Literature DB >> 22225306

In aqua vivo EPID dosimetry.

Markus Wendling1, Leah N McDermott, Anton Mans, Ígor Olaciregui-Ruiz, Raul Pecharromán-Gallego, Jan-Jakob Sonke, Joep Stroom, Marcel van Herk, Ben J Mijnheer.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: At the Netherlands Cancer Institute--Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Hospital in vivo dosimetry using an electronic portal imaging device (EPID) has been implemented for almost all high-energy photon treatments of cancer with curative intent. Lung cancer treatments were initially excluded, because the original back-projection dose-reconstruction algorithm uses water-based scatter-correction kernels and therefore does not account for tissue inhomogeneities accurately. The aim of this study was to test a new method, in aqua vivo EPID dosimetry, for fast dose verification of lung cancer irradiations during actual patient treatment.
METHODS: The key feature of our method is the dose reconstruction in the patient from EPID images, obtained during the actual treatment, whereby the images have been converted to a situation as if the patient consisted entirely of water; hence, the method is termed in aqua vivo. This is done by multiplying the measured in vivo EPID image with the ratio of two digitally reconstructed transmission images for the unit-density and inhomogeneous tissue situation. For dose verification, a comparison is made with the calculated dose distribution with the inhomogeneity correction switched off. IMRT treatment verification is performed for each beam in 2D using a 2D γ evaluation, while for the verification of volumetric-modulated arc therapy (VMAT) treatments in 3D a 3D γ evaluation is applied using the same parameters (3%, 3 mm). The method was tested using two inhomogeneous phantoms simulating a tumor in lung and measuring its sensitivity for patient positioning errors. Subsequently five IMRT and five VMAT clinical lung cancer treatments were investigated, using both the conventional back-projection algorithm and the in aqua vivo method. The verification results of the in aqua vivo method were statistically analyzed for 751 lung cancer patients treated with IMRT and 50 lung cancer patients treated with VMAT.
RESULTS: The improvements by applying the in aqua vivo approach are considerable. The percentage of γ values ≤1 increased on average from 66.2% to 93.1% and from 43.6% to 97.5% for the IMRT and VMAT cases, respectively. The corresponding mean γ value decreased from 0.99 to 0.43 for the IMRT cases and from 1.71 to 0.40 for the VMAT cases, which is similar to the accepted clinical values for the verification of IMRT treatments of prostate, rectum, and head-and-neck cancers. The deviation between the reconstructed and planned dose at the isocenter diminished on average from 5.3% to 0.5% for the VMAT patients and was almost the same, within 1%, for the IMRT cases. The in aqua vivo verification results for IMRT and VMAT treatments of a large group of patients had a mean γ of approximately 0.5, a percentage of γ values ≤1 larger than 89%, and a difference of the isocenter dose value less than 1%.
CONCLUSIONS: With the in aqua vivo approach for the verification of lung cancer treatments (IMRT and VMAT), we can achieve results with the same accuracy as obtained during in vivo EPID dosimetry of sites without large inhomogeneities.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22225306     DOI: 10.1118/1.3665709

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


  19 in total

1.  A dual two dimensional electronic portal imaging device transit dosimetry model based on an empirical quadratic formalism.

Authors:  Y I Tan; M Metwaly; M Glegg; S P Baggarley; A Elliott
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2015-05-13       Impact factor: 3.039

Review 2.  A review of recent advances in optical fibre sensors for in vivo dosimetry during radiotherapy.

Authors:  S O'Keeffe; D McCarthy; P Woulfe; M W D Grattan; A R Hounsell; D Sporea; L Mihai; I Vata; G Leen; E Lewis
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2015-03-11       Impact factor: 3.039

3.  Fast 3D dosimetric verifications based on an electronic portal imaging device using a GPU calculation engine.

Authors:  Jinhan Zhu; Lixin Chen; Along Chen; Guangwen Luo; Xiaowu Deng; Xiaowei Liu
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2015-04-11       Impact factor: 3.481

4.  Assessment of a 2D electronic portal imaging devices-based dosimetry algorithm for pretreatment and in-vivo midplane dose verification.

Authors:  Ali Jomehzadeh; Parvaneh Shokrani; Mohammad Mohammadi; Alireza Amouheidari
Journal:  Adv Biomed Res       Date:  2016-11-28

5.  A Simple Method for 2-D In Vivo Dosimetry by Portal Imaging.

Authors:  Stefano Peca; Derek Wilson Brown; Wendy Lani Smith
Journal:  Technol Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2017-06-06

6.  Experimental verification of a 3D in vivo dose monitoring system based on EPID.

Authors:  Xiaoyong Wang; Lixin Chen; Conghua Xie; Dajiang Wang; Gaili Chen; Zhengming Fu; Hui Liu
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-11-30

7.  Validation of measurement-guided 3D VMAT dose reconstruction on a heterogeneous anthropomorphic phantom.

Authors:  Daniel Opp; Benjamin E Nelms; Geoffrey Zhang; Craig Stevens; Vladimir Feygelman
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2013-07-08       Impact factor: 2.102

8.  Two-dimensional in vivo dose verification using portal imaging and correlation ratios.

Authors:  Stefano Peca; Derek W Brown
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2014-07-08       Impact factor: 2.102

9.  A Homogeneous Water-Equivalent Anthropomorphic Phantom for Dosimetric Verification of Radiotherapy Plans.

Authors:  Manikandan Arjunan; Sureka Chandra Sekaran; Biplab Sarkar; Sujatha Manikandan
Journal:  J Med Phys       Date:  2018 Apr-Jun

10.  Voluntary breath-holding for breast cancer radiotherapy is consistent and stable.

Authors:  Ruth Colgan; Matthew James; Frederick R Bartlett; Anna M Kirby; Ellen M Donovan
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2015-08-13       Impact factor: 3.039

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