| Literature DB >> 22955649 |
Baozhou Sun1, Dharanipathy Rangaraj, Sunita Boddu, Murty Goddu, Deshan Yang, Geethpriya Palaniswaamy, Sridhar Yaddanapudi, Omar Wooten, Sasa Mutic.
Abstract
Experimental methods are commonly used for patient-specific IMRT delivery verification. There are a variety of IMRT QA techniques which have been proposed and clinically used with a common understanding that not one single method can detect all possible errors. The aim of this work was to compare the efficiency and effectiveness of independent dose calculation followed by machine log file analysis to conventional measurement-based methods in detecting errors in IMRT delivery. Sixteen IMRT treatment plans (5 head-and-neck, 3 rectum, 3 breast, and 5 prostate plans) created with a commercial treatment planning system (TPS) were recalculated on a QA phantom. All treatment plans underwent ion chamber (IC) and 2D diode array measurements. The same set of plans was also recomputed with another commercial treatment planning system and the two sets of calculations were compared. The deviations between dosimetric measurements and independent dose calculation were evaluated. The comparisons included evaluations of DVHs and point doses calculated by the two TPS systems. Machine log files were captured during pretreatment composite point dose measurements and analyzed to verify data transfer and performance of the delivery machine. Average deviation between IC measurements and point dose calculations with the two TPSs for head-and-neck plans were 1.2 ± 1.3% and 1.4 ± 1.6%, respectively. For 2D diode array measurements, the mean gamma value with 3% dose difference and 3 mm distance-to-agreement was within 1.5% for 13 of 16 plans. The mean 3D dose differences calculated from two TPSs were within 3% for head-and-neck cases and within 2% for other plans. The machine log file analysis showed that the gantry angle, jaw position, collimator angle, and MUs were consistent as planned, and maximal MLC position error was less than 0.5 mm. The independent dose calculation followed by the machine log analysis takes an average 47 ± 6 minutes, while the experimental approach (using IC and 2D diode array measurements) takes an average about 2 hours in our clinic. Independent dose calculation followed by machine log file analysis can be a reliable tool to verify IMRT treatments. Additionally, independent dose calculations have the potential to identify several problems (heterogeneity calculations, data corruptions, system failures) with the primary TPS, which generally are not identifiable with a measurement-based approach. Additionally, machine log file analysis can identify many problems (gantry, collimator, jaw setting) which also may not be detected with a measurement-based approach. Machine log file analysis could also detect performance problems for individual MLC leaves which could be masked in the analysis of a measured fluence.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22955649 PMCID: PMC5718232 DOI: 10.1120/jacmp.v13i5.3837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Clin Med Phys ISSN: 1526-9914 Impact factor: 2.102
A qualitative analysis of effectiveness of QA techniques to catch some potential discrepancy or error that could happen in an IMRT treatment. Note: only a few are mentioned here and only pretreatment QA techniques are analyzed.
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| Gantry Angle | 3 | 5 | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| Collimator Jaw Setting | 3 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| Collimator Angle | 3 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| MLC Positioning Error | 4 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| MUs | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | 5 |
| Couch Angle Error | 2 | 5 | 2 | 5 | 5 |
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| Dosimetry Characteristic – | |||||
| Energy Change, Symmetry and | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 | 5 |
| Flatness Off | |||||
| Absolute Dose Output Calibration | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Relative Dose Output – Small Field Output Off | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5 | 5 |
| One Segment Dropped Out or Not Transferred Properly | 4 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 5 |
| One Field Not Transferred Correctly | 4 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| Demanding MLC Sequence or MLC Positioning Issues – Beam Hold Off | 4 | 4 | 4 | 1 | 5 |
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| Small Field Out Prediction Issue | 2 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 1 |
| Heterogeneity Correction Issues | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 1 |
| Wrong CT to ED | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 2 |
| DVH Calculation Discrepancy | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 1 |
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| Beam Data Modification After | |||||
| Pretreatment QA and Other Machine Issues During Each Fraction | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
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| Anatomy Changes, localization Issues, Setup Issues | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
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| Isocenter Placement, Prescription, Wrong CT Voxel Size, Plan Quality | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
Note: 1 is most effective, 4 is least effective, and 5 is not possible to find from QA test results.
