AI Article Synopsis

  • The purpose of the study was to evaluate the performance of the AlignRT InBore™ system, which utilizes both ceiling-mounted and bore-mounted cameras for patient setup and tracking during radiation therapy.
  • The methods involved testing treatment plans for various cancer patients with and without the AlignRT InBore™ system, measuring factors like dose delivery, image quality, and the system's accuracy and stability using specialized phantoms.
  • Results indicated that the AlignRT InBore™ did not negatively impact treatment delivery or image quality, while demonstrating high motion detection accuracy and stability, proving to be an effective option for surface guided radiation therapy without adverse effects on the Halcyon™ system.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To commission and assess the performance of AlignRT InBore™, a Halcyon™ and Ethos™-dedicated Surface Guided Radiation Therapy (SGRT) platform which combines ceiling-mounted cameras for patient setup and bore-mounted cameras for in-bore tracking.

Methods: To check the potential impact of InBore™ cameras on dose delivery, 16 SRS, H&N, breast and pelvis patients' quality assurance (QA) treatment plans were measured with/without AlignRT InBore™ and using ArcCHECK® and SRS MapCHECK®. Impact on image quality was determined using Catphan® 540 phantom and considering all available MV and CBCT protocols (head, breast, chest and pelvis). The stability, accuracy and overall performance of AlignRT InBore™ was assessed using an MV Cube and anthropomorphic phantoms.

Results: Comparison of 2D dose distributions with/without AlignRT InBore™ showed no impact on treatment delivery for all 16 QA checks (p-value > 0.25). 2D and CBCT images showed no artefacts or change in the contrast-to-noise ratio, resolution and noise values measured with Catphan® 540. Anti-collision sensors were unaffected by the bore-mounted cameras. Additionally, AlignRT InBore™ cameras allowed for motion detection with sub-0.5 mm accuracy and sub-0.4 mm stability with surface coverage of >50 × 60 × 35 cc. Accurate transition (sub-0.3 mm) from virtual to treatment isocentres was achieved. Finally, Halcyon™ rotations during CBCT and beam delivery resulted in limited camera vibrations with translation uncertainty <0.5 mm in left-right and anterior-posterior directions and <0.1 mm in head-feet direction.

Conclusion: AlignRT InBore™ provides SGRT setup and intrafraction monitoring capabilities with a performance comparable to standard SGRT solutions while having no adverse effect on Halcyon™.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmp.2020.10.024DOI Listing

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