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What are the differences in QA betweenCT scanner and CT simulator? References: AAPM Report 39 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Greetings from Philadelphia!


1
Greetings from Philadelphia!
Independance Hall
2
Quality Assurance of CT Simulatorin Modern
Radiation TherapyAndrew Wu, PhD,
FAAPMDepartment of Radiologic SciencesThomas
Jefferson UniversityPhiladelphia,
PennsylvaniaU.S.A.
  • AAPM, Task Group Reports - 39 (CT scan), 40(Rad
    Onc), 53(Tx planning), and 66 (CT simulator).

3
What are the differences in QA between CT
scanner and CT simulator?
  • References
  • AAPM Report 39
  • "Specification and Acceptance Testing for
    Computed Tomography Scanners".
  • AAPM Report 66
  • "Quality Assurance for Computed Tomography
    Simulators and Computed Tomography Simulation
    Process".

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The CT-simulator IS a CT scanner equipped with
  • 1) A flat table-top,
  • 2) A large bore opening (donut hole)
  • with a large field-of-view (FOV),
  • 3) External patient positioning lasers, and
  • 4) A specialized 3D software for treatment
    planning (Virtual simulation).

7
What is Virtual simulation ?
  • Using specialized CT and planning software in an
    advanced computer, the planning of radiation
    therapy treatment has the ability
  • 1) to delineate tumors and adjacent normal
    structures in 3 dimensions, and
  • 2) to accurately place radiation beams for the
    patients to be treated.

8
QA of CT-simulator includes
  • (I) Geometric accuracy
  • Positioning lasers
  • Movements of mechanical components.
  • (II) Imaging performance
  • CT number accuracy
  • Image noise
  • In plane spatial integrity
  • field uniformity
  • Spatial resolution
  • Contrast resolution
  • (III) Safety of patients
  • Radiation dose to patient

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  • (I) Geometric accuracy
  • Positioning lasers

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  • (I) Geometric accuracy
  • Positioning lasers

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  • (I) Geometric accuracy
  • Positioning lasers

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  • (I) Geometric accuracy
  • Positioning lasers

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(I) Geometric accuracy - Movements of mechanical
components.
The registration device allows the patient
immobilization device to be moved from the
CT-scanner to a treatment machine in a
reproducible manner,
14
  • (I) Geometric accuracy -
  • Movements of mechanical components.

15
  • (I) Geometric accuracy -
  • Movements of mechanical components.

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(II) Image Quality QA Tests
  1. CT number accuracy
  2. Image noise
  3. In plane spatial integrity
  4. field uniformity
  5. Spatial resolution
  6. Contrast resolution

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Image performance evaluation phantom Image
noise and field uniformity
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Image performance evaluation phantom In plane
spatial integrity
23
Image performance evaluation phantom spatial
resolution (line-pair/cm)
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Image performance evaluation phantom contrast
resolution.
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  • (III) Safety of patients - Radiation dose to
    patient - CTDI

26
Liberty Bell
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Hair loss in patients who received CT radiation
overdoses
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  • (III) Verify safe dose delivered from CT
  • CTDI is Computerized Tomography Dose Index
  • represents the integrated dose, along the z axis,
    from one axial CT-scan (one rotation of the x-ray
    tube)

CT slide
CTDI
z
30
TDCI .
Z
  • Theoretically, the CTDI should be measured along
    z-axis from plus to minus infinite, i.e., CTDIFDA
    or CTDI8.
  • In practice, the ion chamber to measure CTDI is
    typically 100 mm long, the IEC has specifically
    defined CTDI100.
  • CTDI100 is defferent from CTDI 8 .

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-50
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Definition of CTDI100
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A body and head phantom for measurement of dose
from CT-scans. Pencil ionization chamber is
inserted in the center of the body phantom.
32 cm dia
16 cm dia
33
where
34
and
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What are you measuring?
  • If you just measured CTDI100 for QA,
  • CTDI100 the dose in air at the center of a
    single slide of an axial scan integrating over a
    length of 100 mm in the clinical setting with an
    ionization chamber.

