Abstract
Online adaptive magnetic resonance (MR)-guided treatment planning for pancreatic tumors on 1.5T systems typically employs Cartesian 3D T 2w magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The main disadvantage of this sequence is that respiratory motion results in substantial blurring in the abdomen, which can hamper delineation accuracy. This study investigated the use of two motion-robust radial MRI sequences as main delineation scan for pancreatic MR-guided radiotherapy. Twelve patients with pancreatic tumors were imaged with a 3D T 2w scan, a Periodically Rotated Overlapping ParallEL Lines with Enhanced Reconstruction (PROPELLER) scan (partially overlapping strips), and a 3D Vane scan (stack-of-stars), on a 1.5T MR-Linac under abdominal compression. The scans were assessed by three radiation oncologists for their suitability for online adaptive delineation. A quantitative comparison was made for gradient entropy and the effect of motion on apparent target position. The PROPELLER scans were selected as first preference in 56% of the cases, the 3D T 2w in 42% and the 3D Vane in 3%. PROPELLER scans sometimes contained a large interslice variation which would have compromised delineation. Gradient entropy was significantly higher in 3D T 2w patient scans. The apparent target position was more sensitive to motion amplitude in the PROPELLER scans, but substantial offsets did not occur under 10mm peak-to-peak. PROPELLER MRI may be a superior imaging sequence for pancreatic MRgRT compared to standard Cartesian sequences. The large interslice variation should be mitigated through further sequence optimization before PROPELLER can be adopted for online treatment adaptation.
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