Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence...

59
Physics Sunday, March 4, 2018 9:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.

Transcript of Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence...

Page 1: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Physics

Sunday, March 4, 2018

9:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.

Page 2: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Social Q&A

Use your phone, tablet, or laptop to

➢ Submit questions to speakers and moderators

➢ Answer interactive questions / audience response polls

astro.org/RefresherSocialQA

Page 3: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Faculty DisclosuresFaculty and Committee disclosures are also on the 2018 ASTRO Annual Refresher Course website.

Name Employment Funding Sources Ownership or Investments

Leadership

Laurence Court, PhD MD Anderson Cancer Center

None None None

Page 4: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy

Laurence Court, PhD

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

Houston TX

[email protected]

Page 5: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Disclosures

• Employer: UT MD Anderson Cancer Center

• Grants from: NCI, CPRIT, Varian, Elekta, Mobius

Page 6: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Acknowledgements

• Many slides from Geoff Ibbott, Carri Glide-Hurst, Dave Fuller, Ashley Rubinstein, Gabriel Sawakuchi, Daniel O’Brien, Bas Raaymakers, Elekta and ViewRay

Page 7: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Learning Objectives

• To be able to describe the different approaches to MRI-guided radiation therapy

• To be able to discuss some of the dosimetric challenges with MRI-guided radiation therapy (treatment planning, physics QA…..)

Page 8: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Contents

• Why MR-guided RT?

• What does MR-guided RT look like?

• What is the impact of the magnetic field on distributions?

• What ways are there to mitigate this?

• Anything else to worry about (radiation biology experiments)

• Some physics QA challenges

• How many patients have been treated?

• Summary

Page 9: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Why MR for RT?Very brief introduction to what MR can offer us

Page 10: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

What clinical benefits could MRbring to radiotherapy?

Slide from Dave Fuller

Page 11: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

• Fundamental advantage:– Simultaneous imaging of not only

anatomy, but of functional and spatial/motion of both tumor and normal tissue over time

• Ultimately, we want data that is:– Anticipatory (predictive/early)

– Actionable (changes care)

– Accurate (in time and 3D space)

– Additive (more than 1 feature/function)

Why should the future be MR?

Slide from Dave Fuller

Page 12: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

DiagnosisStaging

SimulationTreatment Planning

Tx DeliveryOn-Line Adaption &

Tx Assessment

Off-line Response

Assessment

Role of MRI is growing in Radiation OncologyExpansion to Treatment Time imaging

MR Images courtesy of Philips

MR ScannerSequences and Post-processing S/W

MR ScannerMR Scanner w/ MR-RT Oncology Configuration

Treatment Planning S/W with MR support

MRI Guided Radiation therapy

G. Ibbott, RSNA, Chicago, 2017

Page 13: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

MRI-guided RadiotherapyIntroduction to in-room MR-guided RT

Page 14: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Concept of MRI acceleratorAccelerator

MLC

beam

• Simultaneous MRI and irradiation• To do this:

1. Mount the Linac on a rotatable gantry around the MRI magnet ➢ The radiation isocentre is at the centre of the MRI imaging

volume

2. Modify the linac to make it compatible with the MRI

3. Modify the MRI system to➢Minimise material in the beam path and ensure it is

homogeneous ➢Minimise magnetic field at the Linac

• Technical issues• Magnetic interference• Beam absorption• RF interference

Raaymakers et al. PMB 2009 Based on a slide from Elekta

Page 15: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

• 15cm central region free from coils

• 8cm Al eq

• Active magnetic shielding (pair of shield coils with opposite polarity)

Raa

ymak

ers

et a

l. P

MB

20

09

Page 16: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Impact of magnetic field on dose distributions

Page 17: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

17

Point dose kernels with and without a magnetic field

Raaijmakers et al. PMB 2008

Page 18: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Dose deposition in a magnetic fieldThe Electron Return Effect (ERE)

γ

γ

e-

e-

γ

e-

B = 0

γ

γ

e-

e-

γ

e-

B = 1.5 T

Ra

aijm

ake

rset

al.

