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Dynamic Lung Tumor Tracking for Stereotactic Ablative Body Radiation Therapy

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

Physicians considering stereotactic ablative body radiation therapy (SBRT) for the treatment of extracranial cancer targets must be aware of the sizeable risks for normal tissue injury and the hazards of physical tumor miss. A first-of-its-kind SBRT platform achieves high-precision ablative radiation treatment through a combination of versatile real-time imaging solutions and sophisticated tumor tracking capabilities. It uses dual-diagnostic kV x-ray units for stereoscopic open-loop feedback of cancer target intrafraction movement occurring as a consequence of respiratory motions and heartbeat. Image-guided feedback drives a gimbaled radiation accelerator (maximum 15 x 15 cm field size) capable of real-time ±4 cm pan-and-tilt action. Robot-driven ±60° pivots of an integrated ±185° rotational gantry allow for coplanar and non-coplanar accelerator beam set-up angles, ultimately permitting unique treatment degrees of freedom. State-of-the-art software aids real-time six dimensional positioning, ensuring irradiation of cancer targets with sub-millimeter accuracy (0.4 mm at isocenter). Use of these features enables treating physicians to steer radiation dose to cancer tumor targets while simultaneously reducing radiation dose to normal tissues. By adding respiration correlated computed tomography (CT) and 2-[(18)F] fluoro-2-deoxy-ᴅ-glucose ((18)F-FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) images into the planning system for enhanced tumor target contouring, the likelihood of physical tumor miss becomes substantially less. In this article, we describe new radiation plans for the treatment of moving lung tumors.

Journal: JoVE
ISSN: 1940-087X
Issue: 100
Pages: 1-5
Publication year:2015
Keywords:Female, Fluorodeoxyglucose F18, Humans, Lung Neoplasms, Male, Positron-Emission Tomography, Radiopharmaceuticals, Radiosurgery, Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted, Tomography, X-Ray Computed
  • PubMed Central Id: PMC4545162
  • ORCID: /0000-0002-5717-7136/work/61831485
  • ORCID: /0000-0001-9108-610X/work/60612488
  • WoS Id: 000361536000060
  • Scopus Id: 84941253899
  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3791/52875
CSS-citation score:1