Radiotherapie Hirslanden AG, Institute for Radiotherapy, Aarau, Switzerland.
Med Phys. 2012 Dec;39(12):7650-61. doi: 10.1118/1.4758065.
The full benefit of the increased precision of contemporary treatment techniques can only be exploited if the accuracy of the patient positioning is guaranteed. Therefore, more and more imaging modalities are used in the process of the patient setup in clinical routine of radiation therapy. The improved accuracy in patient positioning, however, results in additional dose contributions to the integral patient dose. To quantify this, absorbed dose measurements from typical imaging procedures involved in an image-guided radiation therapy treatment were measured in an anthropomorphic phantom for a complete course of treatment. The experimental setup, including the measurement positions in the phantom, was exactly the same as in a preceding study of radiotherapy stray dose measurements. This allows a direct combination of imaging dose distributions with the therapy dose distribution.
Individually calibrated thermoluminescent dosimeters were used to measure absorbed dose in an anthropomorphic phantom at 184 locations. The dose distributions from imaging devices used with treatment machines from the manufacturers Accuray, Elekta, Siemens, and Varian and from computed tomography scanners from GE Healthcare were determined and the resulting effective dose was calculated. The list of investigated imaging techniques consisted of cone beam computed tomography (kilo- and megavoltage), megavoltage fan beam computed tomography, kilo- and megavoltage planar imaging, planning computed tomography with and without gating methods and planar scout views.
A conventional 3D planning CT resulted in an effective dose additional to the treatment stray dose of less than 1 mSv outside of the treated volume, whereas a 4D planning CT resulted in a 10 times larger dose. For a daily setup of the patient with two planar kilovoltage images or with a fan beam CT at the TomoTherapy unit, an additional effective dose outside of the treated volume of less than 0.4 mSv and 1.4 mSv was measured, respectively. Using kilovoltage or megavoltage radiation to obtain cone beam computed tomography scans led to an additional dose of 8-46 mSv. For treatment verification images performed once per week using double exposure technique, an additional effective dose of up to 18 mSv was measured.
Daily setup imaging using kilovoltage planar images or TomoTherapy megavoltage fan beam CT imaging can be used as a standard procedure in clinical routine. Daily kilovoltage and megavoltage cone beam computed tomography setup imaging should be applied on an individual or indication based protocol. Depending on the imaging scheme applied, image-guided radiation therapy can be administered without increasing the dose outside of the treated volume compared to therapies without image guidance.
如果要保证患者定位的准确性,那么只有提高当代治疗技术的精度,才能充分发挥其全部优势。因此,在放射治疗的临床常规中,越来越多的成像方式被用于患者定位过程。然而,患者定位精度的提高会导致患者积分剂量的附加剂量。为了量化这一点,对典型影像程序在完整治疗过程中涉及的吸收剂量进行了测量。实验设置与放射治疗散射线剂量测量的先前研究完全相同,包括体模中的测量位置。这允许将成像剂量分布与治疗剂量分布直接结合。
使用单独校准的热释光剂量计在体模的 184 个位置测量吸收剂量。从制造商 Accuray、Elekta、Siemens 和 Varian 的治疗机以及 GE Healthcare 的 CT 扫描仪获得成像设备的剂量分布,并计算出相应的有效剂量。所研究的成像技术包括锥形束 CT(千伏和兆伏)、兆伏扇束 CT、千伏和兆伏平面成像、带和不带门控方法的计划 CT 以及平面扫描视图。
常规的 3D 计划 CT 除了治疗散射线剂量外,在治疗体积外还会导致小于 1 mSv 的有效剂量,而 4D 计划 CT 则会导致 10 倍更大的剂量。对于患者的日常定位,如果每天使用 2 个平面千伏图像或 TomoTherapy 设备的扇束 CT,则在治疗体积外测量到的有效剂量分别小于 0.4 mSv 和 1.4 mSv。使用千伏或兆伏射线获得锥形束 CT 扫描会导致 8-46 mSv 的附加剂量。对于每周使用双曝光技术进行一次的治疗验证图像,测量到的有效剂量高达 18 mSv。
使用千伏平面图像或 TomoTherapy 兆伏扇束 CT 成像进行日常定位成像,可以作为临床常规的标准程序。每天进行千伏和兆伏锥形束 CT 定位成像应根据个人或适应证协议进行。根据所应用的成像方案,与无图像引导的治疗相比,图像引导放射治疗可以在不增加治疗体积外剂量的情况下进行。