Literature DB >> 22284036

Quantification of the variability of diaphragm motion and implications for treatment margin construction.

Simon Rit1, Marcel van Herk, Lambert Zijp, Jan-Jakob Sonke.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To quantify the variability of diaphragm motion during free-breathing radiotherapy of lung patients and its effect on treatment margins to account for geometric uncertainties. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Thirty-three lung cancer patients were analyzed. Each patient had 5-19 cone-beam scans acquired during different treatment fractions. The craniocaudal position of the diaphragm dome on the same side as the tumor was tracked over 2 min in the projection images, because it is both easily visible and a suitable surrogate to study the variability of the tumor motion and its impact on treatment margins. Intra-acquisition, inter-acquisition, and inter-patient variability of the respiratory cycles were quantified separately, as were the probability density functions (PDFs) of the diaphragm position over each cycle, each acquisition, and each patient. Asymmetric margins were simulated using each patient PDF and compared to symmetric margins computed from a margin recipe.
RESULTS: The peak-to-peak amplitude variability (1 SD) was 3.3 mm, 2.4 mm, and 6.1 mm for the intra-acquisition, inter-acquisition, and inter-patient variability, respectively. The average PDF of each cycle was similar to the sin(4) function but the PDF of each acquisition was closer to a skew-normal distribution because of the motion variability. Despite large interfraction baseline variability, the PDF of each patient was generally asymmetric with a longer end-inhale tail because the end-exhale position was more stable than the end-inhale position. The asymmetry of the PDF required asymmetric margins around the time-averaged position to account for the position uncertainty but the average difference was 1.0 mm (range, 0.0-4.4 mm) for a sharp penumbra and an idealized online setup correction protocol.
CONCLUSION: The respiratory motion is more irregular during the fractions than between the fractions. The PDF of the respiratory motion is asymmetrically distributed. Both the intra-acquisition variability and the PDF asymmetry have a limited impact on dose distributions and inferred margins. The use of a margin recipe to account for respiratory motion with an estimate of the average motion amplitude was adequate in almost all patients.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22284036     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2011.06.1986

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys        ISSN: 0360-3016            Impact factor:   7.038


  14 in total

1.  A tool for validating MRI-guided strategies: a digital breathing CT/MRI phantom of the abdominal site.

Authors:  Chiara Paganelli; Paul Summers; Chiara Gianoli; Massimo Bellomi; Guido Baroni; Marco Riboldi
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2017-04-08       Impact factor: 2.602

2.  Dosimetric comparison between volumetric modulated arc therapy planning techniques for prostate cancer in the presence of intrafractional organ deformation.

Authors:  Maria Varnava; Iori Sumida; Michio Oda; Keita Kurosu; Fumiaki Isohashi; Yuji Seo; Keisuke Otani; Kazuhiko Ogawa
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2021-03-10       Impact factor: 2.724

3.  2D/4D marker-free tumor tracking using 4D CBCT as the reference image.

Authors:  Mengjiao Wang; Gregory C Sharp; Simon Rit; Vivien Delmon; Guangzhi Wang
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2014-04-08       Impact factor: 3.609

4.  A Novel Method of Cone Beam CT Projection Binning Based on Image Registration.

Authors:  Seonyeong Park; Siyong Kim; Byongyong Yi; Geoffrey Hugo; H Michael Gach; Yuichi Motai
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 10.048

5.  Interobserver variability of patient positioning using four different CT datasets for image registration in lung stereotactic body radiotherapy.

Authors:  Markus Oechsner; Barbara Chizzali; Michal Devecka; Stefan Münch; Stephanie Elisabeth Combs; Jan Jakob Wilkens; Marciana Nona Duma
Journal:  Strahlenther Onkol       Date:  2017-07-19       Impact factor: 3.621

6.  Dose escalated liver stereotactic body radiation therapy at the mean respiratory position.

Authors:  Michael Velec; Joanne L Moseley; Laura A Dawson; Kristy K Brock
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2014-07-08       Impact factor: 7.038

7.  Introduction of a pseudo demons force to enhance deformation range for robust reconstruction of super-resolution time-resolved 4DMRI.

Authors:  Guang Li; August Sun; Xingyu Nie; Jason Moody; Kirk Huang; Shirong Zhang; Satyam Sharma; Joseph Deasy
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2018-10-15       Impact factor: 4.071

8.  Registration uncertainties between 3D cone beam computed tomography and different reference CT datasets in lung stereotactic body radiation therapy.

Authors:  Markus Oechsner; Barbara Chizzali; Michal Devecka; Stephanie Elisabeth Combs; Jan Jakob Wilkens; Marciana Nona Duma
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2016-10-26       Impact factor: 3.481

9.  Automatic diaphragm segmentation for real-time lung tumor tracking on cone-beam CT projections: a convolutional neural network approach.

Authors:  David Edmunds; Greg Sharp; Brian Winey
Journal:  Biomed Phys Eng Express       Date:  2019-03-12

10.  Quantifying variability of intrafractional target motion in stereotactic body radiotherapy for lung cancers.

Authors:  Mark K H Chan; Dora L W Kwong; Eric Tam; Anthony Tong; Sherry C Y Ng
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2013-09-06       Impact factor: 2.102

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