AI Article Synopsis

  • Stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation (STAR) is being researched as a beneficial treatment for patients who experience recurrent ventricular tachycardias after unsuccessful catheter ablation, particularly for those with structural heart issues.
  • The Cyberknife robotic system enhances precision by using tracking technology, but the effectiveness can be impacted by changes in the geometry of the target markers, leading to a proposed method to correct for these deformations.
  • A study involving radiotherapy planning and 3D translations demonstrated that applying a 2 mm margin for target volume adjustments effectively accommodates variability in image registration, resulting in larger and better-aligned treatment areas for patients.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose: Stereotactic arrhythmia radioablation (STAR) has been suggested as a promising therapeutic alternative in cases of failed catheter ablation for recurrent ventricular tachycardias in patients with structural heart disease. Cyberknife robotic radiosurgery system utilizing target tracking technology is one of the available STAR treatment platforms. Tracking using implantable cardioverter-defibrillator lead tip as target surrogate marker is affected by the deformation of marker-target geometry. A simple method to account for the deformation in the target definition process is proposed.

Methods: Radiotherapy planning CT series include scans at expiration and inspiration breath hold, and three free-breathing scans. All secondary series are triple registered to the primary CT: 6D/spine + 3D translation/marker + 3D translation/target surrogate-a heterogeneous structure around the left main coronary artery. The 3D translation difference between the last two registrations reflects the deformation between the marker and the target (surrogate) for the respective respiratory phase. Maximum translation differences in each direction form an anisotropic geometry deformation margin (GDM) to expand the initial single-phase clinical target volume (CTV) to create an internal target volume (ITV) in the dynamic coordinates of the marker. Alternative GDM-based target volumes were created for seven recent STAR patients and compared to the original treated planning target volumes (PTVs) as well as to analogical volumes created using deformable image registration (DIR) by MIM and Velocity software. Intra- and inter-observer variabilities of the triple registration process were tested as components of the final ITV to PTV margin.

Results: A margin of 2 mm has been found to cover the image registration observer variability. GDM-based target volumes are larger and shifted toward the inspiration phase relative to the original clinical volumes based on a 3-mm isotropic margin without deformation consideration. GDM-based targets are similar (mean DICE similarity coefficient range 0.80-0.87) to their equivalents based on the DIR of the primary target volume delineated by dedicated software.

Conclusion: The proposed GDM method is a simple way to account for marker-target deformation-related uncertainty for tracking with Cyberknife and better control of the risk of target underdose. The principle applies to general radiotherapy as well.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9108236PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.870127DOI Listing

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