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1.
PurposeTo develop a four-dimensional (4D) dose calculation system for real-time tumor tracking (RTTT) irradiation by the Vero4DRT.MethodsFirst, a 6-MV photon beam delivered by the Vero4DRT was simulated using EGSnrc. A moving phantom position was directly measured by a laser displacement gauge. The pan and tilt angles, monitor units, and the indexing time indicating the phantom position were also extracted from a log file. Next, phase space data at any angle were created from both the log file and particle data under the dynamic multileaf collimator. Irradiation both with and without RTTT, with the phantom moving, were simulated using several treatment field sizes. Each was compared with the corresponding measurement using films. Finally, dose calculation for each computed tomography dataset of 10 respiratory phases with the X-ray head rotated was performed to simulate the RTTT irradiation (4D plan) for lung, liver, and pancreatic cancer patients. Dose-volume histograms of the 4D plan were compared with those calculated on the single reference respiratory phase without the gimbal rotation [three-dimensional (3D) plan].ResultsDifferences between the simulated and measured doses were less than 3% for RTTT irradiation in most areas, except the high-dose gradient. For clinical cases, the target coverage in 4D plans was almost identical to that of the 3D plans. However, the doses to organs at risk in the 4D plans varied at intermediate- and low-dose levels.ConclusionsOur proposed system has acceptable accuracy for RTTT irradiation in the Vero4DRT and is capable of simulating clinical RTTT plans.  相似文献   

2.
BackgroundThe advances in image guidance and capability of highly conformal dose deliveries made possible the use of helical tomotherapy (HT) for lung cancer treatment. To determine the effect of respiratory motion on the delivered dose in HT, film dosimetry using a dynamic phantom was performed. This was a phantom study to determine the effect of motion on the delivered dose in HT.Materials and methods4D computed tomography (4DCT) was acquired for various target motions of CIRS dynamic phantom (CIRS Inc., Norfolk, USA) with 2.5cm diameter spherical target of volume 8.2 cc moving in the COS4 motion pattern. AveIP images and treatment plans were generated in the HT planning system. Target excursions during treatment delivery were changed in the superior-inferior, anteroposterior and lateral directions. The breathing cycle time was varied from 4 to 5 sec. and also the delivery interruptions were introduced. A film was exposed for each delivery and gamma analysis was performed.ResultsThe gamma pass rate (GPR) with 3%, 2 mm criteria for the target motion in the S-I direction showed a significant reduction from 97.5% to 54.4% as the motion increased from 3 mm to 8 mm (p = 0.03). For the target motion in S-I = 8 mm, L-R = A-P = 3 mm, the percentage decrease in the GPR was 74% (p = 0.001) for three interruptions.ConclusionThe ITV based approach in HT is ideal for a shallow breathing situation when the tumor excursions were confined to 5 mm in the S-I and 3 mm in L-R and A-P directions.  相似文献   

3.
PurposeTo assess the interplay effect amplitude between different planned MU distributions and respiratory patterns in the CyberKnife system when treating moving targets with static tracking technique.MethodsSmall- and Large-Respiratory Motions (SRM and LRM) differing in amplitude and frequency were simulated in a semi-anthropomorphic dynamic thorax phantom. The interplay effect was evaluated for both respiration motions in terms of GTV coverage and conformity for three plans designed with an increasing range of MU per beam (small, medium and large). Each plan was delivered three times changing the initial beam-on phase to assess the inter-fraction variation. Dose distributions were measured using radiochromic films placed in the GTV axial and sagittal planes.ResultsGenerally, SRM plans gave higher GTV coverage and were less dependent on beam-on phases than LRM plans. For SRM (LRM) plans, the GTV coverage ranged from 95.2% to 99.7% (85.9% to 99.8%). Maximum GTV coverage was found for large MU plans in SRM and for small MU plans in LRM. Minimum GTV coverage was found for medium MU plans for both SRM and LRM. For SRM plans, dose conformity decreased with increasing MU range while the variation was reduced for LRM plans. Large MU plans reduced the inter-fraction variation for SRM and LRM.ConclusionsWe confirmed the interplay effect between target motion and beam irradiation time for CyberKnife static tracking. Plans with large MU per beam improved the GTV coverage for small motion amplitude and the inter-fraction dose variation for large motion amplitude.  相似文献   

