Literature DB >> 19687567

The design, physical properties and clinical utility of an iris collimator for robotic radiosurgery.

G G Echner1, W Kilby, M Lee, E Earnst, S Sayeh, A Schlaefer, B Rhein, J R Dooley, C Lang, O Blanck, E Lessard, C R Maurer, W Schlegel.   

Abstract

Robotic radiosurgery using more than one circular collimator can improve treatment plan quality and reduce total monitor units (MU). The rationale for an iris collimator that allows the field size to be varied during treatment delivery is to enable the benefits of multiple-field-size treatments to be realized with no increase in treatment time due to collimator exchange or multiple traversals of the robotic manipulator by allowing each beam to be delivered with any desired field size during a single traversal. This paper describes the Iris variable aperture collimator (Accuray Incorporated, Sunnyvale, CA, USA), which incorporates 12 tungsten-copper alloy segments in two banks of six. The banks are rotated by 30 degrees with respect to each other, which limits the radiation leakage between the collimator segments and produces a 12-sided polygonal treatment beam. The beam is approximately circular, with a root-mean-square (rms) deviation in the 50% dose radius of <0.8% (corresponding to <0.25 mm at the 60 mm field size) and an rms variation in the 20-80% penumbra width of about 0.1 mm at the 5 mm field size increasing to about 0.5 mm at 60 mm. The maximum measured collimator leakage dose rate was 0.07%. A commissioning method is described by which the average dose profile can be obtained from four profile measurements at each depth based on the periodicity of the isodose line variations with azimuthal angle. The penumbra of averaged profiles increased with field size and was typically 0.2-0.6 mm larger than that of an equivalent fixed circular collimator. The aperture reproducibility is < or =0.1 mm at the lower bank, diverging to < or =0.2 mm at a nominal treatment distance of 800 mm from the beam focus. Output factors (OFs) and tissue-phantom-ratio data are identical to those used for fixed collimators, except the OFs for the two smallest field sizes (5 and 7.5 mm) are considerably lower for the Iris Collimator. If average collimator profiles are used, the assumption of circular symmetry results in dose calculation errors that are <1 mm or <1% for single beams across the full range of field sizes; errors for multiple non-coplanar beam treatment plans are expected to be smaller. Treatment plans were generated for 19 cases using the Iris Collimator (12 field sizes) and also using one and three fixed collimators. The results of the treatment planning study demonstrate that the use of multiple field sizes achieves multiple plan quality improvements, including reduction of total MU, increase of target volume coverage and improvements in conformality and homogeneity compared with using a single field size for a large proportion of the cases studied. The Iris Collimator offers the potential to greatly increase the clinical application of multiple field sizes for robotic radiosurgery.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19687567     DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/54/18/001

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


  39 in total

1.  Development of raster scanning IMRT using a robotic radiosurgery system.

Authors:  Hiroya Shiomi; Yuichi Akino; Iori Sumida; Norihisa Masai; Ryoong-Jin Oh; Kazuhiko Ogawa
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 2.724

2.  Analysis and optimization of the robot setup for robotic-ultrasound-guided radiation therapy.

Authors:  Matthias Schlüter; Stefan Gerlach; Christoph Fürweger; Alexander Schlaefer
Journal:  Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg       Date:  2019-06-06       Impact factor: 2.924

3.  Impact of robotic ultrasound image guidance on plan quality in SBRT of the prostate.

Authors:  Stefan Gerlach; Ivo Kuhlemann; Floris Ernst; Christoph Fürweger; Alexander Schlaefer
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2017-07-27       Impact factor: 3.039

4.  Evaluation of a synthetic single-crystal diamond detector for relative dosimetry measurements on a CyberKnife.

Authors:  A Chalkley; G Heyes
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2014-03       Impact factor: 3.039

5.  Robotic ultrasound-guided SBRT of the prostate: feasibility with respect to plan quality.

Authors:  Stefan Gerlach; Ivo Kuhlemann; Philipp Jauer; Ralf Bruder; Floris Ernst; Christoph Fürweger; Alexander Schlaefer
Journal:  Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg       Date:  2016-07-12       Impact factor: 2.924

6.  Treatment planning for spinal radiosurgery : A competitive multiplatform benchmark challenge.

Authors:  Christos Moustakis; Mark K H Chan; Jinkoo Kim; Joakim Nilsson; Alanah Bergman; Tewfik J Bichay; Isabel Palazon Cano; Savino Cilla; Francesco Deodato; Raffaela Doro; Jürgen Dunst; Hans Theodor Eich; Pierre Fau; Ming Fong; Uwe Haverkamp; Simon Heinze; Guido Hildebrandt; Detlef Imhoff; Erik de Klerck; Janett Köhn; Ulrike Lambrecht; Britta Loutfi-Krauss; Fatemeh Ebrahimi; Laura Masi; Alan H Mayville; Ante Mestrovic; Maaike Milder; Alessio G Morganti; Dirk Rades; Ulla Ramm; Claus Rödel; Frank-Andre Siebert; Wilhelm den Toom; Lei Wang; Stefan Wurster; Achim Schweikard; Scott G Soltys; Samuel Ryu; Oliver Blanck
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2018-05-25       Impact factor: 3.621

7.  Intracranial stereotactic radiosurgery with an adapted linear accelerator vs. robotic radiosurgery: Comparison of dosimetric treatment plan quality.

Authors:  Harald Treuer; Moritz Hoevels; Klaus Luyken; Veerle Visser-Vandewalle; Jochen Wirths; Martin Kocher; Maximilian Ruge
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2014-11-22       Impact factor: 3.621

8.  18FDG-PET/CT Definition of Clinical Target Volume for Robotic Stereotactic Body Radiosurgery Treatment of Metastatic Gynecologic Malignancies.

Authors:  Charles A Kunos; Robert Debernardo; Jeffrey Fabien; Donald C Dobbins; Yuxia Zhang; James Brindle; Peter F Faulhaber
Journal:  J Nucl Med Radiat Ther       Date:  2011-12-12

9.  Treatment Planning for Self-Shielded Radiosurgery.

Authors:  John R Adler; Achim Schweikard; Younes Achkire; Oliver Blanck; Mohan Bodduluri; Lijun Ma; Hui Zhang
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2017-09-08

10.  A Novel Method for Quality Assurance of the Cyberknife Iris Variable Aperture Collimator.

Authors:  Sarah-Charlotta Heidorn; Nikolaus Kremer; Christoph Fürweger
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2016-05-21
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