Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Oncology (196)
- Radiology (61)
- Physical Sciences and Mathematics (43)
- Life Sciences (35)
- Diseases (31)
-
- Physics (27)
- Medical Sciences (24)
- Neoplasms (20)
- Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment (16)
- Biochemistry, Biophysics, and Structural Biology (13)
- Medical Biophysics (12)
- Other Physics (12)
- Genetics and Genomics (11)
- Public Health (11)
- Surgery (11)
- Animal Experimentation and Research (9)
- Biochemistry (9)
- Research Methods in Life Sciences (9)
- Translational Medical Research (9)
- Cell and Developmental Biology (8)
- Cancer Biology (7)
- Computer Sciences (7)
- Molecular Genetics (7)
- Artificial Intelligence and Robotics (6)
- Chemicals and Drugs (6)
- Microbiology (6)
- Statistics and Probability (6)
- Institution
-
- Thomas Jefferson University (86)
- Beaumont Health (68)
- The Texas Medical Center Library (68)
- Chulalongkorn University (35)
- Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell (34)
-
- Aga Khan University (22)
- University of Kentucky (17)
- Loma Linda University (14)
- Grand Valley State University (12)
- Western University (9)
- Louisiana State University (8)
- Selected Works (8)
- University of Nebraska Medical Center (7)
- Technological University Dublin (6)
- Old Dominion University (5)
- Baptist Health South Florida (4)
- Virginia Commonwealth University (4)
- Wayne State University (4)
- University of Nevada, Las Vegas (3)
- City University of New York (CUNY) (2)
- Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (2)
- Misericordia University (2)
- Sheridan College (2)
- University of Louisville (2)
- Valparaiso University (2)
- Claremont Colleges (1)
- Dartmouth College (1)
- DePaul University (1)
- East Tennessee State University (1)
- Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library, The George Washington University (1)
- Keyword
-
- Radiation (29)
- Humans (28)
- Radiotherapy (28)
- Radiation therapy (18)
- Kazakhstan (Asia) (14)
-
- Science & Technology (13)
- Life Sciences & Biomedicine (12)
- Oncology (12)
- Chernobyl Nuclear Accident (10)
- Breast cancer (9)
- Cancer (9)
- Chornobyl (Ukraine (9)
- Glioblastoma (9)
- Proton therapy (9)
- Radiosurgery (9)
- 1986) (8)
- Chemotherapy (8)
- Male (8)
- Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted (8)
- American International Health Alliance (7)
- Computer-Assisted (7)
- Correspondence (7)
- Head and neck cancer (7)
- Prostate cancer (7)
- Radiotherapy Dosage (7)
- Radiotherapy Planning (7)
- Texas Hadassah Medical Research Foundation (7)
- VMAT (7)
- Brachytherapy (6)
- Carcinoma (6)
- Publication Year
- Publication
-
- Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers (76)
- Conference Presentation Abstracts (52)
- Works on Radiation Effects: 1990-2020 (50)
- Chulalongkorn University Theses and Dissertations (Chula ETD) (35)
- Journal Articles (34)
-
- Dissertations & Theses (Open Access) (18)
- Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects (14)
- Department of Radiation Oncology (13)
- Posters (12)
- Culminating Experience Projects (11)
- Articles (9)
- Radiation Medicine Faculty Publications (8)
- Posters and Presentations: Medical Imaging & Therapeutic Sciences (7)
- Biochemistry Publications (6)
- LSU Master's Theses (6)
- Theses and Dissertations--Radiation Medicine (5)
- All Publications (4)
- Theses and Dissertations (4)
- Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository (3)
- Health Physics & Diagnostic Sciences Faculty Publications (3)
- House Staff Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Conference (2020-) (3)
- Medical Student Research Symposium (3)
- LSU Doctoral Dissertations (2)
- Minesh Mehta (2)
- Publications (2)
- Publications and Research (2)
- Publications and Scholarship (2)
- Rupesh Kotecha (2)
- Section of Neurosurgery (2)
- Alonso Gutierrez (1)
Articles 31 - 60 of 440
Full-Text Articles in Radiation Medicine
Dosimetric Significance Of Manual Density Overrides In Oropharyngeal Cancer, Thomas Lo Greco
Dosimetric Significance Of Manual Density Overrides In Oropharyngeal Cancer, Thomas Lo Greco
Culminating Experience Projects
Kilovoltage computed tomography plays a crucial role in radiotherapy planning. However, the presence of high-density metallic objects can introduce streaking artifacts in CT scans, resulting in inaccurate dose calculations by the treatment planning software. Previous studies have explored manual density overrides and artifact reduction algorithms individually to enhance dose calculation accuracy, but their combined application on patient plans within a treatment planning system remains unexplored.
