Pappas Eleftherios P, Alshanqity Mukhtar, Moutsatsos Argyris, Lababidi Hani, Alsafi Khalid, Georgiou Konstantinos, Karaiskos Pantelis, Georgiou Evangelos
1 Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
2 King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Technol Cancer Res Treat. 2017 Dec;16(6):1120-1129. doi: 10.1177/1533034617735454. Epub 2017 Oct 11.
In view of their superior soft tissue contrast compared to computed tomography, magnetic resonance images are commonly involved in stereotactic radiosurgery/radiotherapy applications for target delineation purposes. It is known, however, that magnetic resonance images are geometrically distorted, thus deteriorating dose delivery accuracy. The present work focuses on the assessment of geometric distortion inherent in magnetic resonance images used in stereotactic radiosurgery/radiotherapy treatment planning and attempts to quantitively evaluate the consequent impact on dose delivery. The geometric distortions for 3 clinical magnetic resonance protocols (at both 1.5 and 3.0 T) used for stereotactic radiosurgery/radiotherapy treatment planning were evaluated using a recently proposed phantom and methodology. Areas of increased distortion were identified at the edges of the imaged volume which was comparable to a brain scan. Although mean absolute distortion did not exceed 0.5 mm on any spatial axis, maximum detected control point disposition reached 2 mm. In an effort to establish what could be considered as acceptable geometric uncertainty, highly conformal plans were utilized to irradiate targets of different diameters (5-50 mm). The targets were mispositioned by 0.5 up to 3 mm, and dose-volume histograms and plan quality indices clinically used for plan evaluation and acceptance were derived and used to investigate the effect of geometrical uncertainty (distortion) on dose delivery accuracy and plan quality. The latter was found to be strongly dependent on target size. For targets less than 20 mm in diameter, a spatial disposition of the order of 1 mm could significantly affect (>5%) plan acceptance/quality indices. For targets with diameter greater than 2 cm, the corresponding disposition was found greater than 1.5 mm. Overall results of this work suggest that efficacy of stereotactic radiosurgery/radiotherapy applications could be compromised in case of very small targets lying distant from the scanner's isocenter (eg, the periphery of the brain).
鉴于与计算机断层扫描相比,磁共振图像具有更高的软组织对比度,因此在立体定向放射外科手术/放射治疗应用中,磁共振图像常用于靶区勾画。然而,众所周知,磁共振图像存在几何失真,从而降低了剂量传递的准确性。目前的工作重点是评估立体定向放射外科手术/放射治疗治疗计划中使用的磁共振图像固有的几何失真,并试图定量评估其对剂量传递的影响。使用最近提出的体模和方法,对用于立体定向放射外科手术/放射治疗治疗计划的3种临床磁共振协议(1.5T和3.0T)的几何失真进行了评估。在成像体积的边缘发现了失真增加的区域,这与脑部扫描相当。尽管在任何空间轴上平均绝对失真不超过0.5mm,但检测到的最大控制点位移达到了2mm。为了确定可接受的几何不确定性,利用高度适形计划照射不同直径(5-50mm)的靶区。将靶区误定位0.5至3mm,并得出临床上用于计划评估和验收的剂量体积直方图和计划质量指标,以研究几何不确定性(失真)对剂量传递准确性和计划质量的影响。发现后者强烈依赖于靶区大小。对于直径小于20mm的靶区,约1mm的空间位移可能会显著影响(>5%)计划验收/质量指标。对于直径大于2cm的靶区,相应的位移大于1.5mm。这项工作的总体结果表明,对于远离扫描仪等中心的非常小的靶区(例如脑周边),立体定向放射外科手术/放射治疗应用的疗效可能会受到影响。