4D CT and Its Application in Respiration Motion
Correction
Steve B. Jiang, Ph.D.
Department of
Radiation Oncology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School,
Boston, MA 02114, USA
The purpose of CT simulation in radiotherapy is to acquire
patient geometrical information and to build a patient geometrical model for
treatment planning. Errors in patient model caused by motion artifacts will
influence all treatment fractions and therefore should be handled carefully.
Due to the tumor respiratory motion, the captured tumor position and shape can
be heavily distorted. The distortions along the axis of motion could result in
either a lengthening or shortening of the target. The center of the imaged
target can be displaced by as much as the amplitude of the motion.
A newly developed technique that can reduce motion artifacts
and provide patient geometry throughout the whole breathing cycle is called
respiration-correlated or 4D CT scan. The basic idea for 4D
CT scan is that, at every position of interest
along patient’s long axis, images are over-sampled and each image is tagged
with breathing phase information. After the scan is done, images are sorted
based on the corresponding breathing phase signals. Thus, many 3D CT sets are
obtained, each corresponding to a particular breathing phase, and together
constitutes a 4D CT set
that covers that the whole breathing cycle. 4D CT
scan has been developed at various institutions with slightly different
flavors. In this talk, we will provide an overview of various implementations
of 4D CT scan. 4D
CT scan can be used to account for respiratory
motion to generate images with less distortion than 3D CT scan. 4D images also
contain respiratory motion information of tumor and organs that is not
available in a 3D CT image. This technology can be used for respiratory-gated
treatment to identify the patient-specific phase of minimum tumor motion,
determine residual tumor motion within the gate interval, and compare treatment
plans at different phases. It can also be used for non-gated treatment planning
to define ITV by combining gross tumor volume at all breathing phases or using
a method called maximum intensity projection. Of course 4D
CT will also play a vital role in the futuristic
4D radiotherapy where the tumor is tracked dynamically during the treatment
using multileaf collimator.
Existing problems for 4D CT
scan include the increased imaging dose, CT tube heating, and data management.
More importantly, one has to keep in mind that 4D CT
scan is not really 4D. Temporal information is mapped into one breathing cycle.
Irregular respiration will cause artifacts in 4D CT
images. Patient coaching can improve the regularity of breathing pattern and
thus reduce the residual artifacts. However this issue still deserves further
studies.