This research aims to assess the necessity of manual density overrides when an artifact reduction algorithm is already employed to address dental artifacts in oropharyngeal cancer treatment plans. A total of 20 previously treated volumetric …
Intensity Modulated Bolus Electron Conformal Therapy (Im-Bect): Methods For Quality Assurance Of Prime Intensity Modulators And Evaluation Of Planned Im-Bect Dose Distributions, Andrew S. Mcguffey
Intensity Modulated Bolus Electron Conformal Therapy (Im-Bect): Methods For Quality Assurance Of Prime Intensity Modulators And Evaluation Of Planned Im-Bect Dose Distributions, Andrew S. Mcguffey
LSU Doctoral Dissertations
Purpose: Intensity-modulated bolus electron conformal therapy (IM-BECT) shapes homogeneous dose distributions to superficial, irregularly-shaped target volumes, avoiding nearby critical structures. This dissertation provides research useful for translating IM-BECT to the radiotherapy clinic by: (1) developing and testing a factory quality assurance (QA) method for fabricated Passive Radiotherapy Intensity Modulator for Electrons (PRIME) devices and (2) verifying an IM-BECT planning and delivery process using end-to-end tests.
Methods: The IM-BECT planning and delivery process determines beam parameters and treatment devices (cutout, bolus, PRIME device) using .decimal’s (Sanford, FL) ElectronRT (eRT) planning system; calculates dose using a pencil-beam redefinition algorithm modified for PRIME …
Differences In Clinical Outcomes Based On Molecular Markers In Glioblastoma Patients Treated With Concurrent Tumor-Treating Fields And Chemoradiation: Exploratory Analysis Of The Spare Trial, Louis Cappelli, Mehak Majid Khan, Allison Kayne, Spencer Poiset, Ryan Miller, Ayesha Ali, Muneeb Khan Niazi, Wenyin Shi, Iyad Alnahhas
Differences In Clinical Outcomes Based On Molecular Markers In Glioblastoma Patients Treated With Concurrent Tumor-Treating Fields And Chemoradiation: Exploratory Analysis Of The Spare Trial, Louis Cappelli, Mehak Majid Khan, Allison Kayne, Spencer Poiset, Ryan Miller, Ayesha Ali, Muneeb Khan Niazi, Wenyin Shi, Iyad Alnahhas
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
Background: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary malignant brain tumor in adults. Despite enormous research efforts, GBM remains a deadly disease. The standard-of-care treatment for patients with newly diagnosed with GBM as per the National Cancer Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) is maximal safe surgical resection followed by concurrent chemoradiation and maintenance temozolomide (TMZ) with adjuvant tumor treating fields (TTF). TTF is a non-pharmacological intervention that delivers low-intensity, intermediate frequency alternating electric fields that arrests cell proliferation by disrupting the mitotic spindle. TTF have been shown in a large clinical trial to improve patient outcomes when added to radiation and …
Long-Term Outcomes Of Bevacizumab And Chemoradiation For Locoregionally Advanced Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma: A Nonrandomized Controlled Trial, Nancy Y. Lee, Jonathan Harris, John Kim, Adam Garden, James Mechalakos, David G. Pfister, Anthony T.C. Chan, Kenneth Hu, A. Dimitrios Colevas, Steven Frank, George Shenouda, Voichita Bar-Ad, John N. Waldron, Paul M. Harari, Adam Raben, Pedro Torres-Saavedra, Quynh-Thu Le
Long-Term Outcomes Of Bevacizumab And Chemoradiation For Locoregionally Advanced Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma: A Nonrandomized Controlled Trial, Nancy Y. Lee, Jonathan Harris, John Kim, Adam Garden, James Mechalakos, David G. Pfister, Anthony T.C. Chan, Kenneth Hu, A. Dimitrios Colevas, Steven Frank, George Shenouda, Voichita Bar-Ad, John N. Waldron, Paul M. Harari, Adam Raben, Pedro Torres-Saavedra, Quynh-Thu Le
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
IMPORTANCE: The long-term outcomes associated with adding bevacizumab, a vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitor, to standard chemoradiation have continued to be favorable for a group of patients with locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC).
