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WE‐F‐BRB‐00: New Developments in Knowledge‐Based Treatment Planning and Automation
Author(s) -
McNutt Todd
Publication year - 2015
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 - 10.1118/1.4926042
Subject(s) - radiation treatment planning , medical physics , computer science , informatics , session (web analytics) , dosimetry , data management , medicine , radiation therapy , data mining , nuclear medicine , engineering , electrical engineering , world wide web
Advancements in informatics in radiotherapy are opening up opportunities to improve our ability to assess treatment plans. Models on individualizing patient dose constraints from prior patient data and shape relationships have been extensively researched and are now making their way into commercial products. New developments in knowledge based treatment planning involve understanding the impact of the radiation dosimetry on the patient. Akin to radiobiology models that have driven intensity modulated radiotherapy optimization, toxicity and outcome predictions based on treatment plans and prior patient experiences may be the next step in knowledge based planning. In order to realize these predictions, it is necessary to understand how the clinical information can be captured, structured and organized with ontologies and databases designed for recall. Large databases containing radiation dosimetry and outcomes present the opportunity to evaluate treatment plans against predictions of toxicity and disease response. Such evaluations can be based on dose volume histogram or even the full 3‐dimensional dose distribution and its relation to the critical anatomy. This session will provide an understanding of ontologies and standard terminologies used to capture clinical knowledge into structured databases; How data can be organized and accessed to utilize the knowledge in planning; and examples of research and clinical efforts to incorporate that clinical knowledge into planning for improved care for our patients. Learning Objectives: 1. Understand the role of standard terminologies, ontologies and data organization in oncology 2. Understand methods to capture clinical toxicity and outcomes in a clinical setting 3. Understand opportunities to learn from clinical data and its application to treatment planningTodd McNutt receives funding from Philips, Elekta and Toshiba for some of the work presented

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