36
CT Dose Index and Patient Dose They Are Not the
Same Thing ?
  • By Cynthia H. McCollough, PhD, Shuai Leng, PhD,
    Lifeng Yu, PhD, Dianna D. Cody, PhD, John M.
    Boone, PhD and Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD
  • Radiology

37
Radiation exposure from CT scans in childhood and
subsequent risk of leukaemia and brain tumours a
retrospective cohort study
  • Published by The Lancet, Early Online
    Publication, 7 June 2012
  • doi10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60815-0Cite or Link
    Using DOI
  • Dr Mark S Pearce PhD a , Jane A Salotti PhD a,
    Mark P Little PhD c, Kieran McHugh FRCR d,
    Choonsik Lee PhD c, Kwang Pyo Kim PhD e, Nicola L
    Howe MSc a, Cecile M Ronckers PhD c f, Preetha
    Rajaraman PhD c, Alan W Craft MD b, Louise Parker
    PhD g, Amy Berrington de González DPhil c

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TIME magazine reported
  • Between 1996 and 2010, the use of CT scans
    climbed nearly 8 annually.
  • That translated into a doubling of radiation
    exposure per capita among the study participants,
    from 1.2 mSv to 2.3 mSv.
  • Also, a doubling of the portion of patients who
    ended up receiving high (gt20-50 mSv) or very high
    (gt50 mSv) doses of radiation from the
    scans.Read more http//healthland.time.com/2012
    /06/13/too-many-scans-use-of-ct-scans-triples-stud
    y-finds/ixzz1ykHNz5vt

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Findings
  • During follow-up,
  • 74 of 178 604 patients were diagnosed with
    leukaemia and 135 of 176 587 patients were
    diagnosed with brain tumors.
  • It was noted a positive association between
    radiation dose from CT scans received in
    childhood and leukaemia (p00097) and brain
    tumours (plt00001).

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Findings (continue)
  • Compared with patients who received a dose of
    less than 0.5 cGy,
  • the relative risk of leukaemia for patients who
    received a cumulative dose of at least 3 cGy
    (mean dose 5.1-1.3 cGy) was 318 and
  • the relative risk of brain cancer for patients
    who received a cumulative dose of 5-7.4 cGy (mean
    dose 6.0 cGy) was 282.

41
Radiation exposure from CT scans in childhood and
subsequent risk of leukaemia and brain tumours a
retrospective cohort studyMark S Pearce, Jane A
Salotti, Mark P Little, Kieran McHugh, Choonsik
Lee, Kwang Pyo Kim, Nicola L Howe, Cecile M
Ronckers, Preetha Rajaraman, Sir Alan W Craft,
Louise Parker, Amy Berrington de
Gonzálezwww.thelancet.com Published online June
7, 2012 DOI10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60815-0
42
Radiation exposure from CT scans in childhood and
subsequent risk of leukaemia and brain tumours a
retrospective cohort studyMark S Pearce, Jane A
Salotti, Mark P Little, Kieran McHugh, Choonsik
Lee, Kwang Pyo Kim, Nicola L Howe, Cecile M
Ronckers, Preetha Rajaraman, Sir Alan W Craft,
Louise Parker, Amy Berrington de
Gonzálezwww.thelancet.com Published online June
7, 2012 DOI10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60815-0
43
Interpretation .
  • Use of CT scans in children to deliver cumulative
    doses of about 5 cGy might almost triple the risk
    of leukaemia and doses of about 6 cGy might
    triple the risk of brain cancer.

