Abstract

To quantify the performance of the Clarity ultrasound (US) imaging system (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden) for real-time dynamic multileaf collimator (MLC) tracking. The Clarity calibration and quality assurance phantom was mounted on a motion platform moving with a periodic sine wave trajectory. The detected position of a 30 mm hypoechogenic sphere within the phantom was continuously reported via Clarity's real-time streaming interface to an in-house tracking and delivery software and subsequently used to adapt the MLC aperture. A portal imager measured MV treatment field/MLC apertures and motion platform positions throughout each experiment to independently quantify system latency and geometric error. Based on the measured range of latency values, a prostate stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) delivery was performed with three realistic motion trajectories. The dosimetric impact of system latency on MLC tracking was directly measured using a 3D dosimeter mounted on the motion platform. For 2D US imaging, the overall system latency, including all delay times from the imaging and delivery chain, ranged from 392 to 424 ms depending on the lateral sector size. For 3D US imaging, the latency ranged from 566 to 1031 ms depending on the elevational sweep. The latency-corrected geometric root-mean squared error was below 0.75 mm (2D US) and below 1.75 mm (3D US). For the prostate SBRT delivery, the impact of a range of system latencies (400-1000 ms) on the MLC tracking performance was minimal in terms of gamma failure rate. Real-time MLC tracking based on a noninvasive US input is technologically feasible. Current system latencies are higher than those for x-ray imaging systems, but US can provide full volumetric image data and the impact of system latency was measured to be small for a prostate SBRT case when using a US-like motion input.

Highlights

  • Real-time dynamic multileaf collimator (MLC) tracking is an emerging adaptive radiation therapy (RT) delivery technique aimed at increasing dose conformity to the target by reshaping the plan segment, i.e., MLC aperture, to the most recently observed target position

  • We report on the first use of the Clarity US imaging system (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden) for MLC-based motion tracking

  • Based on a previously established measurement protocol,8 this study investigates overall system latency and geometric tracking error for a range of 2D/3D imaging settings

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Summary

Introduction

Real-time dynamic multileaf collimator (MLC) tracking is an emerging adaptive radiation therapy (RT) delivery technique aimed at increasing dose conformity to the target by reshaping the plan segment, i.e., MLC aperture, to the most recently observed target position. The dosimetric improvements provided by MLC tracking of the prostate during irradiation have been illustrated for a range of fractionation schedules.. Colvill et al demonstrated that the impact of intrafractional prostate motion averaged over the entire patient cohort was found to be small, systematic drifts and/or sudden transient motion events can lead to outlier fractions resulting in under-dosed targets. This is especially of concern for hypofractionated stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) delivery schedules and reduced margins.

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