Abstract

PurposeTarget positions should be acquired during beam delivery for accurate lung stereotactic body radiotherapy. We aimed to perform kilovoltage (kV) imaging during beam irradiation (intra-irradiation imaging) under phase-gated conditions and evaluate its performance. MethodsCatphan 504 and QUASAR respiratory motion phantoms were used to evaluate image quality and target detectability, respectively. TrueBeam STx linac and the Developer Mode was used. The imaging parameters were 125 kVp and 1.2 mAs/projection. Flattened megavoltage (MV) X-ray beam energies 6, 10 and 15 MV and un-flattened beam energies 6 and 10 MV were used with field sizes of 5 × 5 and 15 × 15 cm2 and various frame rates for intra-irradiation imaging. In addition, using a QUASAR phantom, intra-irradiation imaging was performed during intensity-modulated plan delivery. The root-mean-square error (RMSE) of the CT-number for the inserted rods, image noise, visual assessment, and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were evaluated. ResultsThe RMSEs of intra-irradiation cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) images under gated conditions were 50–230 Hounsfield Unit (HU) (static < 30 HU). The noise of the intra-irradiation CBCT images under gated conditions was 15–35 HU, whereas that of the standard CBCT images was 8.8–27.2 HU. Lower frame rates exhibited large RMSEs and noise; however, the iterative reconstruction algorithm (IR) was effective at improving these values. Approximately 7 fps with the IR showed an equivalent CNR of 15 fps without the IR. The target was visible on all the gated intra-irradiation CBCT images. ConclusionSeveral image quality improvements are required; however, intra-irradiated CBCT images showed good visual target detection.

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