4.
PurposeTo commission and assess the performance of AlignRT InBore™, a Halcyon™ and Ethos™-dedicated Surface Guided Radiation Therapy (SGRT) platform which combines ceiling-mounted cameras for patient setup and bore-mounted cameras for in-bore tracking.MethodsTo check the potential impact of InBore™ cameras on dose delivery, 16 SRS, H&N, breast and pelvis patients’ quality assurance (QA) treatment plans were measured with/without AlignRT InBore™ and using ArcCHECK® and SRS MapCHECK®. Impact on image quality was determined using Catphan® 540 phantom and considering all available MV and CBCT protocols (head, breast, chest and pelvis). The stability, accuracy and overall performance of AlignRT InBore™ was assessed using an MV Cube and anthropomorphic phantoms.ResultsComparison of 2D dose distributions with/without AlignRT InBore™ showed no impact on treatment delivery for all 16 QA checks (p-value > 0.25). 2D and CBCT images showed no artefacts or change in the contrast-to-noise ratio, resolution and noise values measured with Catphan® 540. Anti-collision sensors were unaffected by the bore-mounted cameras. Additionally, AlignRT InBore™ cameras allowed for motion detection with sub-0.5 mm accuracy and sub-0.4 mm stability with surface coverage of >50 × 60 × 35 cc. Accurate transition (sub-0.3 mm) from virtual to treatment isocentres was achieved. Finally, Halcyon™ rotations during CBCT and beam delivery resulted in limited camera vibrations with translation uncertainty <0.5 mm in left-right and anterior-posterior directions and <0.1 mm in head-feet direction.ConclusionAlignRT InBore™ provides SGRT setup and intrafraction monitoring capabilities with a performance comparable to standard SGRT solutions while having no adverse effect on Halcyon™.  相似文献   

5.
AimDeveloping and assessing the feasibility of using a three-dimensional (3D) printed patient-specific anthropomorphic pelvis phantom for dose calculation and verification for stereotactic ablative radiation therapy (SABR) with dose escalation to the dominant intraprostatic lesions.Material and methodsA 3D-printed pelvis phantom, including bone-mimicking material, was fabricated based on the computed tomography (CT) images of a prostate cancer patient. To compare the extent to which patient and phantom body and bones overlapped, the similarity Dice coefficient was calculated. Modular cylindrical inserts were created to encapsulate radiochromic films and ionization chamber for absolute dosimetry measurements at the location of prostate and at the boost region. Gamma analysis evaluation with 2%/2mm criteria was performed to compare treatment planning system calculations and measured dose when delivering a 10 flattening filter free (FFF) SABR plan and a 10FFF boost SABR plan.ResultsDice coefficients of 0.98 and 0.91 were measured for body and bones, respectively, demonstrating agreement between patient and phantom outlines. For the boost plans the gamma analysis yielded 97.0% of pixels passing 2%/2mm criteria and these results were supported by the chamber average dose difference of 0.47 ± 0.03%. These results were further improved when overriding the bone relative electron density: 97.3% for the 2%/2mm gamma analysis, and 0.05 ± 0.03% for the ionization chamber average dose difference.ConclusionsThe modular patient-specific 3D-printed pelvis phantom has proven to be a highly attractive and versatile tool to validate prostate SABR boost plans using multiple detectors.  相似文献   

6.
AimWe sought to improve error detection ability during volume modulated arc therapy (VMAT) by dividing and evaluating the treatment plan.BackgroundVMAT involves moving a beam source delivering radiation to tumor tissue through an arc, which significantly decreases treatment time. Treatment planning for VMAT involves many parameters. Quality assurance before treatment is a major focus of research.Materials and methodsWe used an established VMAT prostate treatment plan and divided it into 12° × 30° sections. In all the sections, only image data that generated errors in one segment and those that were integrally acquired were evaluated by a gamma analysis. This was done with five different patient plans.ResultsThe integrated image data resulting from errors in each section was 100% (tolerance 0.5 mm/0.5%) in the gamma analysis result in all image data. Division of the treatment plans produced a shift in the mean value of each gamma analysis in the cranial, left, and ventral directions of 94.59%, 98.83%, 96.58%, and the discrimination ability improved.ConclusionThe error discrimination ability was improved by dividing and verifying the portal imaging.  相似文献   

