Is a Single Respiratory Correlated 4D-CT Study Sufficient for Evaluation of Breathing Motion?

Purpose: Respiratory correlated computed tomography has been shown to be effective for evaluation of breathing-induced motion of pulmonary tumors. This study investigated whether a single four-dimensional CT study (4D-CT) is representative and sufficient for treatment planning in stereotactic body r...

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Published inInternational journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics Vol. 67; no. 5; pp. 1352 - 1359
Main Authors Guckenberger, Matthias, M.D, Wilbert, Juergen, Ph.D, Meyer, Juergen, Ph.D, Baier, Kurt, Richter, Anne, Flentje, Michael, M.D
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.04.2007
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Summary:Purpose: Respiratory correlated computed tomography has been shown to be effective for evaluation of breathing-induced motion of pulmonary tumors. This study investigated whether a single four-dimensional CT study (4D-CT) is representative and sufficient for treatment planning in stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Methods and Materials: Four repeated helical 4D-CT studies were acquired every 10 min for 10 patients with 14 pulmonary metastases. Patients remained immobilized in a stereotactic body frame (SBF) for 30 min; abdominal compression was applied to seven patients. Using amplitude based sorting, eight phases equally distributed over the breathing cycle were reconstructed for each 4D-CT study. Tumor position was defined in a total of 406 CT series and variability of breathing motion and mean tumor position were evaluated. Results: Peak-to-peak tumor motion was 9.9 mm ± 6.8 mm (mean ± standard deviation) and 9.0 mm ± 7.4 mm at time point 0 min (t0 ) and t30 , respectively. In one patient with poor pulmonary function, continuous increase of breathing motion from 17.4 mm at t0 to 28.3 mm at t30 was seen. In five and two lesions, respectively, a drift of the mean tumor position greater than 3 mm and 5 mm was observed. A borderline significance was calculated for larger tumor position variability in midventilation phases compared with peak-ventilation phases of the breathing cycle ( p = 0.08). Conclusion: Treatment planning based on a single 4D-CT study is reliable for the majority of patients. Increased intrafractional uncertainties were seen for patients with poor pulmonary function and with tumors located in the lower lobe.
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ISSN:0360-3016
1879-355X
DOI:10.1016/j.ijrobp.2006.11.025