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The effect of irregular breathing patterns on internal target volumes in four-dimensional CT and cone-beam CT images in the context of stereotactic lung radiotherapy

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posted on 2024-11-23, 08:31 authored by Natalie Clements, Tomas Kron, Rick FranichRick Franich, Leon Dunn, P Roxby, Y Aarons, B Chesson, S Siva, D Duplan, D Ball
Purpose: Stereotactic lung radiotherapy is complicated by tumor motion from patient respiration. Four-dimensional CT (4DCT) imaging is a motion compensation method used in treatment planning to generate a maximum intensity projection (MIP) internal target volume (ITV). Image guided radiotherapy during treatment may involve acquiring a volumetric cone-beam CT (CBCT) image and visually aligning the tumor to the planning 4DCT MIP ITV contour. Moving targets imaged with CBCT can appear blurred and currently there are no studies reporting on the effect that irregular breathing patterns have on CBCT volumes and their alignment to 4DCT MIP ITV contours. The objective of this work was therefore to image a phantom moving with irregular breathing patterns to determine whether any configurations resulted in errors in volume contouring or alignment. Methods: A Perspex thorax phantom was used to simulate a patient. Three wooden "lung" inserts with embedded Perspex "lesions" were moved up to 4 cm with computer-generated motion patterns, and up to 1 cm with patient-specific breathing patterns. The phantom was imaged on 4DCT and CBCT with the same acquisition settings used for stereotactic lung patients in the clinic and the volumes on all phantom images were contoured. This project assessed the volumes for qualitative and quantitative changes including volume, length of the volume, and errors in alignment between CBCT volumes and 4DCT MIP ITV contours.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1118/1.4773310
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 00942405

Journal

Medical physics - Radiation Imaging Physics

Volume

40

Number

21904

Issue

2

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Publisher

American Association of Physicists in Medicine

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 Am. Assoc. Phys. Med. 0

Former Identifier

2006040361

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-04-08

Open access

  • Yes

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