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Evaluation of Dynamic Delivery Quality Assurance Process for Internal Target Volume Based RapidArc
Author(s) -
JuYoung Song
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
progress in medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2508-4453
pISSN - 2508-4445
DOI - 10.14316/pmp.2017.28.4.181
Subject(s) - quality assurance , imaging phantom , volume (thermodynamics) , nuclear medicine , process (computing) , computer science , medical physics , medicine , physics , external quality assessment , pathology , quantum mechanics , operating system
Corresponding author Ju-Young Song (jysong@jnu.ac.kr) Tel: 82-61-379-7225 Fax: 82-61-379-7249 The conventional delivery quality assurance (DQA) process for RapidArc (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, USA), has the limitation that it measures and analyzes the dose in a phantom material and cannot analyze the dosimetric changes under the motional organ condition. In this study, a DQA method was designed to overcome the limitations of the conventional DQA process for internal target volume (ITV) based RapidArc. The dynamic DQA measurement device was designed with a moving phantom that can simulate variable target motions. The dose distribution in the real volume of the target and organ-at-risk (OAR)s were reconstructed using 3DVH with the ArcCHECK (SunNuclear, Melbourne, USA) measurement data under the dynamic condition. A total of 10 ITV-based RapidArc plans for liver-cancer patients were analyzed with the designed dynamic DQA process. The average pass rate of gamma evaluation was 81.55±9.48% when the DQA dose was measured in the respiratory moving condition of the patient. Appropriate method was applied to correct the effect of moving phantom structures in the dose calculation, and DVH data of the real volume of target and OARs were created with the recalculated dose by the 3DVH program. We confirmed the valid dose coverage of a real target volume in the ITV-based RapidArc. The variable difference of the DVH of the OARs showed that dose variation can occur differently according to the location, shape, size and motion range of the target. The DQA process devised in this study can effectively evaluate the DVH of the real volume of the target and OARs in a respiratory moving condition in addition to the simple verification of the accuracy of the treatment machine. This can be helpful to predict the prognosis of treatment by the accurate dose analysis in the real target and OARs.

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