Pre-treatment patient-specific stopping power by combining list-mode proton radiography and x-ray CT
The relative stopping power (RSP) uncertainty is the largest contributor to the range uncertainty in proton therapy. The purpose of this work was to develop a systematic method that yields accurate and patient-specific RSPs by combining (1) pre-treatment x-ray CT and (2) daily proton radiography of...
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| Published in | Physics in medicine & biology Vol. 62; no. 17; pp. 6836 - 6852 |
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| Main Authors | , , , , |
| Format | Journal Article |
| Language | English |
| Published |
England
IOP Publishing
03.08.2017
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| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Get full text |
| ISSN | 0031-9155 1361-6560 1361-6560 |
| DOI | 10.1088/1361-6560/aa7c42 |
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| Summary: | The relative stopping power (RSP) uncertainty is the largest contributor to the range uncertainty in proton therapy. The purpose of this work was to develop a systematic method that yields accurate and patient-specific RSPs by combining (1) pre-treatment x-ray CT and (2) daily proton radiography of the patient. The method was formulated as a penalized least squares optimization problem (argmin(∥Ax−b∥22)). The parameter A represents the cumulative path-length crossed by the proton in each material, separated by thresholding on the HU. The material RSPs (water equivalent thickness/physical thickness) are denoted by x. The parameter b is the list-mode proton radiography produced using Geant4 simulations. The problem was solved using a non-negative linear-solver with x⩾0. A was computed by superposing proton trajectories calculated with a cubic or linear spline approach to the CT. The material's RSP assigned in Geant4 were used for reference while the clinical HU-RSP calibration curve was used for comparison. The Gammex RMI-467 phantom was first investigated. The standard deviation between the estimated material RSP and the calculated RSP is 0.45%. The robustness of the techniques was then assessed as a function of the number of projections and initial proton energy. Optimization with two initial projections yields precise RSP ( 1.0%) for 330 MeV protons. 250 MeV protons have shown higher uncertainty ( 2.0%) due to the loss of precision in the path estimate. Anthropomorphic phantoms of the head, pelvis, and lung were subsequently evaluated. Accurate RSP has been obtained for the head (μ=0.21±1.63%), the lung (μ=0.06±0.99%) and the pelvis (μ=0.90±3.87%). The range precision has been optimized using the calibration curves obtained with the algorithm, yielding a mean R80 difference to the reference of 0.11 ±0.09%, 0.28 ± 0.34% and 0.05±0.06% in the same order. The solution's accuracy is limited by the assumed HU/RSP bijection, neglecting inherent degeneracy. The proposed formulation of the problem with prior knowledge x-ray CT demonstrates potential to increase the accuracy of present RSP estimates. |
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| Bibliography: | Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine PMB-105836.R1 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
| ISSN: | 0031-9155 1361-6560 1361-6560 |
| DOI: | 10.1088/1361-6560/aa7c42 |