Literature DB >> 28079260

An experimentally validated couch and MLC tracking simulator used to investigate hybrid couch-MLC tracking.

Jakob Toftegaard1, Rune Hansen2, Thomas Ravkilde2, Kristijan Macek3, Per Rugaard Poulsen1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE/
OBJECTIVE: Couch and MLC tracking are two novel techniques to mitigate intrafractional tumor motion on a conventional linear accelerator, but both techniques still have residual dosimetric errors. Here, we first propose and experimentally validate a software tool to simulate couch and MLC tracking, and then use the simulator to study hybrid couch-MLC tracking for improved tracking performance.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The tracking simulator requires a treatment plan and a motion trajectory as input and simulates the delivered monitor units and motion of all accelerator parts as function of time. The simulator outputs accelerator log files synchronized with the target motion as well as the MLC exposure error, which is a simple dose error surrogate. A series of couch and MLC tracking experiments were used to determine appropriate parameters for the simulator dynamics and to validate the simulator by its ability to reproduce the experimental tracking accuracy. Three hybrid couch-MLC tracking strategies were investigated. All strategies divided the target motion in beam's eye view into motion perpendicular and parallel to the MLC leaves. In the hybrid strategies, couch tracking compensated for the following target motion components (in order of decreasing couch tracking contribution): (a) all perpendicular motion, (b) residual perpendicular motion less than half a leaf width, and (c) persistent residual perpendicular motion that was stable at a time scale of 1s. MLC tracking compensated for the remaining target motion. All tracking strategies were simulated with two prostate and two lung cancer single-arc VMAT plans using 695 prostate trajectories and 160 lung tumor trajectories. The tracking error was quantified as the MLC exposure error. The couch motion was quantified as the mean speed, acceleration, and jerk of the couch.
RESULTS: The simulator reproduced the experimental gantry position with a mean (maximum) root-mean-square (rms) error of 0.07°(0.2°). The geometrical rms tracking error was reproduced with mean (maximum) absolute errors of 0.20 mm(0.23 mm) and 0.1 mm(0.23 mm) for MLC tracking parallel and perpendicular to the MLC leaves, and 0.40 mm(0.46 mm), 0.09 mm(0.25 mm), and 0.20 mm(0.46 mm) for couch tracking in the left-right, anterior-posterior, and cranio-caudal directions. The MLC exposure error of VMAT MLC tracking was reproduced with a mean absolute error of 5.6%. All hybrid tracking strategies reduced the couch motion relative to pure couch tracking and improved the tracking accuracy compared with pure MLC tracking. The mean MLC exposure error reduction relative to no tracking was 66.6% (couch tracking), 72.9% (hybrid (1)), 70.2% (2), 59.1% (3), and 55.6% (MLC tracking) for lung tumor motion and 76.5% (couch tracking), 76.1% (1), 74.3% (2), 72.3% (3), and 35.9% (MLC tracking) for prostate motion. For prostate motion, pure MLC tracking resulted in rather large MLC exposure errors that were more than halved with all hybrid tracking strategies.
CONCLUSION: A couch and MLC tracking simulator was developed and experimentally validated against a series of tracking experiments. All hybrid couch-MLC tracking strategies improved MLC tracking. Two strategies also improved couch tracking of lung tumors. In particular, MLC tracking of prostate may be greatly improved by a modest degree of couch motion.
© 2017 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  IGRT; motion management; real-time adaption; tumor tracking

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28079260     DOI: 10.1002/mp.12104

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


  5 in total

1.  Technical Note: In silico and experimental evaluation of two leaf-fitting algorithms for MLC tracking based on exposure error and plan complexity.

Authors:  Vincent Caillet; Ricky O'Brien; Douglas Moore; Per Poulsen; Tobias Pommer; Emma Colvill; Amit Sawant; Jeremy Booth; Paul Keall
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2019-03-04       Impact factor: 4.071

Review 2.  Review of Real-Time 3-Dimensional Image Guided Radiation Therapy on Standard-Equipped Cancer Radiation Therapy Systems: Are We at the Tipping Point for the Era of Real-Time Radiation Therapy?

Authors:  Paul J Keall; Doan Trang Nguyen; Ricky O'Brien; Pengpeng Zhang; Laura Happersett; Jenny Bertholet; Per R Poulsen
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2018-04-14       Impact factor: 7.038

3.  Optimization of training periods for the estimation model of three-dimensional target positions using an external respiratory surrogate.

Authors:  Hiraku Iramina; Mitsuhiro Nakamura; Yusuke Iizuka; Takamasa Mitsuyoshi; Yukinori Matsuo; Takashi Mizowaki; Ikuo Kanno
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2018-04-19       Impact factor: 3.481

4.  Patterns of practice for adaptive and real-time radiation therapy (POP-ART RT) part I: Intra-fraction breathing motion management.

Authors:  Gail Anastasi; Jenny Bertholet; Per Poulsen; Toon Roggen; Cristina Garibaldi; Nina Tilly; Jeremy T Booth; Uwe Oelfke; Ben Heijmen; Marianne C Aznar
Journal:  Radiother Oncol       Date:  2020-06-23       Impact factor: 6.280

5.  Direct measurement and correction of both megavoltage and kilovoltage scattered x-rays for orthogonal kilovoltage imaging subsystems with dual flat panel detectors.

Authors:  Hiraku Iramina; Mitsuhiro Nakamura; Takashi Mizowaki
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2020-07-25       Impact factor: 2.102

  5 in total

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