7.
PurposeThe aim of this work was the commissioning of delivery procedures for the treatment of moving targets in scanning pencil beam hadrontherapy.MethodsEBT3 films fixed to the Anzai Respiratory Phantom were exposed to carbon ion scanned homogeneous fields (E = 332 MeV/u). To evaluate the interplay effect, field size and flatness for 3 different scenarios were compared to static condition: gated irradiation or repainting alone and combination of both. Respiratory signal was provided by Anzai pressure sensor or optical tracking system (OTS). End-exhale phase and 1 s gating window were chosen (2.5 mm residual motion). Dose measurements were performed using a PinPoint ionization chamber inserted into the Brainlab ET Gating Phantom. A sub-set of tests was also performed using proton beams.ResultsThe combination of gating technique and repainting (N = 5) showed excellent results (6.1% vs 4.3% flatness, identical field size and dose deviation within 1.3%). Treatment delivery time was acceptable. Dose homogeneity for gated irradiation alone was poor. Both Anzai sensor and OTS appeared suitable for providing respiratory signal. Comparisons between protons and carbon ions showed that larger beam spot sizes represent more favorable condition for minimizing motion effect.ConclusionResults of measurements performed on different phantoms showed that the combination of gating and layered repainting is suitable to treat moving targets using scanning ion beams. Abdominal compression using thermoplastic masks, together with multi-field planning approach and multi-fractionation, have also been assessed as additional strategies to mitigate the effect of patient respiration in the clinical practice.  相似文献   

8.
PurposeTo establish the reliability and accuracy of a UNIQUE Linac in delivering RapidArc treatments and assess its long term stability.Materials and methodsUNIQUE performance was monitored and analyzed for a period of nearly two years. 2280 Dynalog files, related to 179 clinical RapidArc treatments were collected. Different tumor sites and dose scheduling were included, covering the full range of our treatment plans. Statistical distributions of MLC motion error, gantry rotation error and MU delivery error were evaluated. The stochastic and systematic nature of each error was investigated together with their variation in time.ResultsAll the delivery errors are found to be small and more stringent tolerances than those proposed by TG142 are suggested. Unlike MLC positional errors, where a linear relationship with leaf speed holds, other Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) parameters reveal a random nature and, consequently, a reduced clinical relevance. MLC errors are linearly related only to leaf speed no matter the shape of the MLC apertures. Gantry rotation and MU delivery are as accurate as major competing Linacs. UNIQUE was found to be reliable and accurate throughout the investigation period, regardless of the specific tumor sites and fractionation schemes.ConclusionsThe accuracy of RapidArc treatments delivered with UNIQUE has been established. The stochastic nature of delivery errors is proven. Long term statistics of the delivery parameter errors do not show significant variations, confirming the reliability of the VMAT delivery system.  相似文献   

9.
PurposeTo implement a knowledge-based (KB) optimization strategy to our adaptive (ART) early-regression guided boosting technique in neo-adjuvant radio-chemotherapy for rectal cancer.Material and methodsThe protocol consists of a first phase delivering 27.6 Gy to tumor/lymph-nodes (2.3 Gy/fr-PTV1), followed by the ART phase concomitantly delivering 18.6 Gy (3.1 Gy/fr) and 13.8 Gy (2.3 Gy/fr) to the residual tumor (PTVART) and to PTV1 respectively. PTVART is obtained by expanding the residual GTV, as visible on MRI at fraction 9. Forty plans were used to generate a KB-model for the first phase using the RapidPlan tool. Instead of building a new model, a robust strategy scaling the KB-model to the ART phase was applied. Both internal and external validation were performed for both phases: all automatic plans (RP) were compared in terms of OARs/PTVs parameters against the original plans (RA).ResultsThe resulting automatic plans were generally better than or equivalent to clinical plans. Of note, V30Gy and V40Gy were significantly improved in RP plans for bladder and bowel; gEUD analysis showed improvement for KB-modality for all OARs, up to 3 Gy for the bowel.ConclusionsThe KB-model generated for the first phase was robust and it was also efficiently adapted to the ART phase. The performance of automatically generated plans were slightly better than the corresponding manual plans for both phases.  相似文献   

