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Accuracy verification of infrared marker‐based dynamic tumor‐tracking irradiation using the gimbaled x‐ray head of the Vero4DRT (MHI‐TM2000) a)
Author(s) -
Mukumoto Nobutaka,
Nakamura Mitsuhiro,
Sawada Akira,
Suzuki Yasunobu,
Takahashi Kunio,
Miyabe Yuki,
Kaneko Shuji,
Mizowaki Takashi,
Kokubo Masaki,
Hiraoka Masahiro
Publication year - 2013
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 - 10.1118/1.4794506
Subject(s) - physics , tracking (education) , gimbal , amplitude , optics , nuclear medicine , position (finance) , irradiation , tilt (camera) , standard deviation , mathematics , medicine , statistics , nuclear physics , psychology , pedagogy , finance , quantum mechanics , economics , geometry
Purpose: To verify the accuracy of an infrared (IR) marker‐based dynamic tumor‐tracking irradiation system (IR tracking) using the gimbaled x‐ray head of the Vero4DRT (MHI‐TM2000).Methods: The gimbaled 6‐MV C‐band x‐ray head of the Vero4DRT can swing along the pan‐and‐tilt direction to track a moving target. During beam delivery, the Vero4DRT predicts the future three‐dimensional (3D) target position in real time using a correlation model [four‐dimensional (4D) model] between the target and IR marker motion, and then continuously transfers the corresponding tracking orientation to the gimbaled x‐ray head. The 4D‐modeling error ( E 4DM ) and the positional tracking error ( E P ) were defined as the difference between the predicted and measured positions of the target in 4D modeling and as the difference between the tracked and measured positions of the target during irradiation, respectively. For the clinical application of IR tracking, we assessed the relationship between E 4DM and E P for three 1D sinusoidal (peak‐to‐peak amplitude [ A ]: 20–40 mm, breathing period [ T ]: 2–4 s), five 1D phase‐shifted sinusoidal ( A : 20 mm, T : 4 s, phase shift [τ]: 0.2–2 s), and six 3D patient respiratory patterns.Results: The difference between the 95th percentile of the absolute E P ( E P 95 ) and the mean ( μ ) + two standard deviations (SD) of absolute E 4DM ( E 4 D M μ + 2 S D ) was within ±1 mm for all motion patterns. As the absolute correlation between the target and IR marker motions decreased from 1.0 to 0.1 for the 1D phase‐shifted sinusoidal patterns, the E 4 DM μ + 2 SDand E P 95 increased linearly, from 0.4 to 3.0 mm (R = −0.98) and from 0.5 to 2.2 mm (R = −0.95), respectively. There was a strong positive correlation between E 4 DM μ + 2 SDand E P 95 in each direction [(lateral, craniocaudal, anteroposterior) = (0.99, 0.98, 1.00)], even for the 3D respiratory patterns; thus, E P 95 was readily estimated from E 4 DM μ + 2 SD .Conclusions: Positional tracking errors correlated strongly with 4D‐modeling errors in IR tracking. Thus, the accuracy of the 4D model must be verified before treatment, and margins are required to compensate for the 4D‐modeling error.