Literature DB >> 12852551

A method for the reconstruction of four-dimensional synchronized CT scans acquired during free breathing.

Daniel A Low1, Michelle Nystrom, Eugene Kalinin, Parag Parikh, James F Dempsey, Jeffrey D Bradley, Sasa Mutic, Sasha H Wahab, Tareque Islam, Gary Christensen, David G Politte, Bruce R Whiting.   

Abstract

Breathing motion is a significant source of error in radiotherapy treatment planning for the thorax and upper abdomen. Accounting for breathing motion has a profound effect on the size of conformal radiation portals employed in these sites. Breathing motion also causes artifacts and distortions in treatment planning computed tomography (CT) scans acquired during free breathing and also causes a breakdown of the assumption of the superposition of radiation portals in intensity-modulated radiation therapy, possibly leading to significant dose delivery errors. Proposed voluntary and involuntary breath-hold techniques have the potential for reducing or eliminating the effects of breathing motion, however, they are limited in practice, by the fact that many lung cancer patients cannot tolerate holding their breath. We present an alternative solution to accounting for breathing motion in radiotherapy treatment planning, where multislice CT scans are collected simultaneously with digital spirometry over many free breathing cycles to create a four-dimensional (4-D) image set, where tidal lung volume is the additional dimension. An analysis of this 4-D data leads to methods for digital-spirometry, based elimination or accounting of breathing motion artifacts in radiotherapy treatment planning for free breathing patients. The 4-D image set is generated by sorting free-breathing multislice CT scans according to user-defined tidal-volume bins. A multislice CT scanner is operated in the ciné mode, acquiring 15 scans per couch position, while the patient undergoes simultaneous digital-spirometry measurements. The spirometry is used to retrospectively sort the CT scans by their correlated tidal lung volume within the patient's normal breathing cycle. This method has been prototyped using data from three lung cancer patients. The actual tidal lung volumes agreed with the specified bin volumes within standard deviations ranging between 22 and 33 cm3. An analysis of sagittal and coronal images demonstrated relatively small (<1 cm) motion artifacts along the diaphragm, even for tidal volumes where the rate of breathing motion is greatest. While still under development, this technology has the potential for revolutionizing the radiotherapy treatment planning for the thorax and upper abdomen.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12852551     DOI: 10.1118/1.1576230

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  108 in total

1.  Four-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging (4D-MRI) using image-based respiratory surrogate: a feasibility study.

Authors:  Jing Cai; Zheng Chang; Zhiheng Wang; William Paul Segars; Fang-Fang Yin
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 4.071

2.  Clinical utility of co-registered respiratory-gated( 99m)Tc-Technegas/MAA SPECT-CT images in the assessment of regional lung functional impairment in patients with lung cancer.

Authors:  Kazuyoshi Suga; Yasuhiko Kawakami; Mohammed Zaki; Tomio Yamashita; Kensaku Shimizu; Naofumi Matsunaga
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2004-06-10       Impact factor: 9.236

3.  A novel technique for markerless, self-sorted 4D-CBCT: feasibility study.

Authors:  Irina Vergalasova; Jing Cai; Fang-Fang Yin
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 4.071

4.  Extraction of tumor motion trajectories using PICCS-4DCBCT: a validation study.

Authors:  Zhihua Qi; Guang-Hong Chen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2011-10       Impact factor: 4.071

5.  Design of a compensating bolus by use of exhalation CT data for covering residual motion in respiratory-gated charged-particle lung therapy: four-dimensional carbon beam dose calculation.

Authors:  Shinichiro Mori; Hiroshi Asakura; Shuhei Komatsu; Tomoyasu Yashiro; Motoki Kumagai; Susumu Kandatsu; Masayuki Baba; Masahiro Endo
Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2007-11-27

6.  Practical approaches to four-dimensional heavy-charged-particle lung therapy.

Authors:  Shinichiro Mori; Ziji Wu; Michael R Folkert; Motoki Kumagai; Suguru Dobashi; Toshio Sugane; Masayuki Baba
Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2009-10-14

7.  A method to map errors in the deformable registration of 4DCT images.

Authors:  Constantin Vaman; David Staub; Jeffrey Williamson; Martin J Murphy
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 4.071

8.  A study of respiration-correlated cone-beam CT scans to correct target positioning errors in radiotherapy of thoracic cancer.

Authors:  J P Santoro; J McNamara; E Yorke; H Pham; A Rimner; K E Rosenzweig; G S Mageras
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 4.071

9.  Cine cone beam CT reconstruction using low-rank matrix factorization: algorithm and a proof-of-principle study.

Authors:  Jian-Feng Cai; Xun Jia; Hao Gao; Steve B Jiang; Zuowei Shen; Hongkai Zhao
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2014-04-21       Impact factor: 10.048

10.  An initial investigation of hyperpolarized gas tagging magnetic resonance imaging in evaluating deformable image registration-based lung ventilation.

Authors:  Taoran Cui; G Wilson Miller; John P Mugler; Gordon D Cates; Jaime F Mata; Eduard E de Lange; Qijie Huang; Talissa A Altes; Fang-Fang Yin; Jing Cai
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2018-10-23       Impact factor: 4.071

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