10.
Background and purpose3D printing is rapidly evolving and further assessment of materials and technique is required for clinical applications. We evaluated 3D printed boluses with acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and polylactide (PLA) at different infill percentage.Material and methodsA low-cost 3D printer was used. The influence of the air inclusion within the 3D printed boluses was assessed thoroughly both with treatment planning system (TPS) and with physical measurements. For each bolus, two treatment plans were calculated with Monte Carlo algorithm, considering the computed tomography (CT) scan of the 3D printed bolus or modelling the 3D printed bolus as a virtual bolus structure with a homogeneous density. Depth dose measurements were performed with Gafchromic films.ResultsHigh infill percentage corresponds to high density and high homogeneity within bolus material. The approximation of the bolus in the TPS as a homogeneous material is satisfying for infill percentages greater than 20%. Measurements performed with PLA boluses are more comparable to the TPS calculated profiles. For boluses printed at 40% and 60% infill, the discrepancies between calculated and measured dose distribution are within 5%.Conclusions3D printing technology allows modulating the shift of the build-up region by tuning the infill percentage of the 3D printed bolus in order to improve superficial target coverage.  相似文献   

11.
PurposeTo validate the accuracy of 4D Monte Carlo (4DMC) simulations to calculate dose deliveries to a deforming anatomy in the presence of realistic respiratory motion traces. A previously developed deformable lung phantom comprising an elastic tumor was modified to enable programming of arbitrary motion profiles. 4D simulations of the dose delivered to the phantom were compared with the measurements.MethodsThe deformable lung phantom moving with irregular breathing patterns was irradiated using static and VMAT beam deliveries. Using the RADPOS 4D dosimetry system, point doses were measured inside and outside the tumor. Dose profiles were acquired using films along the motion path of the tumor (S-I). In addition to dose measurements, RADPOS was used to record the motion of the tumor during dose deliveries. Dose measurements were then compared against 4DMC simulations with EGSnrc/4DdefDOSXYZnrc using the recorded tumor motion.ResultsThe agreements between dose profiles from measurements and simulations were determined to be within 2%/2 mm. Point dose agreements were within 2σ of experimental and/or positional/dose reading uncertainties. 4DMC simulations were shown to accurately predict the sensitivity of delivered dose to the starting phase of breathing motions. We have demonstrated that our 4DMC method, combined with RADPOS, can accurately simulate realistic dose deliveries to a deforming anatomy moving with realistic breathing traces. This 4DMC tool has the potential to be used as a quality assurance tool to verify treatments involving respiratory motion. Adaptive treatment delivery is another area that may benefit from the potential of this 4DMC tool.  相似文献   

12.
IntroductionIn the 7 years since our facility opened, we have treated >2000 patients with pencil-beam scanned carbon-ion beam therapy.MethodsTo summarize treatment workflow, we evaluated the following five metrics: i) total number of treated patients; ii) treatment planning time, not including contouring procedure; iii) quality assurance (QA) time (daily and patient-specific); iv) treatment room occupancy time, including patient setup, preparation time, and beam irradiation time; and v) daily treatment hours. These were derived from the oncology information system and patient handling system log files.ResultsThe annual number of treated patients reached 594, 7 years from the facility startup, using two treatment rooms. Mean treatment planning time was 6.0 h (minimum: 3.4 h for prostate, maximum: 9.3 h for esophagus). Mean time devoted to daily QA and patient-specific QA were 22 min and 13.5 min per port, respectively, for the irradiation beam system. Room occupancy time was 14.5 min without gating for the first year, improving to 9.2 min (8.2 min without gating and 12.8 min with gating) in the second. At full capacity, the system ran for 7.5 h per day.ConclusionsWe are now capable of treating approximately 600 patients per year in two treatment rooms. Accounting for the staff working time, this performance appears reasonable compared to the other facilities.  相似文献   

13.
PurposeTo verify whether Icon automatic correction is robust in preserving plan quality.Materials/methodsAn end-to-end phantom was used to verify Icon’s correction accuracy qualitatively. For quantitative assessment, two plans, a composite- and a uniform-shot-only, were created for an elliptical- (E) and a sausage-shaped (S) lesion inside a PseudoPatient head phantom with a film insert. The phantom was irradiated in the planned and three other positions under each plan: 14° pitch (B); 14° rotation + 8° pitch (C); 95° rotation + 4-cm shift (D).ResultsIcon accurately corrects the locations of the shots. For the uniform-shot plans: all gamma index passing rates were >97%, and the differences between the planned and the delivery doses (minimum, maximum, and mean) were all ≤0.1 Gy. For the composite-shot plans, however, the dose differences increased as the phantom was shifted through positions B-D, with a gamma index passing rate of 61% for lesion-E in position D, and 92%, 79%, and 45% for lesion-S in positions B, C, and D, respectively.ConclusionsPlans using only uniform shots are more robust to deviations in treatment position. The tolerance for such deviations may be lower for plans using composite shots.  相似文献   

