Impact of the fixed gantry angle approximation on dosimetric accuracy for helical tomotherapy plans

被引:9
|
作者
Tudor, G. Samuel J. [1 ,2 ]
Thomas, Simon J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Addenbrookes Hosp, Dept Med Phys & Clin Engn, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, England
[2] Univ Cambridge, Dept Oncol, Cambridge CB2 0QQ, England
关键词
tomotherapy; dosimetry; accuracy; THERAPY;
D O I
10.1118/1.4769120
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: The purpose of the work was to determine the accuracy of the dose calculation of off-axis, small target helical tomotherapy treatments using 51 calculation angles, and to determine the increase in calculation angles required to improve the accuracy to acceptable standards. Methods: A previously described dose calculation program [S. J. Thomas, K. R. Eyre, G. S. J. Tudor, and J. Fairfoul, "Dose calculation software for helical tomotherapy, utilizing patient CT data to calculate an independent three-dimensional dose cube," Med. Phys. 39, 160-167 (2012)] was modified to permit decomposition of each projection into several subprojections, allowing more accurate modeling of the temporal distribution of fluence within each beamlet. Four plans of small off-axis spherical targets were recalculated several times with different numbers of subprojections, with the minimum dose to 95% of the PTV (D-95%) and the minimum dose to 2% of the PTV (D-2%) calculated for each, in order to determine the minimum number of subprojections required for accurate dose statistics. A further nine plans were used to determine the effect on conventional calculation accuracy of varying target size, target position, modulation factor, and pitch. For this analysis, the mean dose and equivalent uniform dose were considered in addition to D-95% and D-2%. Results: The differences between calculations made using the 51 angle approximation and using the closest approximation to real treatment delivery were notable, with up to 11.0% overestimate of D-95% for the cases studied. A previously unreported underestimate of dose to parts of the PTV was observed due to this effect, with D-2% being underestimated by up to 3.3%. The effect is dependent on target size, position, modulation factor, and the angular distribution of fluence within the sinogram but not pitch. Decomposing each projection into three subprojections left differences in dose statistics that were of reduced magnitude but still appreciable. The effect of increasing the number of subprojections beyond five had little effect. Conclusions: When applied to small, off-axis targets, the limitations of the 51 calculation angle model can substantially affect the veracity of PTV dose statistics, including both underestimation and overestimation of dose depending on position within the PTV. Increasing the number of calculation angles by a factor of 5 reduces the effect to insignificant levels. While the latest release of TomoTherapy planning software will ameliorate the problem, the studied effect is best avoided by positioning small targets near to the bore center. Where this is not possible, it is recommended to ensure a high actual modulation factor and to use an unscaled delivery for patient-specific quality assurance. (C) 2013 American Association of Physicists in Medicine. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.4769120]
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Comparison of Elekta VMAT with helical tomotherapy and fixed field IMRT: Plan quality, delivery efficiency and accuracy
    Rao, Min
    Yang, Wensha
    Chen, Fan
    Sheng, Ke
    Ye, Jinsong
    Mehta, Vivek
    Shepard, David
    Cao, Daliang
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2010, 37 (03) : 1350 - 1359
  • [42] The Dosimetric Effect of Small Bowel Contrast on Rectal Cancer Patients for Conventional, Linac-based IMRT, and Helical Tomotherapy Plans
    Field, G.
    Liu, D.
    Joseph, K.
    Dickey, M.
    Polkosnik, L.
    Warkentin, H.
    Severin, D.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2011, 81 (02): : S371 - S372
  • [43] Dosimetric comparison of helical tomotherapy treatment plans for total marrow irradiation created using GPU and CPU dose calculation engines
    Nalichowski, Adrian
    Burmeister, Jay
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2013, 40 (07)
  • [44] Dosimetric Comparison Between Intensity-Modulated Arc Therapy and Helical Tomotherapy Plans for Simultaneous Boost Treatment of Esophageal Cancer
    Han, C.
    Chen, Y.
    Liu, A.
    Schultheiss, T.
    Wong, J.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2009, 36 (06)
  • [45] Dosimetric comparison between helical tomotherapy and intensity-modulated radiation therapy plans for non-small cell lung cancer
    Meng Ling-ling
    Feng Lin-chun
    Wang Yun-lai
    Dai Xiang-kun
    Xie Chuan-bin
    CHINESE MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2011, 124 (11) : 1667 - 1671
  • [47] Helical Tomotherapy for Whole Brain Radiotherapy with integrated Boost for Patients with multiple Brain Metastases: Evaluation of Dosis Distributions and dosimetric Accuracy
    Levegruen, S.
    Poettgen, C.
    Wittig, A.
    Ebenau, M.
    Heinle, R.
    Luebcke, W.
    Abu Jawad, J.
    Stuschke, M.
    STRAHLENTHERAPIE UND ONKOLOGIE, 2011, 187 : 34 - 35
  • [48] The dosimetric and clinical comparison between helical tomotherapy and fixed-field intensity-modulated radiotherapy in radical irradiation for cervical cancer
    Guo, M. F.
    Zhao, X. J.
    Huang, Y.
    Chen, D. K.
    Zhang, N.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION RESEARCH, 2022, 20 (02): : 377 - 382
  • [49] The Dosimetric Effect of Intrafraction Prostate Motion on Step-and-Shoot Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy Plans: Magnitude, Correlation With Motion Parameters, and Comparison With Helical Tomotherapy Plans
    Langen, Katja M.
    Chauhan, Bhavin
    Siebers, Jeffrey V.
    Moore, Joseph
    Kupelian, Patrick A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2012, 84 (05): : 1220 - 1225
  • [50] A Sensitivity Analysis for Evaluating Dosimetric Impact of MLC Modeling Parameter Accuracy On IMRT Treatment Plans
    Utsunomiya, S.
    Shibuya, N.
    Yamaki, M.
    Sasamoto, R.
    Aoyama, H.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2014, 41 (06) : 315 - 315