Abstract

To develop a method for detecting jaw positions during jaw-tracking delivery to ensure an accurate delivery of radiation to patients using an electronic portal imaging device (EPID) in the cine mode on a linear accelerator for radiotherapy. A bidirectional picket fence (BPF) plan was used in a novel application to detect jaw positions during jaw-tracking delivery. In the BPF plan, jaws tracked multileaf collimator (MLC) apertures. The irradiated patterns were acquired by an EPID in the cine mode. The upper- and lower-half leaves in the MLC moved in opposite directions to facilitate detection of jaw positions on EPID images. A picket-fence-like image was created by summing all acquired cine images and evaluated to detect MLC leaf positions. Jaw positions determined on the cine images were compared with those expected from the delivered BPF plan. The absolute differences (average ± 1 standard deviation) were 0.16 ± 0.19 mm for the X1 jaw and 0.11 ± 0.16 mm for the X2 jaw. The maximum error in the MLC leaf positions detected in the picket-fence-like pattern were 0.11 mm. Jaw positions during jaw-tracking delivery were identified using the cine EPID images and could be determined within an accuracy better than 0.5 mm. The BPF plan is also available as a picket fence test and can determine the MLC leaf positions to an accuracy better than 0.5 mm.

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