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Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy

In radiotherapy, setup precision has great influence on the therapeutic effect. In addition, body movements during the irradiation and physical alternations during the treatment period might cause deviation from the planned irradiation dosage distribution. Both of these factors could undesirably inf...

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Autores principales: Takagi, Hitoshi, Obata, Yasunori, Kobayashi, Hidetoshi, Takenaka, Kazuyuki, Hirose, Yasujirou, Goto, Hajime, Hattori, Tomohiko
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5718662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21587188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1120/jacmp.v12i2.3400
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author Takagi, Hitoshi
Obata, Yasunori
Kobayashi, Hidetoshi
Takenaka, Kazuyuki
Hirose, Yasujirou
Goto, Hajime
Hattori, Tomohiko
author_facet Takagi, Hitoshi
Obata, Yasunori
Kobayashi, Hidetoshi
Takenaka, Kazuyuki
Hirose, Yasujirou
Goto, Hajime
Hattori, Tomohiko
author_sort Takagi, Hitoshi
collection PubMed
description In radiotherapy, setup precision has great influence on the therapeutic effect. In addition, body movements during the irradiation and physical alternations during the treatment period might cause deviation from the planned irradiation dosage distribution. Both of these factors could undesirably influence the dose absorbed by the target. In order to solve these problems, we developed the “body surface navigation and monitoring system” (hereafter referred to as “Navi‐system”). The purpose of this study is to review the precision of the Navi‐system as well as its usefulness in clinical radiotherapy. The Navi‐system consists of a LED projector, a CCD camera, and a personal computer (PC). The LED projector projects 19 stripes on the patient's body and the CCD camera captures these stripes. The processed image of these stripes in color can be displayed on the PC monitor along with the patient's body surface image, and the digitalized results can be also displayed on the same monitor. The Navi‐system calculates the height of the body contour and the transverse height centroid for the 19 levels and compares them with the reference data to display the results on the monitor on a real‐time basis. These results are always replaced with new data after they are used for display; so, if the results need to be recorded, such recording commands should be given to the computer. 1) Evaluating the accuracy of the body surface height measurement: from the relationship between actual height changes and calculated height changes with torso surface by the Navi‐system, for the height changes from 0.0 mm to [Formula: see text] , the changes show the underestimation of 1.0–1.5 mm and for [Formula: see text] to [Formula: see text] , the underestimation of 1.5–3.0 mm. 2) Evaluating the accuracy of the transverse height centroid measurement: displacement of the inclined flat panel to the right by 5.0 mm, 10.0 mm, 15.0 mm and 20.0 mm showed the transverse height centroid calculated by the Navi‐system for [Formula: see text] line/pair [Formula: see text] line/pair, [Formula: see text] line/pair and [Formula: see text] line/pair, respectively. Also, displacement of the inclined flat panel to the left by 5.0 mm, 10.0 mm, 15.0 mm and 20.0 mm showed the transverse height centroid calculated by the Navi‐system for [Formula: see text] line/pair [Formula: see text] line/pair, [Formula: see text] line/pair and [Formula: see text] line/pair, respectively. 3) Clinical usefulness of the Navi‐system: on using the Navi‐system, the frequency of radiotherapy replanning increased from 5.2% to 21.8%, especially in pelvic or abdominal irradiation. We developed a new navigation system for the purpose of compensating for the weakness of MVCT, CBCT and other systems, as well as for having a screening function. This Navi‐system can monitor the patient continuously and measure change in height of the patient's body surface from the basic plane, in real time. It can also show the results both qualitatively and quantitatively on the PC monitor. PACS number:87.52.‐g
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spelling pubmed-57186622018-04-02 Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy Takagi, Hitoshi Obata, Yasunori Kobayashi, Hidetoshi Takenaka, Kazuyuki Hirose, Yasujirou Goto, Hajime Hattori, Tomohiko J Appl Clin Med Phys Radiation Oncology Physics In radiotherapy, setup precision has great influence on the therapeutic effect. In addition, body movements during the irradiation and physical alternations during the treatment period might cause deviation from the planned irradiation dosage distribution. Both of these factors could undesirably influence the dose absorbed by the target. In order to solve these problems, we developed the “body surface navigation and monitoring system” (hereafter referred to as “Navi‐system”). The purpose of this study is to review the precision of the Navi‐system as well as its usefulness in clinical radiotherapy. The Navi‐system consists of a LED projector, a CCD camera, and a personal computer (PC). The LED projector projects 19 stripes on the patient's body and the CCD camera captures these stripes. The processed image of these stripes in color can be displayed on the PC monitor along with the patient's body surface image, and the digitalized results can be also displayed on the same monitor. The Navi‐system calculates the height of the body contour and the transverse height centroid for the 19 levels and compares them with the reference data to display the results on the monitor on a real‐time basis. These results are always replaced with new data after they are used for display; so, if the results need to be recorded, such recording commands should be given to the computer. 1) Evaluating the accuracy of the body surface height measurement: from the relationship between actual height changes and calculated height changes with torso surface by the Navi‐system, for the height changes from 0.0 mm to [Formula: see text] , the changes show the underestimation of 1.0–1.5 mm and for [Formula: see text] to [Formula: see text] , the underestimation of 1.5–3.0 mm. 2) Evaluating the accuracy of the transverse height centroid measurement: displacement of the inclined flat panel to the right by 5.0 mm, 10.0 mm, 15.0 mm and 20.0 mm showed the transverse height centroid calculated by the Navi‐system for [Formula: see text] line/pair [Formula: see text] line/pair, [Formula: see text] line/pair and [Formula: see text] line/pair, respectively. Also, displacement of the inclined flat panel to the left by 5.0 mm, 10.0 mm, 15.0 mm and 20.0 mm showed the transverse height centroid calculated by the Navi‐system for [Formula: see text] line/pair [Formula: see text] line/pair, [Formula: see text] line/pair and [Formula: see text] line/pair, respectively. 3) Clinical usefulness of the Navi‐system: on using the Navi‐system, the frequency of radiotherapy replanning increased from 5.2% to 21.8%, especially in pelvic or abdominal irradiation. We developed a new navigation system for the purpose of compensating for the weakness of MVCT, CBCT and other systems, as well as for having a screening function. This Navi‐system can monitor the patient continuously and measure change in height of the patient's body surface from the basic plane, in real time. It can also show the results both qualitatively and quantitatively on the PC monitor. PACS number:87.52.‐g John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2011-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5718662/ /pubmed/21587188 http://dx.doi.org/10.1120/jacmp.v12i2.3400 Text en © 2011 The Authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Radiation Oncology Physics
Takagi, Hitoshi
Obata, Yasunori
Kobayashi, Hidetoshi
Takenaka, Kazuyuki
Hirose, Yasujirou
Goto, Hajime
Hattori, Tomohiko
Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
title Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
title_full Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
title_fullStr Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
title_full_unstemmed Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
title_short Clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
title_sort clinical usefulness of a newly developed body surface navigation and monitoring system in radiotherapy
topic Radiation Oncology Physics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5718662/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21587188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1120/jacmp.v12i2.3400
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