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KMID : 0384620050160010024
Korean Journal of Medical Physics
2005 Volume.16 No. 1 p.24 ~ p.31
Development of Independent Target Approximation by Auto-computation of 3-D Distribution Units for Stereotactic Radiosurgery
ÃÖ°æ½Ä:Choi Kyoung-Sik
¿À½ÂÁ¾:Oh Seung-Jong/ÀÌÁ¤¿ì:Lee Jeong-Woo/±èÁ¤±â:Kim Jeung-Kee/¼­Å¼®:Suh Tae-Suk/ÃÖº¸¿µ:Choe Bo-Young/±è¹®Âù:Kim Moon-Chan/Á¤ÇöÅÂ:Chung Hyun-Tai
Abstract
The stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) describes a method of delivering a high dose of radiation to a small tar-get volume in the brain, generally in a single fraction, while the dose delivered to the surrounding normal tissue should be minimized. To perform automatic plan of the SRS, a new method of multi-isocenter/shot linear accelerator (linac) and gamma knife (GK) radiosurgery treatment plan was developed, based on a physical lattice structure in target. The optimal radiosurgical plan had been constructed by many beam parameters in a linear accelerator or gamma knife-based radiation therapy. In this work, an isocenter/shot was modeled as a sphere, which is equal to the circular collimator/helmet hole size because the dimension of the 50% isodose level in the dose profile is similar to its size. In a computer-aided system, it accomplished first an automatic arrangement of multi-isocenter/shot considering two parameters such as positions and collimator/helmet sizes for each isocenter/shot. Simultaneously, an irregularly shaped target was approximated by cubic structures through computation of voxel units. The treatment planning method by the technique was evaluated as a dose distribution by dose volume histograms, dose conformity, and dose homogeneity to targets. For irregularly shaped targets, the new method performed optimal multi-isocenter packing, and it only took a few seconds in a computer-aided system. The targets were included in a more than 50% isodose curve. The dose conformity was ordinarily acceptable levels and the dose homogeneity was always less than 2.0, satisfying for various targets referred to Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) SRS criteria. In conclusion, this approach by physical lattice structure could be a useful radiosurgical plan without restrictions in the various tumor shapes and the different modality techniques such as linac and GK for SRS.
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