OBJECTIVE: To assess long-term toxic effects and clinical outcomes associated with chemotherapy, radiation therapy (RT), and bevacizumab for NPC.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This single-arm phase II nonrandomized controlled trial was conducted by the National Cancer Trials Network group and NRG Oncology (formerly Radiation Therapy Oncology Group), with accrual from December 13, 2006, to February 5, 2009, and data analysis from June 26 to July 1, 2019. …
Particle Arc Single-Isocenter Stereotactic Radiosurgery Of Multiple Brain Metastases, L Volz, S Mein, T Tessonnier, Peilin Liu, A Mairani, M Durante, Xuanfeng Ding, C Graeff, T Li
Particle Arc Single-Isocenter Stereotactic Radiosurgery Of Multiple Brain Metastases, L Volz, S Mein, T Tessonnier, Peilin Liu, A Mairani, M Durante, Xuanfeng Ding, C Graeff, T Li
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: To develop spot-scanning proton (SPArc) and heavy ion (SHArc) arc therapy for single-isocenter stereotatic radiosurgery (SISRS) of multiple brain metastases (MBMs). First results achieved with dedicated planning infrastructure are compared to state-of-the -art volumetric modulated photon arc therapy (HA-VMAT). Methods: A multi-institutional collaboration was established to develop bespoke SPArc and SHArc SISRS infrastructure with available research and commercial treatment planning systems. Devised planning and delivery methods considered dedicated energy, spot, and multi-arc selection strategies. SPArc and SHArc (carbon and helium ions) plans were generated for MBM patients exhibiting 3-12 intracranial lesions with GTV volumes between 0.03ccm and 19.8ccm, at …
An Analytic Model Of The External Beam Dose Rate Effect On Immune Cells In Blood Dosimetry, Lili Zhao, Peilin Liu, G Liu, Xuanfeng Ding
An Analytic Model Of The External Beam Dose Rate Effect On Immune Cells In Blood Dosimetry, Lili Zhao, Peilin Liu, G Liu, Xuanfeng Ding
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: Radiation therapy is a double-edged sword with regard to its immunomodulatory effect. It is critical to find how it is affected by dose rate. Thus, we developed an analytic model for calculating the number of immune cells receiving radiation. Methods: Suppose the blood is received radiation by constant dose rate. The blood is one-way flow without circulation in the radiation delivery at a constant velocity. Two kinds of lung treatment regimens were considered standard delivery 2Gy per fx total 30fx and hypo-fractionation SBRT 12 Gy per fx total 5 fx. Two different dose rates were simulated for standard treatment: …
A Novel Planning Framework For The Efficient Spot-Scanning Proton Arc Therapy Via The Particle Swarm Optimization (Sparc-Particle Swarm), Y Qian, R Dao, G Liu, Xiaoqiang Liu, H Quan, Xuanfeng Ding
A Novel Planning Framework For The Efficient Spot-Scanning Proton Arc Therapy Via The Particle Swarm Optimization (Sparc-Particle Swarm), Y Qian, R Dao, G Liu, Xiaoqiang Liu, H Quan, Xuanfeng Ding
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: The delivery efficiency is the bottleneck of spot-scanning proton arc therapy (SPArc) because of the numerous energy layers (EL) ascending switches. This study aims to develop a new algorithm to mitigate the need of EL ascending via water equivalent thickness (WET) sector selection followed by the particle swarm optimization (SPArc- particle swarm). Methods: SPArc- particle swarm divided the full arc trajectory into the optimal sectors based on the K-means clustering analysis of the relative mean WET. Within the sector, particle swarm optimization was used to minimize the total energy switch time, in which it optimized the energy selection integrated …
