Evaluating the four-dimensional cone beam computed tomography with varying gantry rotation speed

被引:13
|
作者
Yoganathan, S. A. [1 ]
Maria, K. J. [1 ]
Ali, Shajahan Mohamed [2 ]
Agarwal, Arpita [1 ]
Mishra, Surendra P. [2 ]
Kumar, Shaleen [1 ]
机构
[1] Sanjay Gandhi Postgrad Inst Med Sci, Deparment Radiotherapy, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
[2] Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Inst Med Sci, Dept Radiat Oncol, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh, India
来源
BRITISH JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY | 2016年 / 89卷 / 1060期
关键词
RADIATION-THERAPY; ADAPTIVE RADIOTHERAPY; CT RECONSTRUCTION; TARGET MARGINS; INTRA-FRACTION; MOTION MODEL; TUMOR MOTION; LUNG; VOLUME; VERIFICATION;
D O I
10.1259/bjr.20150870
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
Objective: The purpose of this work was to evaluate the four-dimensional cone beam CT (4DCBCT) imaging with different gantry rotation speed. Methods: All the 4DCBCT image acquisitions were carried out in Elekta XVI Symmetry (TM) system (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden). A dynamic thorax phantom with tumour mimicking inserts of diameter 1, 2 and 3 cm was programmed to simulate the respiratory motion (4 s) of the target. 4DCBCT images were acquired with different gantry rotation speeds (36 degrees, 50 degrees, 75 degrees, 100 degrees, 150 degrees and 200 degrees min(-1)). Owing to the technical limitation of 4DCBCT system, average cone beam CT (CBCT) images derived from the 10 phases of 4DCBCT were used for the internal target volume (ITV) contouring. ITVs obtained from average CBCT were compared with the four-dimensional CT (4DCT). In addition, the image quality of 4DCBCT was also evaluated for various gantry rotation speeds using Catphan (R) 600 (The Phantom Laboratory Inc., Salem, NY). Results: Compared to 4DCT, the average CBCT underestimated the ITV. The ITV deviation increased with increasing gantry speed (210.8% vs 217.8% for 36 degrees and 200 degrees min(-1) in 3-cm target) and decreasing target size (217.8% vs 226.8% for target diameter 3 and 1 cm in 200 degrees min(-1)). Similarly, the image quality indicators such as spatial resolution, contrast-to-noise ratio and uniformity also degraded with increasing gantry rotation speed. Conclusion: The impact of gantry rotation speed has to be considered when using 4DCBCT for ITV definition. The phantom study demonstrated that 4DCBCT with slow gantry rotation showed better image quality and less ITV deviation. Advances in knowledge: Usually, the gantry rotation period of Elekta 4DCBCT system is kept constant at 4min (50 degrees min(-1)) for acquisition, and any attempt of decreasing/increasing the acquisition duration requires careful investigation. In this study, the 4DCBCT images with different gantry rotation speed were evaluated.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] A cycle generative adversarial network for improving the quality of four-dimensional cone-beam computed tomography images
    Usui, Keisuke
    Ogawa, Koichi
    Goto, Masami
    Sakano, Yasuaki
    Kyougoku, Shinsuke
    Daida, Hiroyuki
    RADIATION ONCOLOGY, 2022, 17 (01)
  • [32] Center of Rotation and Hysteresis Quantification in the Wrist Utilizing Four-Dimensional Computed Tomography
    Norman, Elizabeth
    Robinson, Sydney
    Chambers, Spencer
    Rainbow, Michael
    Suh, Nina
    Lalone, Emily
    JOURNAL OF WRIST SURGERY, 2025,
  • [33] Evaluation of four-dimensional cone beam computed tomography ventilation images acquired with two different linear accelerators at various gantry speeds using a deformable lung phantom
    Kadoya, Noriyuki
    Nemoto, Hikaru
    Kajikawa, Tomohiro
    Nakajima, Yujiro
    Kanai, Takayuki
    Ieko, Yoshiro
    Ikeda, Ryutaro
    Sato, Kiyokazu
    Dobashi, Suguru
    Takeda, Ken
    Jingu, Keiichi
    PHYSICA MEDICA-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2020, 77 : 75 - 83
  • [34] Motion-map constrained image reconstruction (MCIR): Application to four-dimensional cone-beam computed tomography
    Park, Justin C.
    Kim, Jin Sung
    Park, Sung Ho
    Liu, Zhaowei
    Song, Bongyong
    Song, William Y.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2013, 40 (12)
  • [35] Development of a markerless tumor-tracking algorithm using prior four-dimensional cone-beam computed tomography
    Chhatkuli, Ritu Bhusal
    Demachi, Kazuyuki
    Uesaka, Mitsuru
    Nakagawa, Keiichi
    Haga, Akihiro
    JOURNAL OF RADIATION RESEARCH, 2019, 60 (01) : 109 - 115
  • [36] Dose Verification of Four-Dimensional Cone-Beam Computed Tomography for Target Localization of Planned and Unplanned Target Motion
    Baley, C.
    Stathakis, S.
    Myers, P.
    Kirby, N.
    Rasmussen, K.
    Papanikolaou, N.
    Saenz, D.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2020, 47 (06) : E605 - E606
  • [37] Building a patient-specific model using transfer learning for four-dimensional cone beam computed tomography augmentation
    Sun, Leshan
    Jiang, Zhuoran
    Chang, Yushi
    Ren, Lei
    QUANTITATIVE IMAGING IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY, 2021, 11 (02) : 540 - 555
  • [38] Four-dimensional volume-of-interest reconstruction for cone-beam computed tomography-guided radiation therapy
    Ahmad, Moiz
    Balter, Peter
    Pan, Tinsu
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2011, 38 (10) : 5646 - 5656
  • [39] Quantitation of the four-dimensional computed tomography process
    Lu, W
    Parikh, P
    El Naqa, I
    Nystrom, M
    Hubenschmidt, J
    Wahab, S
    Singh, A
    Christensen, G
    Mutic, S
    Bradley, J
    Low, D
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2004, 31 (06) : 1780 - 1780
  • [40] The accuracy of extracted target motion trajectories in four-dimensional cone-beam computed tomography for lung cancer patients
    Iramina, Hiraku
    Nakamura, Mitsuhiro
    Iizuka, Yusuke
    Mitsuyoshi, Takamasa
    Matsuo, Yukinori
    Mizowaki, Takashi
    Hiraoka, Masahiro
    Kanno, Ikuo
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2016, 121 (01) : 46 - 51