The application of the sinusoidal model to lung cancer patient respiratory motion

被引:113
作者
George, R
Vedam, SS
Chung, TD
Ramakrishnan, V
Keall, PJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Radiat Oncol, Richmond, VA 23298 USA
[2] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Biomed Engn, Richmond, VA 23298 USA
[3] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Dept Biostat, Richmond, VA 23298 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1118/1.2001220
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Accurate modeling of the respiratory cycle is important to account for the effect of organ motion on dose calculation for lung cancer patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate the accuracy of a respiratory model for lung cancer patients. Lujan et al. [Med. Phys. 26(5), 715-720 (1999)] proposed a model, which became widely used, to describe organ motion due to respiration. This model assumes that the parameters do not vary between and within breathing cycles. In this study, first, the correlation of respiratory motion traces with the model f(t) as a function of the parameter n(n. = 1,2,3) was undertaken for each breathing cycle from 331 four-minute respiratory traces acquired from 24 lung cancer patients using three breathing types: free breathing, audio instruction, and audio-visual biofeedback. Because cos(2) and cos(4) had similar correlation coefficients, and cos2 and Cos' have a trigonometric relationship, for simplicity, the cos] value was consequently used for further analysis in which the variations in mean position (z(o)), amplitude of motion (b) and period (tau) with and without biofeedback or instructions were investigated. For all breathing types, the parameter values, mean position (zo), amplitude of motion (b), and period (tau) exhibited significant cycle-to-cycle variations. Audio-visual biofeedback showed the least variations for all three parameters (zo, b, and 7). It was found that mean position (zo) could be approximated with a normal distribution, and the amplitude of motion (b) and period (tau) could be approximated with log normal distributions. The overall probability density function (pdf) of f(t) for each of the three breathing types was fitted with three models: normal, bimodal, and the pdf of a simple harmonic oscillator. It was found that the normal and the bimodal models represented the overall respiratory motion pdfs with correlation values from 0.95 to 0.99, whereas the range of the simple harmonic oscillator pdf correlation values was 0.71 to 0.81. This study demonstrates that the pdfs of mean position (z(o)), amplitude of motion (b), and period (tau) can be used for sampling to obtain more realistic respiratory traces. The overall standard deviations of respiratory motion were 0.48, 0.57, and 0.55 cm for free breathing, audio instruction, and audio-visual biofeedback, respectively. (C) 2005 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:2850 / 2861
页数:12
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   A feasibility study on the prediction of tumour location in the lung from skin motion [J].
Ahn, S ;
Yi, B ;
Suh, Y ;
Kim, J ;
Lee, S ;
Shin, S ;
Shin, S ;
Choi, E .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY, 2004, 77 (919) :588-596
[2]   Uncertainties in CT-based radiation therapy treatment planning associated with patient breathing [J].
Balter, JM ;
TenHaken, RK ;
Lawrence, TS ;
Lam, KL ;
Robertson, JM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 1996, 36 (01) :167-174
[3]   Breathing pattern in humans: diversity and individuality [J].
Benchetrit, G .
RESPIRATION PHYSIOLOGY, 2000, 122 (2-3) :123-129
[4]   Effects of intra-fraction motion on IMRT dose delivery: statistical analysis and simulation [J].
Bortfeld, T ;
Jokivarsi, K ;
Goitein, M ;
Kung, J ;
Jiang, SB .
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2002, 47 (13) :2203-2220
[5]   Temporal variations in the pattern of breathing [J].
Bruce, EN .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 80 (04) :1079-1087
[6]   Accounting for center-of-mass target motion using convolution methods in Monte Carlo-based dose calculations of the lung [J].
Chetty, IJ ;
Rosu, M ;
McShan, DL ;
Fraass, BA ;
Balter, JM ;
Ten Haken, RK .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2004, 31 (04) :925-932
[7]   A fluence convolution method to account for respiratory motion in three-dimensional dose calculations of the liver: A Monte Carlo study [J].
Chetty, IJ ;
Rosu, M ;
Tyagi, N ;
Marsh, LH ;
McShan, DL ;
Balter, JM ;
Fraass, BA ;
Ten Haken, RK .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2003, 30 (07) :1776-1780
[8]   The effects of intra-fraction organ motion on the delivery of intensity-modulated field with a multileaf collimator [J].
Chui, CS ;
Yorke, E ;
Hong, L .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2003, 30 (07) :1736-1746
[9]  
DEJOURS P, 1996, RESPIRATION, P52
[10]   Dose correlation for thoracic motion in radiation therapy of breast cancer [J].
Ding, MS ;
Li, JS ;
Deng, J ;
Fourkal, E ;
Ma, CM .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2003, 30 (09) :2520-2529