| Literature DB >> 31116853 |
Takayuki Nose1, Koji Masui2, Tadashi Takenaka2, Hideya Yamazaki2, Katsuya Nakata2, Yuki Otani3, Shinichiro Kumita4.
Abstract
Real-time fluoroscopic verification of the active source position during actual treatment is the only established method to prevent high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy events. The challenge is spurious signals from an HDR 192Ir source that result in image halation, making source positions indiscernible when using a non-modified image intensifier fluoroscope. We have previously reported a method for observing an HDR 192Ir source by using an elaborately modified image intensifier system. The newly developed flat-panel detector fluoroscope is, by contrast, inherently halation-free thanks to the wider dynamic range (12-14 bits), compared with image intensifier fluoroscopes (8 bits). To explore the feasibility, we applied a commercially available flat-panel detector fluoroscope without modification to actual treatment. We successfully observed source positions without halation for all 107 patients, with a total of 522 HDR treatment sessions during a 3-year period from 2014 to 2017. Actual source positions were compared with planned positions on the planning hard copy. With this method, we detected a total of 1 error (0.2%) among the 522 sessions, at a similar detection rate of 0.1% with our previous experience using a modified image intensifier fluoroscope. We found that a commercially available flat-panel detector fluoroscope is ready for use for real-time verification and outweighs the need for elaborate modifications of an image intensifier fluoroscope. A flat-panel detector fluoroscope will help the global radiation oncology community promote real-time verification programs, leading to safer HDR brachytherapy.Entities:
Keywords: brachytherapy; flat-panel detector; fluoroscopy; high-dose-rate; real-time; verification
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31116853 PMCID: PMC6530625 DOI: 10.1093/jrr/rrz013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Radiat Res ISSN: 0449-3060 Impact factor: 2.724
Fig. 1.Commissioning test set-up: an X-ray test chart (not shown) mounted on a 100 mm-thick phantom (300 mm × 300 mm × 100 mm), an HDR applicator connected to a joint tube set beneath the phantom, and an X-ray tube for the flat-panel detector system positioned under the couch.
Fig. 2.Fluoroscopic monitor image of an X-ray test chart and an HDR 192Ir source with the automatic exposure control function turned on. Image quality was not clear enough to observe the test chart and the 192Ir source (arrow).
Fig. 3.(a) Fluoroscopic image of an X-ray test chart mounted on a phantom. (b) Fluoroscopic image of an X-ray test chart mounted on a phantom and an active HDR 192Ir source (arrow) beneath the phantom.
Fig. 4.(a) A patient with cancer of the hard palate treated with mold brachytherapy. (b) A patient with gynecologic cancer treated with interstitial brachytherapy. Arrows indicate the active source at the top of the drive cable.