Technical and dosimetric aspects of respiratory gating using a pressure‐sensor motion monitoring system
- 23 December 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Medical Physics
- Vol. 33 (1), 145-154
- https://doi.org/10.1118/1.2147743
Abstract
This work introduces a gating technique that uses 4DCT to determine gating parameters and to plan gated treatment, and employs a Siemens linear accelerator to deliver the gated treatment. Because of technology incompatibility, the 4DCT scanner (LightSpeed, GE) and the Siemens accelerator require two different motion-monitoring systems. The motion monitoring system (AZ-773V, Anzai Med.) used for the gated delivery utilizes a pressuresensor to detect the external respiratory motion (pressure change) in real time. Another system (RPM, Varian) used for the 4DCT scanner (LightSpeed, GE) is based on an infrared camera to detect motion of external markers. These two motion monitoring systems (RPM and Anzai systems) were found to correlate well with each other. The depth doses and profile measured for gated delivery (with a duty cycle of 25% or 50%) were found to agree within 1.0% with those measured for ungated delivery, indicating that gating did not significantly alter beam characteristics. The measurement verified also that the MU linearity and beam output remained unchanged (within 0.3%). A practical method of using 4DCT to plan a gated treatment was developed. The duty cycle for either phase or amplitude gating can be determined based on 4DCT with consideration of set-up error and delivery efficiency. The close-loop measurement involving the entire gating process (imaging, planning, and delivery) showed that the measured isodose distributions agreed with those intended, validating the accuracy and reliability of the gating technique. Based these observations, we conclude that the gating technique introduced in this work, integrating Siemens linear accelerator and Anzai pressuresensor device with GE/Varian RPM 4DCT, is reliable and effective, and it can be used clinically to account for respiratory motion during radiation therapy.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Residual motion of lung tumours in gated radiotherapy with external respiratory surrogatesPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 2005
- Target Definition in the Thorax and Central Nervous SystemSeminars in Radiation Oncology, 2005
- Respiratory motion estimation from slowly rotating x‐ray projections: Theory and simulationMedical Physics, 2005
- 4-dimensional computed tomography imaging and treatment planningSeminars in Radiation Oncology, 2004
- Precise and real-time measurement of 3D tumor motion in lung due to breathing and heartbeat, measured during radiotherapyInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 2002
- Potential radiotherapy improvements with respiratory gatingAustralasian Physics & Engineering Sciences in Medicine, 2002
- Respiratory-driven lung tumor motion is independent of tumor size, tumor location, and pulmonary functionInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 2001
- Dosimetric evaluation of lung tumor immobilization using breath hold at deep inspirationInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 2001
- Predictive respiratory gating: a new method to reduce motion artifacts on CT scans.Radiology, 1994
- The double-fissure sign: a motion artifact on thin-section CT scans.Radiology, 1987