Abstract

The Varian Real‐time Position Management (RPM) system allows respiratory gating based on either the phase or displacement (amplitude) of the breathing waveform. A problem in clinical application is that phase‐based gating, required for respiration‐correlated (4D‐CT) simulation, is not robust to irregular breathing patterns during treatment, and a widely used system version (1.6) does not provide an easy means to change from a phase‐based gate into an equivalent displacement‐based one. We report on the development and evaluation of a robust method to convert phase‐gate thresholds, set by the physician, into equivalent displacement‐gate thresholds to facilitate its clinical application to treatment. The software tool analyzes the respiration trace recorded during the 4D‐CT simulation, and determines a relationship between displacement and phase through a functional fit. The displacement gate thresholds are determined from an average of two values of this function, corresponding to the start and end thresholds of the original phase gate. The software tool was evaluated in two ways: first, whether in‐gate residual target motion and predicted treatment beam duty cycle are equivalent between displacement gating and phase gating during 4D‐CT simulation (using retrospective phase recalculation); second, whether residual motion is improved with displacement gating during treatment relative to phase gating (using real‐time phase calculation). Residual target motion was inferred from the respiration traces and quantified in terms of mean and standard deviation in‐gate displacement measured relative to the value at the start of the recorded trace. For retrospectively‐calculated breathing traces compared with real‐time calculated breathing traces, we evaluate the inaccuracies of real‐time phase calculation by measuring the phase gate position in each trace as well as the mean in‐gate displacement and standard deviation of the displacement. Retrospectively‐calculated data from ten patients were analyzed. The patient averaged in‐gate mean ± standard deviation displacement (representing residual motion) was reduced from 0.16±0.14cm for phase gating under simulation conditions to 0.12±0.08cm for displacement gating. Evaluation of respiration traces under treatment conditions (real‐time phase calculation) showed that the average displacement gate threshold results in a lower in‐gate mean and residual motion (variance) for all patients studied. The patient‐averaged in‐gate mean ± standard deviation displacement was reduced from 0.26±0.18cm for phase gating (under treatment conditions) to 0.15±0.09cm for displacement gating. Real‐time phase gating sometimes leads to gating on incorrect portions of the breathing cycle when the breathing trace is irregular. Displacement gating is less prone to such errors, as evidenced by the lower in‐gate residual motion in a large majority of cases.In terms of duty cycle and residual motion, displacement‐based gating is equivalent to phase‐based gating for retrospectively‐calculated phase information.PACS number: 87.55.ne, 87.59.cf, 87.90.+y

Highlights

  • There is widespread use of respiration-correlated CT, or 4DCT, for evaluating respirationinduced tumor motion at simulation, defining treatment margins to account for motion, and selecting appropriate gate intervals for gated treatment.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] One such approach[4] is to acquire repeat CT images over an entire respiratory cycle at each couch position while recording respiration with an external monitor of abdominal displacement (Real-time Position Management RPM, Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto CA)

  • We have developed a software tool that permits one to interactively analyze the phase-based reference trace acquired during the cine-CT session, and choose corresponding amplitude gate thresholds to apply to the treatment reference session

  • The proposed method of determining thresholds for displacement-based gating yields similar in-gate displacement, residual motion, and duty cycle to those established from analysis of respiration-correlated CT at simulation using retrospective phase calculation

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Summary

Introduction

There is widespread use of respiration-correlated CT, or 4DCT, for evaluating respirationinduced tumor motion at simulation, defining treatment margins to account for motion, and selecting appropriate gate intervals for gated treatment.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8] One such approach[4] is to acquire repeat CT images over an entire respiratory cycle at each couch position (cine acquisition) while recording respiration with an external monitor of abdominal displacement (Real-time Position Management RPM, Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto CA). Phase-based gated treatment requires real-time calculation of the phase, which is thereby limited to analysis of the prior respiration trace up to the current instant in time. Real-time calculation can intermittently assign the gating phase interval to an incorrect portion of the respiration trace; this occurrence may be difficult for a therapist to identify.

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