Abstract

Calypso L‐shaped Surface Beacon transponder has recently become available for clinical applications. We herein conduct studies to validate the Surface Beacon transponder in terms of stability, reproducibility, orientation sensitivity, cycle rate dependence, and respiratory waveform tracking accuracy. The Surface Beacon was placed on a Quasar respiratory phantom and positioned at the isocenter with its two arms aligned with the lasers. Breathing waveforms were simulated, and the motion of the transponder was tracked. Stability and drift analysis: sinusoidal waveforms (200 cycles) were produced, and the amplitudes of phases 0% (inhale) and 50% (exhale) were recorded at each breathing cycle. The mean and standard deviation (SD) of the amplitudes were calculated. Linear least‐squares fitting was performed to access the possible amplitude drift over the breathing cycles. Reproducibility: similar setting to stability and drift analysis, and the phantom generated 100 cycles of the sinusoidal waveform per run. The Calypso system's was re‐setup for each run. Recorded amplitude and SD of 0% and 50% phase were compared between runs to assess contribution of Calypso electromagnetic array setup variation. Beacon orientation sensitivity: the Calypso tracks sinusoidal phantom motion with a defined angular offset of the beacon to assess its effect on SD and peak‐to‐peak amplitude. Rate dependence: sinusoidal motion was generated at cycle rates of 1 Hz, .33 Hz, and .2 Hz. Peak‐to‐peak displacement and SDs were assessed. Respiratory waveform tracking accuracy: the phantom reproduced recorded breathing cycles (by volunteers and patients) were tracked by the Calypso system. Deviation in tracking position from produced waveform was used to calculate SD throughout entire breathing cycle. Stability and drift analysis: Mean amplitude ± SD of phase 0% or 50% were 20.01±0.04 mm and ‐19.65±0.08 mm, respectively. No clinically significant drift was detected with drift measured as 5.1×10‐5 mm/s at phase 0% and ‐6.0×10‐5 mm/s at phase 50%. Reproducibility: The SD of the setup was 0.06 mm and 0.02 mm for phases 0% and 50%, respectively. The combined SDs, including both setup and intrarun error of all runs at phases 0% and 50%, were 0.07 mm and 0.11 mm, respectively. Beacon orientation: SD ranged from 0.032 mm to 0.039 mm at phase 0% and from 0.084 mm to 0.096 mm at phase 50%. The SD was found not to vary linearly with Beacon angle in the range of 0° and 15°. A positive systematic error was observed with amplitude 0.07 mm/degree at phase 0% and 0.05 mm/degree at phase 50%. Rate dependence: SD and displacement amplitudes did not vary significantly between 0.2 Hz and 0.33 Hz. At 1 Hz, both 0% and 50% amplitude measurements shifted up appreciably, by 0.72 mm and 0.78 mm, respectively. As compared with the 0.33 Hz data, SD at phase 0% was 1.6 times higher and 5.4 times higher at phase 50%. Respiratory waveform tracking accuracy: SD of 0.233 mm with approximately normal distribution in over 134 min of tracking (201468 data points). The Surface Beacon transponder appears to be stable, accurate, and reproducible. Submillimeter resolution is achieved throughout breathing and sinusoidal waveforms.PACS number(s): 87.50.ct, 87.50.st, 87.50.ux, 87.50.wp, 87.50.yt

Highlights

  • The Calypso Prostate Beacon transponder system (Varian Medical Systems Inc., Palo Alto, CA) has been widely used in the clinic

  • Calypso system positioning has been previously assessed for static accuracy and precision,(1,2,3) as well as the influence of motion on tracking accuracy.[4] previous work has demonstrated the Calypso 4D tracking system provides greater accuracy than alternative tracking methods,(5) these previous studies focus on tracking of three implanted Beacons

  • Submillimeter resolution is achieved throughout breathing and sinusoidal waveforms

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Summary

Introduction

The Calypso Prostate Beacon transponder system (Varian Medical Systems Inc., Palo Alto, CA) has been widely used in the clinic. Varian Medical Systems has recently released an L-shaped Surface Beacon transponder (Fig. 1) for real time tracking with the Calypso system. The Surface Beacon is comprised of two prostate transponders, with one high frequency and one intermediate frequency. The ability to track a nonsite-specific, externally placed Beacon allows for noninvasive tracking of deep inhalation breath-hold (DIBH) and free breathing, as well as general patient motion. At the time of writing, no studies are available evaluating the Calypso Surface Beacon. We conduct studies to validate the Calypso Surface Beacon[6] transponders. One novel experiment we conducted was placing the Surface Beacon on the Quasar phantom so that we can study the real respiratory waves retrospectively

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