44
To verify patient dose for medical imaging
examinations or procedures such as CT Simulation
in current radiation therapy practices today, it
is important to revisit the concept of CTDI.
45
Therefore, CTDIave CTDIw
  • For an axial image of body CT, the CTDI is
    typically a factor or two higher at the surface
    than at the center of the field-of-view.
  • The average CTDI across the field-of-view (x-y
    plane) is given by the weighted CTDI (CTDIw),
  • where CTDIw 2/3 CTDI(surface)
  • 1/3 CTDI(center)

46
Equipment typically used to measure CTDI100
includes an integrating electrometer (black
arrow), a 100-mm-long CTDI ionization chamber
(white arrow), and a CTDI phantom made of
polymethylmethacrylate (arrowhead).
CTDIave CTDIw
McCollough C H et al. Radiology 2011259311-316
47
(a) Radiation dose profile along a line
perpendicular to the scan plane shows a peak dose
level at the center of the primary beam and long
dose tails caused by scattered radiation.
McCollough C H et al. Radiology 2011259311-316
48
(a) Radiation dose profile along a line
perpendicular to the scan plane shows a peak dose
level at the center of the primary beam and long
dose tails caused by scattered radiation.
McCollough C H et al. Radiology 2011259311-316
49
Multiple Scan Average Dose (MSAD)
  • In a volumetric scan with multiple slides, N,
  • MSAD SUM of (individual scan dose profiles)
  • As the number of individual scans increases,
  • the multiple scans average dose (MSAD) also
    increases and reaches a limiting value.

50
  • where
  • DN,I(z) is the dose as a function of position for
    a multiple scan dose profile consisting of N
    scans separated by a constant distance between
    scans equal to I.

51
Multiple scan dose profiles (MSDP)Using the
CTDI100 definition, volume CTDIw (CTDIvol),
which is equivalent to MSAD.
52
Spiral CT
  • the ratio of the table travel per rotation (I) to
    the total nominal beam width (N.T) is referred to
    as pitch.
  • Therefore,
  • where
  • CTDIw represents the average radiation dose
    over the
  • x and y directions and
  • CTDIvol represents the average radiation
    dose over the
  • x, y, and z directions.

53
Dose-Length Product (DLP)
  • Defined as the total energy absorbed by a scan
    volume from a given clinical protocol.
  • DLP (mGy-cm)CTDIvol (mGy) x Scan length(cm)
  • While two scan protocols may have the same
    CTDIvol, their DLP value may be substantially
    difference in scan volume length.

54
  • Real CT Doses - pt size-specific dose (PSSD)
  • For a patient with an anteroposterior dimension
    of 30 cm and a lateral dimension of 40 cm, the
    anteroposterior lateral value would be 70 cm
    and the mean patient dose in the center of the
    scan range would be approximately equivalent to
    the CTDIvol value reported on the console.
  • CTDIvol measurements made on the basis of 32-cm
    phantoms.
  • It would require a different scale factor if the
    measurements made on the basis of 16-cm phantoms .

55
Graph shows relative dose (mean patient dose per
1 mGy of scanner output, CTDIvol) for an
abdominal CT scan and different patient sizes
(here represented by the sum of anteroposterior
A/P and lateral dimensions).
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McCollough C H et al. Radiology 2011259311-316
56
Real CT Doses
  • For a neonate having both anteroposterior and
    lateral dimensions of 10 cm, the anteroposterior
    lateral value would be 20 cm and the mean
    patient dose in the center of an abdomen scan
    would be about 2.3 times the displayed CTDI
    value.
  • CTDIvol measurements made on the basis of 32-cm
    phantoms.
  • It would require a different scale factor if the
    measurements made on the basis of 16-cm phantoms
    .

57
Graph shows relative dose (mean patient dose per
1 mGy of scanner output, CTDIvol) for an
abdominal CT scan and different patient sizes
(here represented by the sum of anteroposterior
A/P and lateral dimensions).
2.3
70
20
McCollough C H et al. Radiology 2011259311-316
58
CT Dose Index and Patient Dose They Are Not the
Same Thing ?
NO, the real patient dose is HIGHER than CTDI !
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FDA proposed
  • A label that would include a cautionary statement
    saying the device is not for use on patients
    under a certain size.
  • The label, along with other aspects of the draft
    guidance and FDA's approach to pediatric imaging
    devices,
  • were debated during a public meeting on Monday,
    July 16, 2012.

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Thank you!
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