14.
PurposeTo verify the accuracy of 4D Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, using the 4DdefDOSXYZnrc user code, in a deforming anatomy. We developed a tissue-equivalent and reproducible deformable lung phantom and evaluated 4D simulations of delivered dose to the phantom by comparing calculations against measurements.MethodsA novel deformable phantom consisting of flexible foam, emulating lung tissue, inside a Lucite external body was constructed. A removable plug, containing an elastic tumor that can hold film and other dosimeters, was inserted in the phantom. Point dose and position measurements were performed inside and outside the tumor using RADPOS 4D dosimetry system. The phantom was irradiated on an Elekta Infinity linac in both stationary and moving states. The dose delivery was simulated using delivery log files and the phantom motion recorded with RADPOS.ResultsReproducibility of the phantom motion was determined to be within 1 mm. The phantom motion presented realistic features like hysteresis. MC calculations and measurements agreed within 2% at the center of tumor. Outside the tumor agreements were better than 5% which were within the positional/dose reading uncertainties at the measurement points. More than 94% of dose points from MC simulations agreed within 2%/2 mm compared to film measurements.ConclusionThe deformable lung phantom presented realistic and reproducible motion characteristics and its use for verification of 4D dose calculations was demonstrated. Our 4DMC method is capable of accurate calculations of the realistic dose delivered to a moving and deforming anatomy during static and dynamic beam delivery techniques.  相似文献   

15.
16.
PurposeAccelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) is alternative treatment option for patients with early stage breast cancer. The interplay effect on volumetric modulated arc therapy APBI (VMAT-APBI) has not been clarified. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of VMAT-APBI for patients with small breasts and investigate the amplitude of respiratory motion during VMAT-APBI delivery that significantly affects dose distribution.MethodsThe VMAT-APBI plans were generated with 28.5 Gy in five fractions. We performed patient-specific quality assurance using Delta4 phantom under static conditions. We also measured point dose and dose distribution using the ionization chamber and radiochromic film under static and moving conditions of 2, 3 and 5 mm. We compared the measured and calculated point doses and dose distributions by dose difference and gamma passing rates.ResultsA total of 20 plans were generated; the dose distributions were consistent with those of previous reports. For all measurements under static conditions, the measured and calculated point doses and dose distributions showed good agreement. The dose differences for chamber measurement were within 3%, regardless of moving conditions. The mean gamma passing rates with 3%/2 mm criteria in the film measurement under static conditions and with 2 mm, 3 mm, and 5 mm of amplitude were 95.0 ± 2.0%, 93.3 ± 3.3%, 92.1 ± 6.2% and 84.8 ± 7.8%, respectively. The difference between 5 mm amplitude and other conditions was statistically significant.ConclusionsRespiratory management should be considered for the risk of unintended dose distribution if the respiratory amplitude is >5 mm.  相似文献   

17.
IntroductionGamma pass percentage (GPP) is the predominant metric used for Patient Specific Quality Assurance (PSQA) in radiation therapy. The dimensionality of the measurement geometry in PSQA has evolved from 2D planar to 3D planar, and presently to state-of-the-art 3D volumetric geometry. We aim to critically examine the performance of the three-dimensional gammas vis-à-vis the older gamma metrics of lower dimensionality to determine their mutual fungibility in PSQA, using clinically approved Volumetric Arc Therapy (VMAT) plans.Methods and materialsGamma pass percentages derived from PSQA for VMAT plans using Octavius 4D phantom with 2D-Array 1500 and its proprietary software were recorded. 2D planar, 3D planar, and 3D volumetric gamma pass percentages were retrospectively extracted for multiple treatment plans at three sites, using three acceptance limits, and for two modes of normalization. The differences in mean pass percentages, and the pairwise correlation between geometries were calculated within limits of statistical significance.ResultsA significant increase in mean pass rates was observed from 2D planar to 3D planar geometries. The difference was less pronounced from 3D planar to 3D volumetric. 2D planar v/s 3D planar showed a significant degree of correlation among themselves, which was not seen against most of the 3D volumetric pass rates.ConclusionThe mean gamma pass rates show conclusive evidence of the benefits of shifting from 2D planar to higher dimensions measurement geometries, but the benefits of using 3D volumetric compared to 3D planar is not always unequivocal. The correlations show mixed results regarding the interdependence of pass percentages at different geometries.  相似文献   

