Program Information
High Performance Preclinical Irradiation Through Optimized Dual Focal Spot Dose Painting and Online Virtual Isocenter Radiation Field Targeting
J Stewart1,2*, P Lindsay2,3 , D Jaffray1-5 , (1) Institute of Biomaterials & Biomedical Engineering, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada (2) Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, Canada (3) Department of Radiation Oncology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada (4) Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada (5) The Techna Institute for the Advancement of Technology for Health, Toronto, Canada
Presentations
WE-EF-BRA-7 (Wednesday, July 15, 2015) 1:45 PM - 3:45 PM Room: Ballroom A
Purpose: Advances in radiotherapy practice facilitated by collimation systems to shape radiation fields and image guidance to target these conformal beams have motivated proposals for more complex dose patterns to improve the therapeutic ratio. Recent progress in small animal radiotherapy platforms has provided the foundation to validate the efficacy of such interventions, but robustly delivering heterogeneous dose distributions at the scale and accuracy demanded by preclinical studies remains challenging. This work proposes a dual focal spot optimization method to paint spatially heterogeneous dose regions and an online virtual isocenter targeting method to accurately target the dose distributions.
Methods: Two-dimensional dose kernels were empirically measured for the 1 mm diameter circular collimator with radiochromic film in a solid water phantom for the small and large x-ray focal spots on the X-RAD 225Cx microirradiator. These kernels were used in an optimization framework which determined a set of animal stage positions, beam-on times, and focal spot settings to optimally deliver a given desired dose distribution. An online method was developed which defined a virtual treatment isocenter based on a single image projection of the collimated radiation field. The method was demonstrated by optimization of a 6 mm circular 2 Gy target adjoining a 4 mm semicircular avoidance region.
Results:The dual focal spot technique improved the optimized dose distribution with the proportion of avoidance region receiving more than 0.5 Gy reduced by 40% compared to the large focal spot technique. Targeting tests performed by irradiating ball bearing targets on radiochromic film pieced revealed the online targeting method improved the three-dimensional accuracy from 0.48 mm to 0.15 mm.
Conclusion: The dual focal spot optimization and online virtual isocenter targeting framework is a robust option for delivering dose at the preclinical level and provides a new experimental option for unique radiobiological investigations
Funding Support, Disclosures, and Conflict of Interest: This work is supported, in part, by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and a Mitacs-Accelerate fellowship. P.E. Lindsay, and D.A. Jaffray are listed as inventors of the system described herein. This system has been licensed to Precision X-Ray Inc. for commercial development.
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