Does Proton Arc Therapy Has Potential Clinical Benefits For Hepatocellular Carcinoma?, Peilin Liu, R Dalfsen, M Soukup, Shupeng Chen, Lili Zhao, Z Wang, X S. Gao, Thomas Quinn, Craig Stevens, Rohan Deraniyagala, Xiaoqiang Li, Xuanfeng Ding
Does Proton Arc Therapy Has Potential Clinical Benefits For Hepatocellular Carcinoma?, Peilin Liu, R Dalfsen, M Soukup, Shupeng Chen, Lili Zhao, Z Wang, X S. Gao, Thomas Quinn, Craig Stevens, Rohan Deraniyagala, Xiaoqiang Li, Xuanfeng Ding
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: To investigate the potential clinical benefits and dose-averaged Linear Energy Transfer (LETd) sparing, utilizing proton arc plan for Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients in comparison with Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy (IMPT). Methods: Ten HCC patients have been retrospectively selected. Two planning groups were created: Proton Arc plans using Monaco ver. 6 and the clinical IMPT plan. Both planning groups used the same robustness parameters. The prescription dose is 67.5 Gy (RBE) in 15 fractions/ 66 GyE in 10 fractions of the Clinical Target Volume (CTV) following clinical IMPT plan. Robustness evaluations were performed to ensure target dose coverage. Normal Tissue …
Investigate The Delivery Efficiency Improvement For Sparc Compared To Impt, Peilin Liu, B A. De Jong, S Chang, Lili Zhao, G Liu, Craig Stevens, Rohan Deraniyagala, E W. Korevaar, J A. Langendijk, Xiaoqiang Li, Xuanfeng Ding
Investigate The Delivery Efficiency Improvement For Sparc Compared To Impt, Peilin Liu, B A. De Jong, S Chang, Lili Zhao, G Liu, Craig Stevens, Rohan Deraniyagala, E W. Korevaar, J A. Langendijk, Xiaoqiang Li, Xuanfeng Ding
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: To assess the efficiency improvement of SPArc compared to IMPT in proton clinical operation.Methods: A random clinical operation day at a proton therapy center with a two room system. Aa total of 10 Head & Neck cancer cases treated on Jan 6th, 2021were selected and SPArc plans were generated for all the cases with similar target coverage and dose constraints of organ at risk (OARs). 3% range uncertainties and 3mm setup uncertainties were applied for robust optimization. The log files of clinical IMPT were exported to calculate true treatment delivery time. The machine-specific delivery sequence model was utilized to …
Individual Vmat Beam Complexity Indices Have Limited Predictive Value For Qa Pass-Rates, Jian Liang, Q Liu, David T. To, Michael G. Snyder
Individual Vmat Beam Complexity Indices Have Limited Predictive Value For Qa Pass-Rates, Jian Liang, Q Liu, David T. To, Michael G. Snyder
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: Previous studies with sample sizes <400 have indicated that VMAT beam complexity indices may have a relationship with measured QA pass-rates. The aim of this study is to evaluate such relationships on a large scale to further investigate their strength. Methods: Total of 17,273 VMAT QA results across 8 Elekta Agility machines were used in this study. All beams were flattened 6MV or 10MV. Sun Nuclear ArcCheck was used for QA measurements with γ-analysis parameters of 10% threshold, 3% dose difference, 2mm distance to agreement, and 95% passing threshold. A total 214 Beams (1.23%) failed QA. QA distributions in Pinnacle were calculated with 2 degree gantry intervals and a dose grid of 2mm. Four complexity indices (MCSv, MU weighted Segment Area, Segment Area/Perimeter, and Average Leaf Gap) were computed. Spearman’s correlations were evaluated for each, and cut-off values for the indices were sought to indicate values above which no QA failures would be expected. Results: Evaluation of the 4 complexity metrics showed weak correlation with QA pass rates (< ±0.42) with high significance (p < 0.001). When metrics were evaluated independently, cut-off