Highly efficient and sensitive patient-specific quality assurance for spot-scanned proton therapy
Autor: | Chris Beltran, Keith M. Furutani, Michael G. Herman, H. Wan Chan Tseung, Thomas J. Whitaker, Jon J. Kruse, Jedediah E. Johnson, Daniel W. Mundy |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Patient-Specific Modeling
Statistical methods Quality Assurance Health Care Computer science medicine.medical_treatment Systems Engineering Monte Carlo method Cancer Treatment 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging 0302 clinical medicine Planned Dose Neoplasms Medicine and Health Sciences Proton Therapy Radiation treatment planning Multidisciplinary Pharmaceutics Physics Applied Mathematics Simulation and Modeling Statistics Radiotherapy Dosage Oncology 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Physical Sciences Engineering and Technology Medicine Protons Algorithms Elementary Particles Research Article Clinical Oncology Science Radiation Therapy Research and Analysis Methods Imaging phantom 03 medical and health sciences DICOM Dose Prediction Methods Histogram medicine Humans Engines Particle Physics Proton therapy Simulation Nuclear Physics Nucleons Retrospective Studies Photons business.industry Mechanical Engineering Radiotherapy Planning Computer-Assisted Data set Radiation therapy Mathematical and statistical techniques Clinical Medicine business Quality Assurance Quality assurance Mathematics |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE, Vol 14, Iss 2, p e0212412 (2019) PLoS ONE |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
Popis: | The purpose of this work was to develop an end-to-end patient-specific quality assurance (QA) technique for spot-scanned proton therapy that is more sensitive and efficient than traditional approaches. The patient-specific methodology relies on independently verifying the accuracy of the delivered proton fluence and the dose calculation in the heterogeneous patient volume. A Monte Carlo dose calculation engine, which was developed in-house, recalculates a planned dose distribution on the patient CT data set to verify the dose distribution represented by the treatment planning system. The plan is then delivered in a pre-treatment setting and logs of spot position and dose monitors, which are integrated into the treatment nozzle, are recorded. A computational routine compares the delivery log to the DICOM spot map used by the Monte Carlo calculation to ensure that the delivered parameters at the machine match the calculated plan. Measurements of dose planes using independent detector arrays, which historically are the standard approach to patient-specific QA, are not performed for every patient. The nozzle-integrated detectors are rigorously validated using independent detectors in regular QA intervals. The measured data are compared to the expected delivery patterns. The dose monitor reading deviations are reported in a histogram, while the spot position discrepancies are plotted vs. spot number to facilitate independent analysis of both random and systematic deviations. Action thresholds are linked to accuracy of the commissioned delivery system. Even when plan delivery is acceptable, the Monte Carlo second check system has identified dose calculation issues which would not have been illuminated using traditional, phantom-based measurement techniques. The efficiency and sensitivity of our patient-specific QA program has been improved by implementing a procedure which independently verifies patient dose calculation accuracy and plan delivery fidelity. Such an approach to QA requires holistic integration and maintenance of patient-specific and patient-independent QA. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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