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WE‐F‐BRD‐01: HDR Brachytherapy II: Integrating Imaging with HDR
Author(s) -
Craciunescu O,
Todor D,
de Leeuw A
Publication year - 2014
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 - 10.1118/1.4889467
Subject(s) - brachytherapy , radiation treatment planning , medical physics , workflow , suite , computer science , medicine , radiation therapy , radiology , history , archaeology , database
In recent years, with the advent of high/pulsed dose rate afterloading technology, advanced treatment planning systems, CT/MRI compatible applicators, and advanced imaging platforms, image‐guided adaptive brachytherapy treatments (IGABT) have started to play an ever increasing role in modern radiation therapy. The most accurate way to approach IGABT treatment is to provide the infrastructure that combines in a single setting an appropriate imaging device, a treatment planning system, and a treatment unit. The Brachytherapy Suite is not a new concept, yet the modern suites are incorporating state‐of‐the‐art imaging (MRI, CBCT equipped simulators, CT, and /or US) that require correct integration with each other and with the treatment planning and delivery systems. Arguably, an MRI‐equipped Brachytherapy Suite is the ideal setup for real‐time adaptive brachytherapy treatments. The main impediment to MRI‐IGABT adoption is access to MRI scanners. Very few radiation oncology departments currently house MRI scanners, and even fewer in a dedicated Brachytherapy Suite. CBCT equipped simulators are increasingly offered by manufacturers as part of a Brachytherapy Suite installation. If optimized, images acquired can be used for treatment planning, or can be registered with other imaging modalities. This infrastructure is relevant for all forms of brachytherapy, especially those utilizing multi‐fractionated courses of treatment such as prostate and cervix. Moreover, for prostate brachytherapy, US imaging systems can be part of the suite to allow for real‐time HDR/LDR treatments. Learning Objectives: 1. Understand the adaptive workflow of MR‐based IGBT for cervical cancer. 2. Familiarize with commissioning aspects of a CBCT equipped simulator with emphasis on brachytherapy applications 3. Learn about the current status and future developments in US‐based prostate brachytherapy