Point dose measurement refers to ion chamber measurement with one or two points in a composite fashion (i.e., all beam delivered to a water equivalent phantom as it would be delivered to the patient).
Field‐by‐field planar dose measurement: all beams delivered from AP direction with gantry and could reset to default position.
Composite planar dose QA refers to measuring a plane using a 2D detector embedded in a phantom and the QA is performed with actual beam parameters as it will be delivered to the patients.
DynaLog QA: analysis of machine log file collected by delivering the actual plan to air or during composite point or planar dose measurement, as explained in a) and c).
Independent dose calculation is verifying the dose distribution of the planning system by recalculating in an independent dose calculation by exporting DICOM RT files (Plan, Dose, Images, Structure set) and any POIs.
Figure 1Process flow for independent dose calculations with machine log file analysis and measured‐based QA in our clinic.
Ion chamber measures to validate independent dose calculation technique.
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| Head‐and‐ Neck |
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| Breast |
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| Prostate |
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| Rectum |
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Figure 2Line dose profiles for an H&N IMRT plan verified by MapCHECK for Pinnacle and Eclipse calculations.
Figure 3Dose difference derived from the difference between measurements vs. Pinnacle and Eclipse calculations vs. Pinnacle.
Figure 4Dose map of a representative H&N case obtained with Pinnacle and Eclipse: (a) from Pinnacle; (b) from Eclipse; (c) difference; (d) 2D gamma.
DVH indices for head‐and‐neck and rectum cases.
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| V 95% |
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| V 105% |
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| V 107% |
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| PTV1 | Min. dose % |
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| D5%‐95% |
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| D3%‐93% |
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| Mean dose (cGy) |
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| V 95% |
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| V 105% |
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| V 107% |
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| PTV2 | Min. dose |
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| D5%‐95% |
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| D3%‐93% |
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| Mean dose (cGy) |
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| Lt. Parotids | V26Gy |
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| – | – |
| Mean dose (cGy) |
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| Rt. Parotids | V26Gy |
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| Mean dose (cGy) |
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| Spinal Cord | Max. dose |
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| – | – |
| Small Bowel | V40Gy | – | – |
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| Mean dose (cGy) | – | – |
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DVH indices for breast and prostate cases.
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| V 95% |
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| V 105% |
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| V 107% |
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| PTV | Min. dose |
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| D5%‐95% |
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| D3%‐93% |
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| Mean dose |
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| Ipsilateral Lung | V20 |
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| – | – |
| Mean dose (cGy) |
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| – | – | |
| Heart | V20 |
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| – | – |
| Mean dose (cGy) |
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| Spinal Cord | Max. dose (cGy) |
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| – | – |
| V65 | – | – |
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| Rectum | V40 | – | – |
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| Mean dose (cGy) | – | – |
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| V65 | – | – |
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| Bladder | V40 | – | – |
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| Mean dose (cGy) | – | – |
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Figure 5Machine log analysis. Gantry, jaw, and collimator angle, MLC positions, MU, and fluence map are compared.
Process flow timeline.
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| 1 | Making a verification plan for measurements (IC and 2D verification plans) | 35 min | 15(capturing DynaLog) |
| 2 | Exporting verification plan for delivery | 3 min | ‐ |
| 3 | 1D and 2D verification at LINAC | 60 min | ‐ |
| 4 | Data analysis of the measurement data | 15 min | ‐ |
| 5 | Export the plan from Pinnacle to Eclipse | ‐ | 10 min |
| 6 | Independent dose calculation in Eclipse | ‐ | 8 min |
| 7 | DVH comparison and analysis | ‐ | 6 min |
| 8 | Machine log analysis | ‐ | 3 min |
| 9 | Documentation | 5 min | 5 min |
| Total Time | 118 min | 47 min |