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SU‐FF‐I‐18: Quantifying the Geometric Accuracy of the On Board Imager Over a One‐Year Period
Author(s) -
Lovelock D,
LoSasso T,
Ali I,
Amols H,
Ling C,
Yamada Y,
Pham H,
Munro P
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.2240256
Subject(s) - isocenter , image guided radiation therapy , radiography , cone beam computed tomography , medical imaging , displacement (psychology) , optics , nuclear medicine , orientation (vector space) , dosimetry , physics , imaging phantom , mathematics , medicine , computer science , artificial intelligence , geometry , computed tomography , radiology , psychology , nuclear physics , psychotherapist
Purpose: To quantify the geometric accuracy of the On Board Imager in both the kV radiographic and cone beam imaging modes. Method and Materials: The Winston‐Lutz test was performed to localize a 5mm tungsten sphere placed within +/− 0.25 mm of the radiation isocenter. The sphere was imaged with half fan cone beam scans, and kV radiographs at the 4 principal gantry angles. The displacement of the sphere from the ‘imaging isocenter’ (the actual position of a point object that the imaging system would find to be at isocenter) was determined for each imaging mode. This test has been repeated 18 times over a period of one year. Results: The average displacement of the sphere from the imaging isocenter using a half fan technique was found to be 0.9 mm Right, 0.9 mm Anterior, and 1.1 mm Inferior, assuming a head first supine orientation. These offsets are incorporated in image‐guided patient setup procedures. Small systematic errors as a function of gantry angle were also measured for the radiographs. A point at the radiation isocenter will appear about 1mm higher in a right lateral image than in a left lateral image. A similar left / right discrepancy exits for anterior and posterior images. Conclusion: The systematic geometric errors of the kV imaging equipment and associated techniques need to be measured and incorporated into the procedure of on‐line image‐guided patient treatment. For the On Board Imager, a geometric accuracy of better than 1mm can be achieved.