Literature DB >> 17671337

Tracking 'differential organ motion' with a 'breathing' multileaf collimator: magnitude of problem assessed using 4D CT data and a motion-compensation strategy.

J R McClelland1, S Webb, D McQuaid, D M Binnie, D J Hawkes.   

Abstract

Intrafraction tumour (e.g. lung) motion due to breathing can, in principle, be compensated for by applying identical breathing motions to the leaves of a multileaf collimator (MLC) as intensity-modulated radiation therapy is delivered by the dynamic MLC (DMLC) technique. A difficulty arising, however, is that irradiated voxels, which are in line with a bixel at one breathing phase (at which the treatment plan has been made), may move such that they cease to be in line with that breathing bixel at another phase. This is the phenomenon of differential voxel motion and existing tracking solutions have ignored this very real problem. There is absolutely no tracking solution to the problem of compensating for differential voxel motion. However, there is a strategy that can be applied in which the leaf breathing is determined to minimize the geometrical mismatch in a least-squares sense in irradiating differentially-moving voxels. A 1D formulation in very restricted circumstances is already in the literature and has been applied to some model breathing situations which can be studied analytically. These are, however, highly artificial. This paper presents the general 2D formulation of the problem including allowing different importance factors to be applied to planning target volume and organ at risk (or most generally) each voxel. The strategy also extends the literature strategy to the situation where the number of voxels connecting to a bixel is a variable. Additionally the phenomenon of 'cross-leaf-track/channel' voxel motion is formally addressed. The general equations are presented and analytic results are given for some 1D, artificially contrived, motions based on the Lujan equations of breathing motion. Further to this, 3D clinical voxel motion data have been extracted from 4D CT measurements to both assess the magnitude of the problem of 2D motion perpendicular to the beam-delivery axis in clinical practice and also to find the 2D optimum breathing-leaf strategy. Issues relating to the practical calculation of the strategy, including effects on leaf velocity and effects of different spatial-sampling frequencies, have been investigated, and unattenuated-fluence maps have been produced showing the effects of the differential motion and tracking. It was discovered that large distances between adjacent leaf-ends could cause the tracking to fail when there was tissue motion across the leaf channels. To overcome this problem the use of 'synchronized' leaf trajectories, which ensure that adjacent leaf-ends are always close enough to each other to facilitate tracking, has also been investigated.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17671337     DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/52/16/007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Med Biol        ISSN: 0031-9155            Impact factor:   3.609


  12 in total

1.  The dosimetric impact of inversely optimized arc radiotherapy plan modulation for real-time dynamic MLC tracking delivery.

Authors:  Marianne Falk; Tobias Larsson; Paul Keall; Byung Chul Cho; Marianne Aznar; Stine Korreman; Per Poulsen; Per Munck Af Rosenschold
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 4.071

2.  Use of dMLC for implementation of dynamic respiratory-gated radiation therapy.

Authors:  Eric W Pepin; Huanmei Wu; Hiroki Shirato
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 4.071

3.  Experimental investigation of a moving averaging algorithm for motion perpendicular to the leaf travel direction in dynamic MLC target tracking.

Authors:  Jai-Woong Yoon; Amit Sawant; Yelin Suh; Byung-Chul Cho; Tae-Suk Suh; Paul Keall
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 4.071

4.  The potential of positron emission tomography for intratreatment dynamic lung tumor tracking: a phantom study.

Authors:  Jaewon Yang; Tokihiro Yamamoto; Samuel R Mazin; Edward E Graves; Paul J Keall
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 4.071

5.  Management of three-dimensional intrafraction motion through real-time DMLC tracking.

Authors:  Amit Sawant; Raghu Venkat; Vikram Srivastava; David Carlson; Sergey Povzner; Herb Cattell; Paul Keall
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 4.071

6.  Motion management during IMAT treatment of mobile lung tumors--a comparison of MLC tracking and gated delivery.

Authors:  Marianne Falk; Tobias Pommer; Paul Keall; Stine Korreman; Gitte Persson; Per Poulsen; Per Munck af Rosenschöld
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 4.071

7.  A deliverable four-dimensional intensity-modulated radiation therapy-planning method for dynamic multileaf collimator tumor tracking delivery.

Authors:  Yelin Suh; Elisabeth Weiss; Hualiang Zhong; Mirek Fatyga; Jeffrey V Siebers; Paul J Keall
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2008-08-01       Impact factor: 7.038

8.  Performance evaluation of respiratory motion-synchronized dynamic IMRT delivery.

Authors:  S A Yoganathan; K J Maria Das; Arpita Agarwal; Shaleen Kumar
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2013-05-06       Impact factor: 2.102

9.  Investigation of the change in marker geometry during respiration motion: a preliminary study for dynamic-multi-leaf real-time tumor tracking.

Authors:  Rie Yamazaki; Seiko Nishioka; Hiroyuki Date; Hiroki Shirato; Takao Koike; Takeshi Nishioka
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2012-12-18       Impact factor: 3.481

10.  Nearest Neighbor Method to Estimate Internal Target for Real-Time Tumor Tracking.

Authors:  Jie Zhang; Xiaolin Huang; Yuxiaotong Shen; Ying Chen; Jing Cai; Yun Ge
Journal:  Technol Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2018-01-01
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