Abstract

To reduce the radiation dose given to patients, a tube current modulation (TCM) method has been widely used in diagnostic CT systems. However, the TCM method has not yet been applied to a kV-CBCT system on a LINAC machine. The purpose of this study is to investigate if a TCM method would be desirable in a kV-CBCT system for image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) or not. We have developed an attenuation–based TCM method using prior knowledge from planning CT images of patients. The TCM method can provide optimized dose reductions without degrading image quality for kV-CBCT imaging. Here, we investigate whether or not our suggested TCM method is desirable to use in kV-CBCT systems to confirm and revise the exact position of a patient for IGRT. Patients go through diagnostic CT scans for RT planning; therefore, using information from prior CT images can enable estimations of the total X-ray attenuation through a patient’s body in a CBCT setting for radiation treatment. Having this planning CT image allows to use the proposed TCM method in RT. The proposed TCM method provides a minimal amount of current for each projection, as well as total current, required to reconstruct the current modulated CBCT image with an image quality similar to that of CBCT. After applying a calculated TCM current for each projection, projection images were acquired and the current modulated CBCT image was reconstructed using a FDK algorithm. To validate the proposed approach, we used a numerical XCAT phantom and a real ATOM phantom and evaluated the performance of the proposed method via visual and quantitative image quality metrics. The organ dose due to imaging radiation was calculated in both cases and compared using the GATE simulation toolkit. As shown in the quantitative evaluation, normalized noise and SSIM values of the TCM were similar to those of conventional CBCT images. In addition, the proposed TCM method yielded comparable image quality to that of conventional CBCT images for both simulations and experimental studies as organ doses were decreased. We have successfully demonstrated the feasibility and dosimetric merit of a prototypical TCM method for kV-CBCT via simulations and experimental study. The results indicate that the proposed TCM method and overall framework can be a viable option for CBCT imaging that utilizes an optimal dose reduction without degrading image quality. Thus, this method reduces the probability for side effects due to radiation exposure.

Highlights

  • Image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) has been extensively used for target localization, patient positioning, and external beam adjustment in radiation therapy procedures [1]

  • To reduce the radiation dose given to patients, a tube current modulation (TCM) method has been widely used in diagnostic CT systems

  • The purpose of this study is to investigate if a TCM method is desirable in kV-cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) systems to confirm and revise the exact position of a patient for IGRT or not

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Summary

Introduction

Image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) has been extensively used for target localization, patient positioning, and external beam adjustment in radiation therapy procedures [1]. One approach of IGRT is kV cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT), which is used to get a patient’s anatomy before treatment [1, 2]. KV-CBCT imaging enables technicians and doctors to observe the target and position of organs at risk before treatment while the patient is on the couch. Repeated use of kV-CBCT has raised concerns regarding radiosensitive organs [3, 4]. A high radiation dose increases the risk of side effects in organs at risk [1,2,3]. There is a limit to the number of allowable CBCT images due to the patient’s radiation burden during treatment

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