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Development of a Novel 4D MRI Sequence for Real-Time Liver Tumor Tracking During Radiotherapy


L Zhuang

L Zhuang1*, y ye2 , r zhuang3 , J Burmeister1 , (1) Department of Oncology, Wayne State Univ School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, (2) Department of Radiology, Wayne State Univ School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, (3) Department of Radiation Therapy Technology, Wayne State Univ, Detroit, MI

Presentations

SU-E-J-240 (Sunday, July 12, 2015) 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM Room: Exhibit Hall


Purpose:To develop a Novel 4D MRI Technique that is feasible for real-time liver tumor tracking during radiotherapy.

Methods:A volunteer underwent an abdominal 2D fast EPI coronal scan on a 3.0T MRI scanner (Siemens Inc., Germany). An optimal set of parameters was determined based on image quality and scan time. A total of 23 slices were scanned to cover the whole liver in the test scan. For each scan position, the 2D images were retrospectively sorted into multiple phases based on breathing signal extracted from the images. Consequently the 2D slices with same phase numbers were stacked to form one 3D image. Multiple phases of 3D images formed the 4D MRI sequence representing one breathing cycle.

Results:The optimal set of scan parameters were: TR= 57ms, TE= 19ms, FOV read= 320mm and flip angle= 30°, which resulted in a total scan time of 14s for 200 frames (FMs) per slice and image resolution of (2.5mm,2.5mm,5.0mm) in three directions. Ten phases of 3D images were generated, each of which had 23 slices. Based on our test scan, only 100FMs were necessary for the phase sorting process which may lower the scan time to 7s/100FMs/slice. For example, only 5 slices/35s are necessary for a 4D MRI scan to cover liver tumor size ≤ 2cm leading to the possibility of tumor trajectory tracking every 35s during treatment.

Conclusion:The novel 4D MRI technique we developed can reconstruct a 4D liver MRI sequence representing one breathing cycle (7s/ slice) without an external monitor. This technique can potentially be used for real-time liver tumor tracking during radiotherapy.


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