Literature DB >> 32830006

Commissioning and quality assurance of a novel solution for respiratory-gated PBS proton therapy based on optical tracking of surface markers.

Giovanni Fattori1, Jan Hrbacek2, Harald Regele2, Christian Bula2, Alexandre Mayor2, Stefan Danuser2, David C Oxley2, Urs Rechsteiner2, Martin Grossmann2, Riccardo Via2, Till T Böhlen2, Alessandra Bolsi2, Marc Walser2, Michele Togno2, Emma Colvill2, Daniel Lempen2, Damien C Weber3, Antony J Lomax4, Sairos Safai2.   

Abstract

We present the commissioning and quality assurance of our clinical protocol for respiratory gating in pencil beam scanning proton therapy for cancer patients with moving targets. In a novel approach, optical tracking has been integrated in the therapy workflow and used to monitor respiratory motion from multiple surrogates, applied on the patients' chest. The gating system was tested under a variety of experimental conditions, specific to proton therapy, to evaluate reaction time and reproducibility of dose delivery control. The system proved to be precise in the application of beam gating and allowed the mitigation of dose distortions even for large (1.4cm) motion amplitudes, provided that adequate treatment windows were selected. The total delivered dose was not affected by the use of gating, with measured integral error within 0.15cGy. Analysing high-resolution images of proton transmission, we observed negligible discrepancies in the geometric location of the dose as a function of the treatment window, with gamma pass rate greater than 95% (2%/2mm) compared to stationary conditions. Similarly, pass rate for the latter metric at the 3%/3mm level was observed above 97% for clinical treatment fields, limiting residual movement to 3mm at end-exhale. These results were confirmed in realistic clinical conditions using an anthropomorphic breathing phantom, reporting a similarly high 3%/3mm pass rate, above 98% and 94%, for regular and irregular breathing, respectively. Finally, early results from periodic QA tests of the optical tracker have shown a reliable system, with small variance observed in static and dynamic measurements.
Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier GmbH.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Commissioning; Moving tumours; Optical tracking; Proton therapy; Quality assurance; Respiratory gating; Surface markers

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32830006     DOI: 10.1016/j.zemedi.2020.07.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Z Med Phys        ISSN: 0939-3889            Impact factor:   4.820


  3 in total

1.  Development and Performance Evaluation of Wearable Respiratory Self-Training System Using Patch Type Magnetic Sensor.

Authors:  Hyo Kyeong Kang; Hojin Kim; Chae-Seon Hong; Jihun Kim; Jin Sung Kim; Dong Wook Kim
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2021-08-03       Impact factor: 6.244

2.  Effects of deep inspiration breath hold on prone photon or proton irradiation of breast and regional lymph nodes.

Authors:  Bruno Speleers; Max Schoepen; Francesca Belosi; Vincent Vakaet; Wilfried De Neve; Pieter Deseyne; Leen Paelinck; Tom Vercauteren; Michael J Parkes; Tony Lomax; Annick Van Greveling; Alessandra Bolsi; Damien C Weber; Liv Veldeman; Werner De Gersem
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-16       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Technical assessment of the NDI Polaris Vega optical tracking system.

Authors:  Giovanni Fattori; Antony John Lomax; Damien Charles Weber; Sairos Safai
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2021-05-12       Impact factor: 3.481

  3 in total

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