D'Souza Warren D, Naqvi Shahid A, Yu Cedric X
Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Phys Med Biol. 2005 Sep 7;50(17):4021-33. doi: 10.1088/0031-9155/50/17/007. Epub 2005 Aug 11.
Significant differences between planned and delivered treatments may occur due to respiration-induced tumour motion, leading to underdosing of parts of the tumour and overdosing of parts of the surrounding critical structures. Existing methods proposed to counter tumour motion include breath-holds, gating and MLC-based tracking. Breath-holds and gating techniques increase treatment time considerably, whereas MLC-based tracking is limited to two dimensions. We present an alternative solution in which a robotic couch moves in real time in response to organ motion. To demonstrate proof-of-principle, we constructed a miniature adaptive couch model consisting of two movable platforms that simulate tumour motion and couch motion, respectively. These platforms were connected via an electronic feedback loop so that the bottom platform responded to the motion of the top platform. We tested our model with a seven-field step-and-shoot delivery case in which we performed three film-based experiments: (1) static geometry, (2) phantom-only motion and (3) phantom motion with simulated couch motion. Our measurements demonstrate that the miniature couch was able to compensate for phantom motion to the extent that the dose distributions were practically indistinguishable from those in static geometry. Motivated by this initial success, we investigated a real-time couch compensation system consisting of a stereoscopic infra-red camera system interfaced to a robotic couch known as the Hexapod, which responds in real time to any change in position detected by the cameras. Optical reflectors placed on a solid water phantom were used as surrogates for motion. We tested the effectiveness of couch-based motion compensation for fixed fields and a dynamic arc delivery cases. Due to hardware limitations, we performed film-based experiments (1), (2) and (3), with the robotic couch at a phantom motion period and dose rate of 16 s and 100 MU min(-1), respectively. Analysis of film measurements showed near-equivalent dose distributions (<or=2 mm agreement of corresponding isodose lines) for static geometry and motion-synchronized real-time robotic couch tracking-based radiation delivery.
由于呼吸引起的肿瘤运动,计划治疗与实际给予的治疗之间可能会出现显著差异,从而导致肿瘤部分区域剂量不足以及周围关键结构部分区域剂量过量。为应对肿瘤运动而提出的现有方法包括屏气、门控和基于多叶准直器(MLC)的跟踪。屏气和门控技术会显著增加治疗时间,而基于MLC的跟踪仅限于二维。我们提出了一种替代解决方案,即机器人治疗床根据器官运动实时移动。为了证明原理,我们构建了一个微型自适应治疗床模型,该模型由两个可移动平台组成,分别模拟肿瘤运动和治疗床运动。这些平台通过电子反馈回路连接,以便底部平台响应顶部平台的运动。我们用一个七野步进式射野投照病例测试了我们的模型,在此病例中我们进行了三个基于胶片的实验:(1)静态几何形状,(2)仅模体运动,以及(3)模体运动与模拟治疗床运动。我们的测量结果表明,微型治疗床能够补偿模体运动,其程度使得剂量分布与静态几何形状中的剂量分布几乎无法区分。受这一初步成功的激励,我们研究了一种实时治疗床补偿系统,该系统由一个立体红外相机系统与一个名为六足机器人的机器人治疗床相连组成,该治疗床会实时响应相机检测到的任何位置变化。放置在固体水模体上的光学反射器被用作运动替代物。我们测试了基于治疗床的运动补偿对固定射野和动态弧形投照病例的有效性。由于硬件限制,我们进行了基于胶片的实验(1)、(2)和(3),机器人治疗床的模体运动周期和剂量率分别为16秒和100 MU min⁻¹。胶片测量分析表明,对于静态几何形状和基于运动同步实时机器人治疗床跟踪的放射治疗,剂量分布近乎等效(相应等剂量线的一致性≤2毫米)。