School of Applied Sciences and Health Innovations Research Institute, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia.
Med Phys. 2012 Sep;39(9):5372-83. doi: 10.1118/1.4742053.
The use of time-resolved four-dimensional computed tomography (4D-CT) in radiotherapy requires strict quality assurance to ensure the accuracy of motion management protocols. The aim of this work was to design and test a phantom capable of large amplitude motion for use in 4D-CT, with particular interest in small lesions typical for stereotactic body radiotherapy.
The phantom of "see-saw" design is light weight, capable of including various sample materials and compatible with several surrogate marker signal acquisition systems. It is constructed of polymethylmethacrylate (Perspex) and its movement is controlled via a dc motor and drive wheel. It was tested using two CT scanners with different 4D acquisition methods: the Philips Brilliance Big Bore CT (helical scan, pressure belt) and a General Electric Discovery STE PET∕CT (axial scan, infrared marker). Amplitudes ranging from 1.5 to 6.0 cm and frequencies of up to 40 cycles per minute were used to study the effect of motion on image quality. Maximum intensity projections (MIPs), as well as average intensity projections (AIPs) of moving objects were investigated and their quality dependence on the number of phase reconstruction bins assessed.
CT number discrepancies between moving and stationary objects were found to have no systematic dependence on amplitude, frequency, or specific interphase variability. MIP-delineated amplitudes of motion were found to match physical phantom amplitudes to within 2 mm for all motion scenarios tested. Objects undergoing large amplitude motions (>3.0 cm) were shown to cause artefacts in MIP and AIP projections when ten phase bins were assigned. This problem can be mitigated by increasing the number of phase bins in a 4D-CT scan.
The phantom was found to be a suitable tool for evaluating the image quality of 4D-CT motion management technology, as well as providing a quality assurance tool for intercenter∕intervendor testing of commercial 4D-CT systems. When imaging objects with large amplitudes, the completeness criterion described here indicates the number of phase bins required to prevent missing data in MIPs and AIPs. This is most relevant for small lesions undergoing large motions.
在放射治疗中使用时变四维计算机断层扫描(4D-CT)需要严格的质量保证,以确保运动管理协议的准确性。本工作的目的是设计和测试一种可用于 4D-CT 的大振幅运动体模,特别关注立体定向体放射治疗中典型的小病变。
“跷跷板”设计的体模重量轻,能够包含各种样本材料,并与几种替代标记信号采集系统兼容。它由聚甲基丙烯酸甲酯(有机玻璃)制成,其运动通过直流电机和驱动轮控制。它使用两种具有不同 4D 采集方法的 CT 扫描仪进行了测试:飞利浦 Brilliance Big Bore CT(螺旋扫描,压力带)和通用电气 Discovery STE PET∕CT(轴向扫描,红外标记)。使用 1.5 至 6.0 cm 的振幅和高达 40 次/分钟的频率来研究运动对图像质量的影响。研究了最大强度投影(MIP)以及移动物体的平均强度投影(AIP),并评估了它们的质量对相位重建箱数量的依赖性。
发现运动和静止物体之间的 CT 数差异没有系统地依赖于振幅、频率或特定的相间变化。对于所有测试的运动场景,发现 MIP 描绘的运动幅度与物理体模幅度相差在 2mm 以内。当分配十个相位箱时,大振幅运动(>3.0cm)的物体在 MIP 和 AIP 投影中会产生伪影。通过增加 4D-CT 扫描中的相位箱数量,可以减轻这个问题。
该体模被发现是评估 4D-CT 运动管理技术图像质量的合适工具,也是商业 4D-CT 系统中心间/供应商间测试的质量保证工具。当对具有大振幅的物体进行成像时,这里描述的完整性标准表明了防止 MIP 和 AIP 中丢失数据所需的相位箱数量。这对于经历大运动的小病变最为相关。