2016
DOI: 10.1118/1.4957761
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WE‐AB‐207A‐08: BEST IN PHYSICS (IMAGING): Advanced Scatter Correction and Iterative Reconstruction for Improved Cone‐Beam CT Imaging On the TrueBeam Radiotherapy Machine

Abstract: Purpose: To improve CBCT image quality for image‐guided radiotherapy by applying advanced reconstruction algorithms to overcome scatter, noise, and artifact limitations Methods: CBCT is used extensively for patient setup in radiotherapy. However, image quality generally falls short of diagnostic CT, limiting soft‐tissue based positioning and potential applications such as adaptive radiotherapy. The conventional TrueBeam CBCT reconstructor uses a basic scatter correction and FDK reconstruction, resulting in res… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This commercially available iterative_CBCT algorithm presented here is different from other approaches focused on improving image quality of low-dose CBCT scans 17,28,31,44 in that it uses the same raw projection data from standard Truebeam CBCT acquisitions and applies software-only methods to improve low-contrast detection and soft-tissue visibility. 40,45,46 Consistent with results in the literature, 7 -10,13,17,23,30 -33,47 -49 iterative reconstruction uses physical constraints, such as regularization penalty terms to improve image quality by reducing image noise and enhancing CNR. This iterative reconstruction algorithm reduces noise and enhances low-contrast detection while maintaining spatial resolution relative to the standard (FDK-based) approach.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 64%
“…This commercially available iterative_CBCT algorithm presented here is different from other approaches focused on improving image quality of low-dose CBCT scans 17,28,31,44 in that it uses the same raw projection data from standard Truebeam CBCT acquisitions and applies software-only methods to improve low-contrast detection and soft-tissue visibility. 40,45,46 Consistent with results in the literature, 7 -10,13,17,23,30 -33,47 -49 iterative reconstruction uses physical constraints, such as regularization penalty terms to improve image quality by reducing image noise and enhancing CNR. This iterative reconstruction algorithm reduces noise and enhances low-contrast detection while maintaining spatial resolution relative to the standard (FDK-based) approach.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 64%
“…This is most common in abdominal cases without fiducials that are located far from the diaphragm. For these cases, the iterative CBCT reconstruction algorithm, 23 an additional add‐on TrueBeam imaging feature, has been useful to improve image quality and target visibility on the amplitude‐gated CBCT. For the latter two instances where the target is not visible on fluoroscopy and the amplitude gate thresholds are estimated from either 4DCBCT motion analysis or the planning phases, the phase dial in the TrueBeam software can be used to correlate the current respiratory trace with phase.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is most common in abdominal cases without fiducials that are located far from the diaphragm. For these cases, the iterative CBCT reconstruction algorithm, 23 The use of 4DCBCT and fluoroscopy in the daily pretreatment imaging process leads to an increase in patient imaging dose compared to non-gated treatments. However, the trade-off between imaging dose and the decreased treatment volumes achievable with accurately delivered gated treatments must be considered.…”
Section: B3 | Robustness To Irregular Breathingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…During treatment of HNSCC, CBCT imaging is commonly obtained daily or weekly for setup veri cation and to monitor for changes in patient anatomy due to tumor response or weight loss. Over the past decade, innovations including Varian's Iterative CBCT have tremendously improved the resolution and quality of cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) such that discrete masses and lymph node conglomerates are readily discernable [5][6][7]. However, this large dataset of CT information has not been routinely used to monitor treatment responses largely because of the low resolution of CBCT in the past.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%