18.
PurposeRadiation treatment planning inherently involves multiple conflicting planning goals, which makes it a suitable application for multicriteria optimization (MCO). This study investigates a MCO algorithm for VMAT planning (VMAT–MCO) for prostate cancer treatments including pelvic lymph nodes and uses standard inverse VMAT optimization (sVMAT) and Tomotherapy planning as benchmarks.MethodsFor each of ten prostate cancer patients, a two stage plan was generated, consisting of a stage 1 plan delivering 22 Gy to the prostate, and a stage 2 plan delivering 50.4 Gy to the lymph nodes and 56 Gy to the prostate with a simultaneous integrated boost. The single plans were generated by three planning techniques (VMAT–MCO, sVMAT, Tomotherapy) and subsequently compared with respect to plan quality and planning time efficiency.ResultsPlan quality was similar for all techniques, but sVMAT showed slightly better rectum (on average Dmean −7%) and bowel sparing (Dmean −17%) compared to VMAT–MCO in the whole pelvic treatments. Tomotherapy plans exhibited higher bladder dose (Dmean +42%) in stage 1 and lower rectum dose (Dmean −6%) in stage 2 than VMAT–MCO. Compared to manual planning, the planning time with MCO was reduced up to 12 and 38 min for stage 1 and 2 plans, respectively.ConclusionMCO can generate highly conformal prostate VMAT plans with minimal workload in the settings of prostate-only treatments and prostate plus lymph nodes irradiation. In the whole pelvic plan manual VMAT optimization led to slightly improved OAR sparing over VMAT–MCO, whereas for the primary prostate treatment plan quality was equal.  相似文献   

19.
AimThe aim of this study is to commission and validate Dolphin-Compass dosimetry as a patient-specific Quality Assurance (QA) device.BackgroundThe advancement of radiation therapy in terms of highly conformal delivery techniques demands a novel method of patient-specific QA. Dolphin-Compass system is a dosimetry solution capable of doing different QA in radiation therapy.Materials and methodsDolphin, air-vented ionization detector array mounted on Versa-HD Linear Accelerator (LINAC) was used for measurements. The Compass is a dose computation algorithm which requires modelling of LINAC head similar to other Treatment Planning Systems (TPS). The dosimetry system was commissioned after measuring the required beam data. The validation was performed by comparison of treatment plans generated in Monaco TPS against the measurement data. Different types of simple, complex, static and dynamic radiation fields and highly conformal treatment plans of patients were used in this study.ResultsFor all field sizes, point doses obtained from Dolphin-Compass dosimetry were in good agreement with the corresponding TPS calculated values in most of the regions, except the penumbra, outside field and at build-up depth. The results of gamma passing rates of measurements by using different Multi-leaf Collimator patterns and Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy fluence were also found to be in good correlation with the corresponding TPS values.ConclusionsThe commissioning and validation of dosimetry was performed with the help of various fields, MLC patterns and complex treatment plans. The present study also evaluated the efficiency of the 3D dosimetry system for the QA of complex treatment plans.  相似文献   

20.
PurposeThe accuracy of gated irradiation may decrease when treatment is performed with short “beam-on” times. Also, the dose is subject to variation between treatment sessions if the respiratory rate is irregular. We therefore evaluated the impact of the differences between gated and non-gated treatment on doses using a new online quality assurance (QA) system for respiratory-gated radiotherapy.MethodsWe generated dose estimation models to associate dose and pulse information using a 0.6 cc Farmer chamber and our QA system. During gated irradiation with each of seven regular and irregular respiratory patterns, with the Farmer chamber readings as references, we evaluated our QA system’s accuracy. We then used the QA system to assess the impact of respiratory patterns on dose distribution for three lung and three liver radiotherapy plans. Gated and non-gated plans were generated and compared.ResultsThere was agreement within 1.7% between the ionization chamber and our system for several regular and irregular motion patterns. For dose distributions with measured errors, there were larger differences between gated and non-gated treatment for high-dose regions within the planned treatment volume (PTV). Compared with a non-gated plan, PTV D95% for a gated plan decreased by −1.5% to −2.6%. Doses to organs at risk were similar with both plans.ConclusionsOur simple system estimated the radiation dose to the patient using only pulse information from the linac, even during irregular respiration. The quality of gated irradiation for each patient can be verified fraction by fraction.  相似文献   

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