Ford E C, Mageras G S, Yorke E, Ling C C
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, Department of Medical Physics, 1275 York Avenue, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Med Phys. 2003 Jan;30(1):88-97. doi: 10.1118/1.1531177.
We describe a method for generating CT images at multiple respiratory phases with a single spiral CT scan, referred to as respiratory-correlated spiral CT (RCCT). RCCT relies on a respiration wave form supplied by an external patient monitor. During acquisition this wave form is recorded along with the initiation time of the CT scan, so as to "time stamp" each reconstructed slice with the phase of the respiratory cycle. By selecting the appropriate slices, a full CT image set is generated at several phases, typically 7-11 per cycle. The CT parameters are chosen to optimize the temporal resolution while minimizing the spatial gap between slices at successive respiratory cycles. Using a pitch of 0.5, a gantry rotation period of 1.5 s, and a 180 degrees reconstruction algorithm results in approximately 5 mm slice spacing at a given phase for typical respiration periods, and a respiratory motion within each slice that is acceptably small, particularly near end expiration or end inspiration where gated radiotherapy is to occur. We have performed validation measurements on a phantom with a moving sphere designed to simulate respiration-induced tumor motion. RCCT scans of the phantom at respiratory periods of 4, 5, and 6 s show good agreement of the sphere's motion with that observed under fluoroscopic imaging. The positional deviations in the sphere's centroid between RCCT and fluoroscopy are 1.1+/-0.9 mm in the transaxial direction (average over all scans at all phases +/-1 s.d.) and 1.2+/-1.0 mm in the longitudinal direction. Reconstructed volumes match those expected on the basis of stationary-phantom scans to within 5% in all cases. The surface distortions of the reconstructed sphere, as quantified by deviations from a mathematical reference sphere, are similar to those from a stationary phantom scan and are correlated with the speed of the phantom. A RCCT scan of the phantom undergoing irregular motion, demonstrates that successful reconstruction can be achieved even with irregular respiration. Limitations from x-ray tube heating in our current CT unit restrict the length of the scan region to 9 cm for the RCCT settings used, though this will not be a limitation for a multislice scanner. RCCT offers an alternative to the current method of respiration-triggered axial scans. Multiple phases of respiration are imaged with RCCT in approximately the same scanning time required to image a single phase with a triggered axial scan. RCCT scans can be used in connection with respiratory-gated treatment to identify the patient-specific phase of minimum tumor motion, determine residual tumor motion within the gate interval, and compare treatment plans at different phases.
我们描述了一种通过单次螺旋CT扫描生成多个呼吸期CT图像的方法,称为呼吸相关螺旋CT(RCCT)。RCCT依赖于外部患者监护仪提供的呼吸波形。在扫描过程中,该波形与CT扫描的起始时间一起被记录下来,以便用呼吸周期的相位对每个重建切片进行“时间标记”。通过选择合适的切片,可以在几个相位生成完整的CT图像集,通常每个周期7 - 11个相位。选择CT参数以优化时间分辨率,同时最小化连续呼吸周期切片之间的空间间隙。使用0.5的螺距、1.5秒的机架旋转周期和180度重建算法,对于典型呼吸周期,在给定相位可得到约5毫米的切片间距,并且每个切片内的呼吸运动足够小,特别是在门控放疗将进行的呼气末或吸气末附近。我们对一个带有模拟呼吸诱导肿瘤运动的移动球体的体模进行了验证测量。在4秒、5秒和6秒呼吸周期对体模进行的RCCT扫描显示,球体运动与荧光透视成像观察到的运动高度一致。RCCT和荧光透视之间球体质心在横轴方向的位置偏差为1.1±0.9毫米(所有扫描在所有相位的平均值±标准差),纵轴方向为1.2±1.0毫米。在所有情况下,重建体积与基于静止体模扫描预期的体积匹配在5%以内。通过与数学参考球体的偏差量化的重建球体表面畸变与静止体模扫描的畸变相似,并且与体模速度相关。对进行不规则运动的体模的RCCT扫描表明,即使呼吸不规则也能成功重建。在我们当前的CT设备中,X射线管加热的限制使得对于所使用的RCCT设置,扫描区域长度限制为9厘米,不过这对于多层扫描仪将不是一个限制。RCCT为当前呼吸触发轴向扫描方法提供了一种替代方案。使用RCCT对多个呼吸期成像所需的扫描时间与使用触发轴向扫描对单个相位成像所需的时间大致相同。RCCT扫描可与呼吸门控治疗结合使用,以识别患者特定的肿瘤最小运动相位,确定门控间隔内的残余肿瘤运动,并比较不同相位的治疗计划。