values from correlation plots separated only 0.67%, 0.72%, 2.2%, 6.3% guaranteed passing beams from the total sample, respectively. When evaluating whether anymetric for a given beam exceeded its cut-off, the fraction of guaranteed passing beams rose to only 6.6%. However, when cut-off values for one metric were allowed to be functionally dependent upon another, the fraction of guaranteed passing beams increased. For MU weighted Segment Area andAverage Leaf Gap, a dependent approach separated 19.1% guaranteed passing beams from the sample. Conclusion: Individual complexity metrics have weak predictive utility in assessing plan performance. However, using multiple complexity cut-off functions with dependence upon more than one metric increased the fraction of predicted passing beams by around 300%.
Linac-Based Srs Treatments Slow Down Unnecessarily Due To Parked Leaf Optimization, Brian Loughery, Cory S. Knill, Raminder P. Sandhu, Lifeng Lin, Jian Liang
Linac-Based Srs Treatments Slow Down Unnecessarily Due To Parked Leaf Optimization, Brian Loughery, Cory S. Knill, Raminder P. Sandhu, Lifeng Lin, Jian Liang
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: It was observed on a VersaHD that clinical SRS deliveries created in the Elements treatment planning system (TPS) slowed gantry rotation and dose rate to allow parked MLC leaves to move into position for use in an upcoming control point. Gantry rotation slowed suddenly, visibly backtracking to previous gantry angles. The purpose of this work is to study the effect of parked MLC positioning parameters in Elements on cranial SRS delivery speed and gantry motion on a VersaHD. Methods: To study the effect of parked MLC leaf positions on VersaHD deliverability, cranial SRS plans were generated with different TPS …
Develop A Novel Beam Orientation Optimization Algorithm For Let (Linear Energy Transfer) Incorporated Impt (Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy) (Imptlet, R Dao, Y Qian, Xiaoqiang Li, H Quan, Xuanfeng Ding, G Liu
Develop A Novel Beam Orientation Optimization Algorithm For Let (Linear Energy Transfer) Incorporated Impt (Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy) (Imptlet, R Dao, Y Qian, Xiaoqiang Li, H Quan, Xuanfeng Ding, G Liu
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: To improve the dose and LET distribution in the IMPTLET, we introduce a new optimization algorithm to search for the optimal beam orientation and count through the arc trajectory (BOC-IMPTLET). Methods: We introduce kmeans clustering analysis in the BOC-IMPTLET algorithm by analyzing the distribution of LET in the target from the full arc trajectory. The optimal of cluster count was used as beam count, which was determined based on the SSE (Sum of Square Error) value and the angle of the corresponding centroid of each cluster was used as beam orientation, respectively. The BOC-IMPTLET algorithm was implemented in the …
Internal Lead Shielding For Clinical Electron Treatments, Patrick N. Mcdermott
Internal Lead Shielding For Clinical Electron Treatments, Patrick N. Mcdermott
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: Electron beams are often used to treat superficial lesions of the lip, cheek, nose and ear. Lead is frequently used to block distal structures. It is customary to place an internal bolus of low atomic number in between the tissue and the lead to reduce electron backscatter from the lead. Space for the lead and the internal bolus is quite limited. The current method, recommended by TG25, for estimating the thickness of the lead plus internal bolus is not self-consistent and leads to a larger than necessary thickness. Furthermore, this method uses an older expression for the electron backscatter …
