Evaluation of a novel patient-specific quality assurance phantom for robotic single-isocentre, multiple-target stereotactic radiosurgery, and stereotactic radiotherapy

To evaluate patient-specific quality assurance (PSQA) of 3 targets in a single delivery using a novel film-based phantom. The phantom was designed to rotate freely as a sphere and could measure 3 targets with film in a single delivery. After identifying the coordinates of 3 targets in the skull, the...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of radiology 2024-02, Vol.97 (1155), p.660-667
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Qianyi, Vinogradskiy, Yevgeniy, Grimm, Jimm, Nie, Wei, Dupre, Pamela, Chawla, Ashish K, Bajaj, Gopal, Yang, Haihua, LaCouture, Tamara, Fan, Jiajin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To evaluate patient-specific quality assurance (PSQA) of 3 targets in a single delivery using a novel film-based phantom. The phantom was designed to rotate freely as a sphere and could measure 3 targets with film in a single delivery. After identifying the coordinates of 3 targets in the skull, the rotation angles about the equator and meridian were computed for optimal phantom setup, ensuring the film plane intersected the 3 targets. The plans were delivered on the CyberKnife system using fiducial tracking. The irradiated films were scanned and processed. All films were analysed using 3 gamma criteria. Fifteen CyberKnife test plans with 3 different modalities were delivered on the phantom. Both automatic and marker-based registration methods were applied when registering the irradiated film and dose plane. Gamma analysis was performed using a 3%/1 mm, 2%/1 mm, and 1%/1 mm criteria with a 10% threshold. For the automatic registration method, the passing rates were 98.2% ± 1.9%, 94.2% ± 3.7%, and 80.9% ± 6.3%, respectively. For the marker-based registration approach, the passing rates were 96.4% ± 2.7%, 91.7% ± 4.3%, and 78.4% ± 6.2%, respectively. A novel spherical phantom was evaluated for the CyberKnife system and achieved acceptable PSQA passing rates using TG218 recommendations. The phantom can measure true-composite dose and offers high-resolution results for PSQA, making it a valuable device for robotic radiosurgery. This is the first study on PSQA of 3 targets concurrently on the CyberKnife system.
ISSN:0007-1285
1748-880X
DOI:10.1093/bjr/tqae011