 1). For brachytherapy, most institutions adopt water-based dose calculation, while approximately 26 % of the institutions take tissue heterogeneity into account. Commissioning and regular QA include eleven tasks, which are performed by two or more professions (29/31) with varying frequencies. Conclusions: Dual usage of a planning CT limits protocol optimization for both tissue characterization and delineation. DECT has been implemented only gradually. A variation of QA testing frequencies and tests are reported.
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PURPOSE: This work presents the clinical validation of RayStation's electron Monte Carlo code by the use of diodes and plane parallel radiation detectors in homogenous and heterogeneous tissues. Results are evaluated against internationally accepted criteria. METHODS: The Monte Carlo-based electron beam dose calculation code was validated using diodes, air- and liquid-filled parallel radiation detectors on an Elekta linac with beam energies of 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 MeV. Treatment setups with varying source-to-skin distances, different applicators, various cutouts, and oblique beam incidences were addressed, together with dose prediction behind lung-, air-, and bone-equivalent inserts. According to NCS (Netherlands Commission for Radiation Dosimetry) report 15 for nonstandard treatment setups, a dose agreement of 3% in the δ1 region (high-dose region around Zref ), a distance-to-agreement (DTA) of 3 mm or a dose agreement of 10% in the δ2 region (regions with high-dose gradients), and 4% in the δ4 region (photon tail/low-dose region) were applied. During validation, clinical routine settings of 2 × 2 × 2-mm3 dose voxels and a statistically dose uncertainty of 0.6% (250 000 histories/cm2 ) were used. RESULTS: RayStation's electron Monte Carlo code dose prediction was able to achieve the tolerances of NCS report 15. Output predictions as a function of the SSD improve with energy and applicator size. Cutout data revealed no field size or energy dependence on the accuracy of the dose prediction. Excellent agreement for the oblique incidence data was achieved and a maximum of one voxel difference was obtained for the DTA behind heterogeneous inserts. CONCLUSIONS: The accuracy of RayStation's Monte Carlo-based electron beam dose prediction for Elekta accelerators is confirmed for clinical treatment planning that is not only performed within an acceptable timeframe in terms of the number of histories but also addresses for homogenous and heterogeneous media.
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Elétrons , Planejamento da Radioterapia Assistida por Computador , Algoritmos , Método de Monte Carlo , Aceleradores de Partículas , Imagens de Fantasmas , Radiometria , Dosagem Radioterapêutica , Planejamento da Radioterapia Assistida por Computador/métodosRESUMO
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Ghent University Hospital investigated the feasibility of the Pinnacle system for planning intracranial stereotactic treatments. The aim was to perform precise dose computation using the collapsed cone engine for treatment delivery with the Moduleaf mini-MLC mounted on an Elekta accelerator. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The Moduleaf was commissioned using dose rate corrected data recorded by a diamond detector and using data measured by cylindrical chambers each limited to restricted field sizes. RESULTS: Automatic modeling resulted in clinical relevant dose errors up to 10%. Using manual modeling in Pinnacle, for clinical applicable fields a 2%/2 mm agreement between modeled data and measurements was obtained. CONCLUSION: The overall accuracy of the collapsed cone algorithm is within tolerances for single fraction stereotactic treatments.