Medical Dosimetry
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 124-134, Summer 2008

Use of the BrainLAB ExacTrac X-Ray 6D System in Image-Guided Radiotherapy

Department of Radiation Oncology, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI; Department of Radiation Oncology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; Department of Radiation Oncology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA; and Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Nebraska, Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE

Received 1 November 2007; accepted 29 February 2008.

Abstract 

The ExacTrac X-Ray 6D image-guided radiotherapy (IGRT) system will be described and its performance evaluated. The system is mainly an integration of 2 subsystems: (1) an infrared (IR)-based optical positioning system (ExacTrac) and (2) a radiographic kV x-ray imaging system (X-Ray 6D). The infrared system consists of 2 IR cameras, which are used to monitor reflective body markers placed on the patient's skin to assist in patient initial setup, and an IR reflective reference star, which is attached to the treatment couch and can assist in couch movement with spatial resolution to better than 0.3 mm. The radiographic kV devices consist of 2 oblique x-ray imagers to obtain high-quality radiographs for patient position verification and adjustment. The position verification is made by fusing the radiographs with the simulation CT images using either 3 degree-of-freedom (3D) or 6 degree-of-freedom (6D) fusion algorithms. The position adjustment is performed using the infrared system according to the verification results. The reliability of the fusion algorithm will be described based on phantom and patient studies. The results indicated that the 6D fusion method is better compared to the 3D method if there are rotational deviations between the simulation and setup positions. Recently, the system has been augmented with the capabilities for image-guided positioning of targets in motion due to respiration and for gated treatment of those targets. The infrared markers provide a respiratory signal for tracking and gating of the treatment beam, with the x-ray system providing periodic confirmation of patient position relative to the gating window throughout the duration of the gated delivery.

Key Words: Image-guided radiation therapy, X-ray guidance, Image fusion, Respiratory gating

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PII: S0958-3947(08)00040-X

doi:10.1016/j.meddos.2008.02.005

Medical Dosimetry
Volume 33, Issue 2 , Pages 124-134, Summer 2008