Gupta Aashish C, Shrestha Suman, Owens Constance A, Smith Susan A, Qiao Ying, Weathers Rita E, Balter Peter A, Kry Stephen F, Howell Rebecca M
Department of Radiation Physics, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, United States of America.
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center UTHealth Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Houston, Texas, United States of America.
Biomed Phys Eng Express. 2020 Nov;6(6). doi: 10.1088/2057-1976/ab97a3. Epub 2020 Sep 29.
We previously developed an age-scalable 3D computational phantom that has been widely used for retrospective whole-body dose reconstructions of conventional two-dimensional historic radiation therapy (RT) treatments in late effects studies of childhood cancer survivors. This phantom is modeled in the FORTRAN programming language and is not readily applicable for dose reconstructions for survivors treated with contemporary RT whose treatment plans were designed using computed tomography images and complex treatment fields. The goal of this work was to adapt the current FORTRAN model of our age-scalable computational phantom into Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard so that it can be used with any treatment planning system (TPS) to reconstruct contemporary RT. Additionally, we report a detailed description of the phantom's age-based scaling functions, information that was not previously published.
We developed a Python script that adapts our phantom model from FORTRAN to DICOM. To validate the conversion, we compared geometric parameters for the phantom modeled in FORTRAN and DICOM scaled to ages 1 month, 6 months, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 10, 15, and 18 years. Specifically, we calculated the percent differences between the corner points and volume of each body region and the normalized mean square distance (NMSD) between each of the organs. In addition, we also calculated the percent difference between the heights of our DICOM age-scaled phantom and the heights (50th percentile) reported by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for male and female children of the same ages. Additionally, we calculated the difference between the organ masses for our DICOM phantom and the organ masses for two reference phantoms (from International Comission on Radiation Protection (ICRP) 89 and the University of Florida/National Cancer Institute reference hybrid voxel phantoms) for ages newborn, 1, 5, 10, 15 and adult. Lastly, we conducted a feasibility study using our DICOM phantom for organ dose calculations in a commercial TPS. Specifically, we simulated a 6 MV photon right-sided flank field RT plan for our DICOM phantom scaled to age 3.9 years; treatment field parameters and age were typical of a Wilms tumor RT treatment in the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study. For comparison, the same treatment was simulated using our in-house dose calculation system with our FORTRAN phantom. The percent differences (between FORTRAN and DICOM) in mean dose and percent of volume receiving dose ⩾5 Gy were calculated for two organs at risk, liver and pancreas.
The percent differences in corner points and the volumes of head, neck, and trunk body regions between our phantom modeled in FORTRAN and DICOM agreed within 3%. For all of the ages, the NMSDs were negliglible with a maximum NMSD of 7.80 × 10 mm for occiptital lobe of 1 month. The heights of our age-scaled phantom agreed with WHO/CDC data within 7% from infant to adult, and within 2% agreement for ages 5 years and older. We observed that organ masses in our phantom are less than the organ masses for other reference phantoms. Dose calculations done with our in-house calculation system (with FORTRAN phantom) and commercial TPS (with DICOM phantom) agreed within 7%.
We successfully adapted our phantom model from the FORTRAN language to DICOM standard and validated its geometric consistency. We also demonstrated that our phantom model is representative of population height data for infant to adult, but that the organ masses are smaller than in other reference phantoms and need further refinement. Our age-scalable computational phantom modeled in DICOM standard can be scaled to any age at RT and used within a commercial TPS to retrospectively reconstruct doses from contemporary RT in childhood cancer survivors.
我们之前开发了一种可按年龄缩放的三维计算体模,已广泛用于儿童癌症幸存者晚期效应研究中传统二维历史放射治疗(RT)治疗的回顾性全身剂量重建。该体模用FORTRAN编程语言建模,不适用于用当代RT治疗的幸存者的剂量重建,这些幸存者的治疗计划是使用计算机断层扫描图像和复杂治疗野设计的。这项工作的目标是将我们可按年龄缩放的计算体模的当前FORTRAN模型改编为医学数字成像和通信(DICOM)标准,以便它可与任何治疗计划系统(TPS)一起用于重建当代RT。此外,我们报告了体模基于年龄的缩放函数的详细描述,这一信息以前未发表过。
我们开发了一个Python脚本,将我们的体模模型从FORTRAN改编为DICOM。为验证转换,我们比较了FORTRAN和DICOM中按1个月、6个月、1岁、2岁、3岁、5岁、8岁、10岁、15岁和18岁缩放的体模的几何参数。具体而言,我们计算了每个身体区域的角点和体积之间的百分比差异以及各器官之间的归一化均方距离(NMSD)。此外,我们还计算了我们的DICOM年龄缩放体模的高度与世界卫生组织(WHO)和疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)报告的同年龄男女儿童身高(第50百分位数)之间的百分比差异。此外,我们计算了我们的DICOM体模的器官质量与两个参考体模(来自国际辐射防护委员会(ICRP)89以及佛罗里达大学/国家癌症研究所参考混合体素体模)在新生儿、1岁、5岁、10岁、15岁和成人年龄时的器官质量差异。最后,我们使用我们的DICOM体模在商业TPS中进行器官剂量计算的可行性研究。具体而言,我们为按3.9岁缩放的DICOM体模模拟了一个6 MV光子右侧腹野RT计划;治疗野参数和年龄是儿童癌症幸存者研究中Wilms瘤RT治疗的典型参数。为作比较,使用我们的内部剂量计算系统和FORTRAN体模模拟了相同的治疗。计算了两个危险器官肝脏和胰腺的平均剂量百分比差异(FORTRAN和DICOM之间)以及接受剂量⩾5 Gy的体积百分比差异。
我们在FORTRAN和DICOM中建模的体模在头部、颈部和躯干身体区域的角点和体积百分比差异在3%以内。对于所有年龄,NMSD可以忽略不计,1个月大婴儿枕叶的最大NMSD为7.80×10毫米。我们的年龄缩放体模的高度与WHO/CDC数据在婴儿到成人范围内的一致性在7%以内,5岁及以上年龄的一致性在2%以内。我们观察到我们体模中的器官质量小于其他参考体模的器官质量。使用我们的内部计算系统(使用FORTRAN体模)和商业TPS(使用DICOM体模)进行的剂量计算一致性在7%以内。
我们成功地将我们的体模模型从FORTRAN语言改编为DICOM标准并验证了其几何一致性。我们还证明了我们的体模模型代表了从婴儿到成人的人群身高数据,但器官质量小于其他参考体模,需要进一步完善。我们以DICOM标准建模的可按年龄缩放的计算体模可缩放到RT时的任何年龄,并可在商业TPS中用于回顾性重建儿童癌症幸存者当代RT的剂量。