Physics and Imaging in Radiation Oncology (Apr 2019)
Evaluating the impact of cone-beam computed tomography scatter mitigation strategies on radiotherapy dose calculation accuracy
Abstract
Background and purpose: The scatter induced image quality degradation of cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) prevents more advanced applications in radiotherapy. We evaluated the dose calculation accuracy on CBCT of various disease sites using different scatter mitigation strategies. Materials and methods: CBCT scans of two patient cohorts (C1, C2) were reconstructed using a uniform (USC) and an iterative scatter correction (ISC) method, combined with an anti-scatter grid (ASG). Head and neck (H&N), lung, pelvic region, and prostate patients were included. To achieve a high accuracy Hounsfield unit and physical density calibrations were performed. The dose distributions of the original treatment plans were analyzed with the γ evaluation method using criteria of 1%/2 mm using the planning CT as the reference. The investigated parameters were the mean γ (γmean), the points in agreement (Pγ≤1) and the 99th percentile (γ1%). Results: Significant differences between USC and ISC in C1 were found for the lung and prostate, where the latter using the ISC produced the best results with medians of 0.38, 98%, and 1.1 for γmean, Pγ≤1 and γ1%, respectively. For C2 the ISC with ASG showed an improvement for all imaging sites. The lung demonstrated the largest relative increase in accuracy with improvements between 48% and 54% for the medians of γmean, Pγ≤1 and γ1%. Conclusions: The introduced method demonstrated high dosimetric accuracy for H&N, prostate and pelvic region if an ASG is applied. A significantly lower accuracy was seen for lung. The ISC yielded a higher robustness against scatter variations than the USC. Keywords: Cone beam CT, Dose, Adaptive radiotherapy