Medical Dosimetry
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 117-123, Summer 2008

Synchrony – Cyberknife Respiratory Compensation Technology

Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, Pittsburgh, PA

Received 1 November 2007; accepted 29 February 2008.

Abstract 

Studies of organs in the thorax and abdomen have shown that these organs can move as much as 40 mm due to respiratory motion. Without compensation for this motion during the course of external beam radiation therapy, the dose coverage to target may be compromised. On the other hand, if compensation of this motion is by expansion of the margin around the target, a significant volume of normal tissue may be unnecessarily irradiated. In hypofractionated regimens, the issue of respiratory compensation becomes an important factor and is critical in single-fraction extracranial radiosurgery applications. CyberKnife is an image-guided radiosurgery system that consists of a 6-MV LINAC mounted to a robotic arm coupled through a control loop to a digital diagnostic x-ray imaging system. The robotic arm can point the beam anywhere in space with 6 degrees of freedom, without being constrained to a conventional isocenter. The CyberKnife has been recently upgraded with a real-time respiratory tracking and compensation system called Synchrony. Using external markers in conjunction with diagnostic x-ray images, Synchrony helps guide the robotic arm to move the radiation beam in real time such that the beam always remains aligned with the target. With the aid of Synchrony, the tumor motion can be tracked in three-dimensional space, and the motion-induced dosimetric change to target can be minimized with a limited margin. The working principles, advantages, limitations, and our clinical experience with this new technology will be discussed.

Key Words: Respiratory compensation, Synchrony, CyberKnife, Image-guided radiosurgery, Medical robotics

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PII: S0958-3947(08)00039-3

doi:10.1016/j.meddos.2008.02.004

Medical Dosimetry
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 117-123, Summer 2008