
Commissioning of and preliminary experience with a new fully integrated computed tomography linac
Author(s) -
Yu Lei,
Zhao Jun,
Zhang Zhen,
Wang Jiazhou,
Hu Weigang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of applied clinical medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.83
H-Index - 48
ISSN - 1526-9914
DOI - 10.1002/acm2.13313
Subject(s) - linear particle accelerator , nuclear medicine , image guided radiation therapy , collimator , medical physics , truebeam , radiation treatment planning , computed tomography , computer science , medicine , beam (structure) , physics , optics , radiology , radiation therapy
Purpose A new medical linear accelerator (linac) platform integrated with helical computed tomography (CT), the uRT‐linac 506c, was introduced into clinical application in 2019 by United Imaging Healthcare (UIH) Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China). It combines a Carm linac with a diagnostic‐quality 16‐slice CT imager, providing seamless workflow from simulation to treatment. The aim of this report is to assess the technical characteristics, commissioning results and preliminary experiences stemming from clinical usage. Methods The mechanical and imaging test procedures, commissioning data collection and TPS validation were summarized. CTIGRT accuracy was investigated with different loads and couch extensions. A series of end‐to‐end cases for different treatment sites and delivery techniques were tested preclinically to estimate the overall accuracy for the entire treatment scheme. The results of patient‐specific QA and machine stability during a one‐year operation are also reported. Results Gantry/couch/collimator isocentricity was measured as 0.63 mm in radius. The TPS models were in agreement with the beam commissioning data within a deviation of 2%. An overall submillimeter accuracy was demonstrated for the CT‐IGRT process under all conditions. The absolute point dose difference for all the preclinical end‐to‐end tests was within 3%, and the gamma passing rate of the 2D dose distribution measured by EBT3 film was better than 90% (3% DD, 3 mm DTA and 10% threshold). Pretreatment QA of clinical cases resulted with better than 3% point dose difference and more than 99% gamma passing rate (3% DD/2 mm DTA/10% threshold) tested with Delta4. The output of the linac was mostly within 1% of variation in a one‐year operation. Conclusion The commissioning results and clinical QA results show that the uRT‐linac 506c platform exhibits good and stable performance in mechanical and dosimetric accuracy. The integrated CT system provides an efficient workflow for image guidance with submillimeter localization precision, and will be a good starting point to proceed advanced adaptive radiotherapy.