Kauweloa K, Park J, Song W
Center for Advanced Radiotherapy Technologies and Department of Radiation Medicine and Applied Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Department of Physics, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA.
Med Phys. 2012 Jun;39(6Part6):3653. doi: 10.1118/1.4734840.
To evaluate the impact on free-breathing CBCT (FBCBCT) image quality to properly visualize the motion range of moving tumors as a function of imaging dose.
A multi-purpose body phantom (QUASAR) with a cylindrical cedar wood (density = 0.330g/cc), and an embedded 3-cm diameter Polystyrene sphere (density = 0.855g/cc) were used to simulate lung tumor motion. Varian Trilogy with OBI system was used to acquire CBCT images (high-dose mode: 125kVp, 80mA, 25ms/frame & low-dose mode: 110kVp, 20mA, 20ms/frame). As the FBCBCT projections were acquired, the sphere moved in accordance to 30 simulated sinusoidal patient breathing patterns using a programmable motion platform, which were given the parameters: inhalation-to-exhalation (I/E) ratio ranging from 1-0.2131, amplitudes of 1 and 3 cm, and periods 2, 4, and 6 seconds. Following the acquisition of FBCBCT images, the ITV contrast, defined as = (target pixel values inside the sphere - avg. pixel values in background)/(avg. pixel values in background), were calculated per image slice.
All parameters, I/E ratio, period, and amplitude did not seem to have much impact on the percentage change of the ITV contrast as a function of imaging dose. The percentage-change for all coronal images with a reduced ITV contrast when going from high-dose to low-dose was - 4.61 ± 3.04%, while the percentage-change for all coronal images with an ncreased ITV contrast when going from high-dose to low-dose, was 8.19 ± 3.61%. The overall percentage-change of all 30 coronal images was 5.21 ± 6.49%.
We found that imaging dose did not have much impact on the visibility of the ITV volume, irrespective of the amplitude, I/E ratio, or period. Thus, it seems that low-dose FBCBCT may be just as suitable for clinical use while sparing a significant imaging dose to the patients.
评估自由呼吸CBCT(FBCBCT)图像质量对正确显示移动肿瘤运动范围的影响,该影响作为成像剂量的函数。
使用一个带有圆柱形雪松木(密度 = 0.330g/cc)的多功能人体模体(QUASAR)和一个嵌入的直径3厘米的聚苯乙烯球体(密度 = 0.855g/cc)来模拟肺部肿瘤运动。使用带有OBI系统的瓦里安Trilogy获取CBCT图像(高剂量模式:125kVp,80mA,25ms/帧;低剂量模式:110kVp,20mA,20ms/帧)。在采集FBCBCT投影时,球体使用可编程运动平台按照30种模拟的正弦患者呼吸模式移动,这些模式的参数为:吸气与呼气(I/E)比范围为1 - 0.2131,幅度为1厘米和3厘米,周期为2秒、4秒和6秒。在采集FBCBCT图像后,计算每个图像切片的ITV对比度,定义为 =(球体内的目标像素值 - 背景中的平均像素值)/(背景中的平均像素值)。
所有参数,即I/E比、周期和幅度,似乎对ITV对比度作为成像剂量函数的百分比变化影响不大。从高剂量到低剂量时ITV对比度降低的所有冠状图像的百分比变化为 - 4.61 ± 3.04%,而从高剂量到低剂量时ITV对比度增加的所有冠状图像的百分比变化为8.19 ± 3.61%。所有30个冠状图像的总体百分比变化为5.21 ± 6.49%。
我们发现成像剂量对ITV体积的可见性影响不大,无论幅度、I/E比或周期如何。因此,低剂量FBCBCT似乎同样适用于临床应用,同时为患者节省大量成像剂量。