Nakagawa Keiichi, Tago Masao, Shibata Kouji, Nakamura Naoki, Yamashita Hideomi, Shiraishi Kenshiro, Terahara Atsuro, Kato Daiki, Kato Shinsuke, Hosoi Yoshio, Shin Masahiro, Ohtomo Kuni
Department of Radiology, University of Tokyo School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Radiat Med. 2003 Jul-Aug;21(4):178-82.
Although the Gamma Knife is widely used as a standard tool of radiosurgery for intracranial diseases, recent innovations in medical accelerators have actualized equivalent dose distribution. Most commonly, multiple non-coplanar arc beams through a combination of gantry and couch rotations are used in linac-based radiosurgery, but beam entry geometry is different from that with the Gamma Knife. We have developed a C-arm-mounted medical accelerator and realized conical beam entry without couch rotation. A combination of several conical rotation beams with different C-arm angles comprises multi-orbit dynamic conical radiation therapy (MODCRT) and resembles radiation beam entry with the Gamma Knife. Intercomparison of dose distributions and dose-volume histograms for the same brain tumor demonstrated that MODCRT delivers a similar dose fall-off pattern to that obtained with the Gamma Knife, though the low-dose spread patterns differ.