On-line target position localization in the presence of respiration: a comparison of two methods
Autor: | Di Yan, Geoffrey D. Hugo, Jonathon Campbell, Jian Liang |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Cancer Research
Lung Neoplasms Mean squared error Movement Imaging phantom Article Position (vector) Respiration Medicine Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Ct simulation Image guidance Radiation business.industry Phantoms Imaging Radiotherapy Planning Computer-Assisted Radiotherapy Dosage Cone-Beam Computed Tomography Oncology Line (geometry) Tomography business Nuclear medicine Tomography Spiral Computed |
Zdroj: | International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics. 69(5) |
ISSN: | 0360-3016 |
Popis: | Purpose To compare two “four-dimensional” methods for image-guided target localization in the presence of respiration. Methods and Materials Four-dimensional image guidance was performed with two methods. A respiration-correlated computed tomography (RCCT) was acquired on a CT simulator, and an average CT (AVG-CT) image was generated from the RCCT. A respiration-correlated cone-beam CT (RC-CBCT) and a free-breathing cone-beam CT (FB-CBCT) were acquired. The “RCCT method” consisted of calculating the mean target position on both the RCCT and RC-CBCT, registering the RCCT to the RC-CBCT, and determining the shift in the mean target position from the planned mean position. The “AVG-CT method” consisted of registering the AVG-CT to the FB-CBCT. The ability of each to measure the shift in the mean target position was compared, both in a respiratory phantom and in 8 patients. Results In phantom, the RCCT and AVG-CT methods were able to measure the true mean target position to within 0.15 cm and 0.10 cm, respectively. In the patient study, the mean error between the methods was 0.13 cm (left–right), 0.14 cm (anterior–posterior), and 0.10 cm (cranio–caudal). The error was not observed to vary with tumor position or magnitude of tumor motion. Conclusions Respiration may impact the on-line image guidance process. The RCCT method enables localization of the mean tumor position and measurement of changes in the motion pattern, whereas the AVG-CT method is simple, fast, and easily implemented. We found the methods to be nearly equivalent in detecting shifts in the mean tumor position. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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