PM

B 2

00

8

Page 19: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Dose perturbation effects0 T 1.5 T

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 80

20

40

60

80

100

B = 1.5 T

B = 0 T

Depth (cm)

Re

lative

Do

se

(%

)

Raaijmakers et al, Phys Med Biol, 2008

Page 20: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

If field covers whole phantom…..R

aa

ijma

kers

et

al, P

hys M

ed

Bio

l, 2

00

8

Page 21: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Impact of surface orientation

Raaijmakers 2007

Page 22: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Varying exit angle

Raaijmakers 2007

Page 23: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

lungsoft

tissue

1.5T B-field

6 MV beam

soft

tissue

23

Magnetic-field-induced dose effects in lung

Page 24: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Magnetic-field-induced dose effects

lungsoft

tissue

soft

tissue

Raaijmakers et al, PMB, 2008

24

Rubinstein et al, Med Phys, 2015

Page 25: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

8 MV

Beam

25

Page 26: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Ways to mitigate the impact of the magnetic field on the dose distributions

Page 27: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Mitigating dose perturbations

• Magnetic field strength

• System geometry

• Treatment planning

27

Page 28: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

28

Princess Margaret Hospital - MR on Rails

G. Ibbott, RSNA, Chicago, 2017

Page 29: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Impact of magnetic field strength

Page 30: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Lower magnetic field strengthViewray MRIdian: Three Co-60 sources and a 0.35 T MRI

30

Dan Low, MRI Guided Radiotherapy, 2017

www.viewray.com

Page 31: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Wooten et al, IJROBP 92, 771-778, 2015

Page 32: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Dan Low, MRI Guided Radiotherapy, 2017

Page 33: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Change system geometry

Parallel orientation

Perpendicular orientation

33

Keall et al, Semin Radiat Oncol, 2014

• The Cross Cancer Institute 6 MV/0.6 T Linac-MRI• The Australian 6 MV/1 T MRI-Linac

Page 34: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Account for perturbations in treatment planning

• Parallel-opposed radiation beams

• IMRT

• Monte-Carlo-based treatment planning

34

Page 35: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Raaijmakers et al, PMB, 2008

Single beam

5 cm beam

Parallel-opposed beams

35

Water

Water

Lung

Page 36: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 700

20

40

60

80

100

Dose (Gy)

Vo

lum

e (

%)

Parotis LeftParotis Right

Submand Left Submand Right

BrainMyelum

DVH for optimized dose distribution oropharynxComparison between B = 0 T and B = 1.5 T

Raaijmakers et al. Phys. Med. Biol. 52 (2007) p. 7045-54

Page 37: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Mitigating dose perturbations - summary

• Magnetic field strength

• System geometry

• Treatment planning

37

Page 38: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Radiation biology experimentsImpact of magnetic field on dose response

Page 39: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org
Page 40: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

40

Rubinstein et al, Med Phys, 2015

Mouse lung phantom Co-60, 1.5T

2.5 cm beam

Single beamParallel-opposed

beams

Page 41: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Block for Co-60 beam

5 cm diam. poles

Electromagnet coils

PA Irradiation AP Irradiation

Page 42: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

The effect of a strong magnetic field on radiation-induced lung damage

• No Magnetic Field

• 9, 10, 10.5, 11, 12, 13 Gy dose groups

• 10 mice per group

• Magnetic Field

• 9, 10, 10.5, 11, 12, 13 Gy dose groups

• 10 mice per group

• Control

• 0 Gy

• 20 mice

42

140 Mice

(C57L)

C57L Mice: • Acute pneumonitis• Chronic fibrosis• No pleural effusions

Page 43: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

43

0

0

2 0

4 0

6 0

8 0

1 0 0

1 2 0 1 4 0 1 6 0 1 8 0 2 0 0 2 2 0 2 4 0

D a y s

Pe

rc

en

t s

urv

iva

l

1 1 G y - 0 T

1 1 G y - 1 .5 T

1 2 G y - 0 T

1 2 G y - 1 .5 T

1 3 G y - 0 T

1 3 G y - 1 .5 T

1 0 .5 G y - 0 T

1 0 .5 G y - 1 .5 T

C o n tro l

9 G y

1 0 G y

Post-irradiation survival

0

0

2 0

4 0

6 0

8 0

1 0 0

1 2 0 1 4 0 1 6 0 1 8 0 2 0 0 2 2 0 2 4 0

S u rv iv a l: A ll m ic e

D a y s

Pe

rc

en

t s

urv

iva

l

0 T

1 .5 T

Page 44: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

0

2 0

4 0

6 0

8 0

1 0 0

9 1 0 1 1 1 2 1 3

In c re a s e d R e s p . R a te a t 5 M o n th s

D o s e (G y )

%M

ice

Wit

h I

nc

re

as

ed

RR

0 T

1 .5 T

E D 50 (95% C I)

1 0 .7 2 G y (1 0 .4 5 -1 1 .0 0 )

1 0 .5 0 G y (1 0 .4 1 -1 0 .5 9 )

