Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

8-13-2025

Journal

Cancers

DOI

10.3390/cancers17162646

PMID

40867275

PMCID

PMC12384547

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

8-13-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Objectives: We investigated the performance of a slow computed tomography (CT) protocol to reduce alignment errors arising from motion when using CT-on-rail (CTOR) for image guidance for patients receiving thoracic stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT).

Methods: A Quasar lung phantom with a moving tumor was programmed with three breathing rates and three motion amplitudes. MIP and average 4DCT images were used for contouring and alignment, respectively. Ten CTOR images were obtained for each of the breathing rates and amplitudes, under both CT protocols. We used in-house CAT software for image guidance, centering the tumor in the lung window within the gross tumor volume contour. Longitudinal coordinate reproducibility was compared between the two protocols. We also retrospectively analyzed CBCT SBRT image guidance alignment data from 31 patients to evaluate the systematic error in the longitudinal direction between simulation and daily treatments.

Results: The mean (standard deviation) alignments (mm) for the standard and slow CT protocol ranged from 0.7 (0.68) and 1.0 (0.0), respectively, for the 28 BPM breathing rate and 5 mm amplitude combination to 5.2 (2.0) and 1.6 (0.52) for the 8 BPM breathing rate and 15 mm amplitude combination. Our retrospective analysis of patient alignment data showed a notable systematic difference in the relative bone and gross tumor volume alignment between the simulation and daily cone beam CT datasets. The mean longitudinal difference was -0.19 cm (standard deviation, 0.17 cm; range, 0.28 cm to -1.14 cm). Therefore, the position of the vertebral body cannot be used as a surrogate for mean tumor position in the longitudinal direction. Longitudinal position must be accurately determined for each patient using multiple CT images.

Conclusions: A slow CT protocol improved the alignment with slower breathing rates being more challenging. A 5 mm PTV is not sufficient for tumor motion greater than 9 mm. Averaging the coordinates from multiple CTOR images is recommended.

Keywords

SBRT, CT-on-rail, image guidance, motion amplitude, breathing frequency

Published Open-Access

yes

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