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1.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; 21(12): 263-271, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33270974

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study is to dually evaluate the effectiveness of PlanIQ in predicting the viability and outcome of dosimetric planning in cases of complex re-irradiation as well as generating an equivalent plan through Pinnacle integration. The study also postulates that a possible strength of PlanIQ lies in mitigating pre-optimization uncertainties tied directly to dose overlap regions where re-irradiation is necessary. METHODS: A retrospective patient selection (n = 20) included a diverse range of re-irradiation cases to be planned using Pinnacle auto-planning with PlanIQ integration. A consistent planning template was developed and applied across all cases. Direct plan comparisons of manual plans against feasibility-produced plans were performed by physician(s) with dosimetry recording relevant proximal OAR and planning timeline data. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: All re-irradiation cases were successfully predicted to be achievable per PlanIQ analyses with three cases (3/20) necessitating 95% target coverage conditions, previously exhibited in the manually planned counterparts, and determined acceptable under institutional standards. At the same time, PlanIQ consistently produced plans of equal or greater quality to the previously manually planned re-irradiation across all (20/20) trials (P = 0.05). Proximal OAR exhibited similar to slightly improved maximum point doses from feasibility-based planning with the largest advantages gained found within the subset of cranial and spine overlap cases, where improvements upward of 10.9% were observed. Mean doses to proximal tissues were found to be a statistically significant (P < 0.05) 5.0% improvement across the entire study. Documented planning times were markedly less than or equal to the time contributed to manual planning across all cases. CONCLUSION: Initial findings indicate that PlanIQ effectively provides the user clear feasibility feedback capable of facilitating decision-making on whether re-irradiation dose objectives and prescription dose coverage are possible at the onset of treatment planning thus eliminating possible trial and error associated with some manual planning. Introducing model-based prediction tools into planning of complex re-irradiation cases yielded positive outcomes on the final treatment plans.


Subject(s)
Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated , Re-Irradiation , Benchmarking , Feasibility Studies , Humans , Organs at Risk , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted , Retrospective Studies
2.
Magn Reson Med ; 53(5): 1013-7, 2005 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15844137

ABSTRACT

An important source of MRI acoustic noise-magnet cryostat warm-bore vibrations caused by eddy-current-induced forces-can be mitigated by a passive metal shield mounted on the outside of a vibration-isolated, vacuum-enclosed shielded gradient set. Finite-element (FE) calculations for a z-gradient indicate that a 2-mm-thick Cu layer wrapped on the gradient assembly can decrease mechanical power deposition in the warm bore and reduce warm-bore acoustic noise production by about 25 dB. Eliminating the conducting warm bore and other magnet parts as significant acoustic noise sources could lead to the development of truly quiet, fully functioning MRI systems with noise levels below 70 dB.


Subject(s)
Acoustics , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/instrumentation , Noise , Copper , Equipment Design , Vibration
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