44

> 190 bpm

Page 45: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

0

2 0

4 0

6 0

8 0

1 0 0

9 1 0 1 1 1 2 1 3

In c re a s e d L u n g D e n s ity a t 5 M o n th s

D o s e (G y )

%M

ice

Wit

h I

nc

re

as

ed

De

ns

0 T

1 .5 T

E D 50 (95% C I)

1 0 .5 6 G y (1 0 .5 2 -1 0 .6 1 )

1 0 .2 6 G y (1 0 .1 3 -1 0 .3 9 )

> 0.64 g/cm3

45

Pre-irradiation

Pre-irradiation 5 months post-irradiation

Page 46: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

0

2 0

4 0

6 0

8 0

1 0 0

9 1 0 1 1 1 2 1 3

R e d u c e d H e a lth y L u n g V o lu m e a t 5 M o n th s

D o s e (G y )

%M

ice

Wit

h R

ed

uc

ed

Vo

l

0 T

1 .5 T

E D 50 (95% C I)

1 0 .5 6 G y (1 0 .4 8 -1 0 .6 4 )

1 0 .3 3 G y (1 0 .1 9 -1 0 .4 8 )

< 0.42 cm3

46

Page 47: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Radiation biology experiments (so far)

• Magnetic field dose not change response (cell experiments)

• Pre-clinical (murine) studies:

• Magnetic field had no impact on survival

• Magnetic field had small (2% or less), but significant impact on respiratory

rate, lung density, and healthy lung volume

Page 48: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Impact on physics QAImpact of the magnetic field on physics QA equipment and measurements

Page 49: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Standard QA measurements

• Ion chamber in solid water or plastic phantom

Page 50: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Effect of magnetic field on dose measurements

Meijsing et al, 2009

Page 51: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Meijsing et al, 2009

Page 52: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

-0.5%

0.0%

0.5%

1.0%

1.5%

0 45 90 135 180 225 270 315 0

Re

lati

ve C

ham

be

r R

esp

on

se

Chamber Orientation (deg)

-0.5%

0.0%

0.5%

1.0%

1.5%

0 45 90 135 180 225 270 315 0

Re

lati

ve C

ham

be

r R

esp

on

se

Chamber Orientation (deg)

• IEC1997 requires<= 0.5% variation for reference dosimetry

• Solid Water Phantom• Variation of 1.3%

• Water Phantom• Variation < 0.3%

More measurement effects

PTW 30013 Farmer ChamberPhantom: 30 x 30 x 15 cm3 solid waterChamber: long-axis parallel to magnetic fieldSCD: 143.5 cmDepth: 5 cm

In Water

Slide from O’Brien and Sawakuchi

Page 53: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

No magnetic fieldMonte Carlo

(a) 0° orientation

(a) 180° orientation

beam

beam

Slide from O’Brien and Sawakuchi

Page 54: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

1.5 T Magnetic Field

Monte Carlo

(a) 0° orientation

(a) 180° orientation

beam

beam

𝑩

𝑩

Slide from O’Brien and Sawakuchi

Page 55: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

• Power supply moved away from detector

• Must use MV beam to position at isocenter

• Must calibrate in MR Linac beam

Initial Testing of MR-Compatible ArcCheck QA Device

G. Ibbott, RSNA, Chicago, 2017

Page 56: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

MR-guided RT is already here

Page 57: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

• January 2014 -June 2016, 316 patients treated

• Online ART MR-IGRT (6 mos)

• Cine gating (9 mos)

MR-Co60 Clinical since Jan, 2014

Page 58: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

HFHS MR-Linac Program Summary (ViewRay system)07/19/17 to 01/23/18

• 47 Patients

• 687 tx fractions completed

• Maximum tx/day = 9 26%

19%

17%11%

11%

6%

2%

2%

2%2%

2%Male Pelvis

Abdomen

Lung

Liver

Pancreas

Breast

Chest Wall

Esophagus

Kidney

Bone

H&N

Treatment by Disease Site (%)

46.8%

46.8%

6.4%

Treatment Distribution

SBRT Conventional APBI

Slide from Carri Glide-Hurst

Page 59: Physics - American Society for Radiation Oncology · Physics: MRI-guided Radiation Therapy Laurence Court, PhD University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston TX lecourt@mdanderson.org

Key Points/Summary

• In-room MRI-guided radiotherapy is here, with more to come

• The permanent magnetic field can impact dose distributions and measurements

• These can be accounted for in several ways

• Radiobiology experiments do not indicate any clinically significant issues (although indicate careful observation of patients)