Application Of A Novel Optical Tool For Linac Calibrations, Cory S. Knill, Brian Loughery, Raminder P. Sandhu, Lifeng Lin, Mark Stefani
Application Of A Novel Optical Tool For Linac Calibrations, Cory S. Knill, Brian Loughery, Raminder P. Sandhu, Lifeng Lin, Mark Stefani
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: Maintaining a linac within tight stereotactic isocentricity tolerances requires minimizing errors in individual components of the linac. However, while isocentricity can be measured using a Winston-Lutz test, contributions from individual components can be difficult to discern. The disconnect between how individual components contribute to isocentricity can lead to lengthy troubleshooting exercises when isocentricity is outside tolerance. To provide more info rmation to physicists and increase the speed of isocentricity adjustments, a new tool that uses optical tracking to investigate and adjust individual linac components that contribute to isocentricity was tested on three clinical linacs. Methods: The optical tracking tool …
A Comprehensive Investigation Of Linear Energy Transfer Optimization Effectiveness In Intensity-Modulated Proton Therapy Via Alternating Direction Method Of Multipliers (Impt Let-Admm), Q Fan, G Liu, Lili Zhao, Xiaoqiang Li, Xuanfeng Ding, S Dai
A Comprehensive Investigation Of Linear Energy Transfer Optimization Effectiveness In Intensity-Modulated Proton Therapy Via Alternating Direction Method Of Multipliers (Impt Let-Admm), Q Fan, G Liu, Lili Zhao, Xiaoqiang Li, Xuanfeng Ding, S Dai
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Linear energy transfer (LET)-guided optimization in intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT) via alternating direction method of multipliers (ADMM) has the potential to improve its biological effectiveness (IMPTLET- ADMM), in which the LET distribution in target can be escalated, while the LET distribution in the organs at risk can be mitigated. This study aims to quantitatively investigate the effectiveness of LET optimization in IMPT via ADMM with different solvers in its iteration loop. Methods: The clinical dose-volume-histogram (DVH) constraint noted dose sub-problem and clinical LET -volume-histogram (LVH) constraint noted LET sub-problem are combined to generate a composite objective function, which is available …
Physician Perceptions On Cancer Screening For Lgbtq+ Patients, Nicolas Nelson, Joseph F. Lombardo, Ayako Shimada, Marissa L. Ruggiero, Alexandria P. Smith, Kevin Ko, Amy E. Leader, Edith P. Mitchell, Nicole L. Simone
Physician Perceptions On Cancer Screening For Lgbtq+ Patients, Nicolas Nelson, Joseph F. Lombardo, Ayako Shimada, Marissa L. Ruggiero, Alexandria P. Smith, Kevin Ko, Amy E. Leader, Edith P. Mitchell, Nicole L. Simone
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
The LGBTQ+ community experiences cancer disparities due to increased risk factors and lower screening rates, attributable to health literacy gaps and systemic barriers. We sought to understand the experiences, perceptions, and knowledge base of healthcare providers regarding cancer screening for LGBTQ+ patients. A 20-item IRB-approved survey was distributed to physicians through professional organizations. The survey assessed experiences and education regarding the LGBTQ+ community and perceptions of patient concerns with different cancer screenings on a 5-point Likert scale. Complete responses were collected from 355 providers. Only 100 (28%) reported past LGBTQ+-related training and were more likely to be female (p = …
The Clinical Usability, Efficiency, And Accuracy Of Combining Deep-Learning-Based Synthetic Ct And Auto-Contouring For Daily Cbct-Based Online Adaptive Radiation Therapy, An Qin, J Xu, N O'Connell, Xuanfeng Ding, Shupeng Chen, D Thill
The Clinical Usability, Efficiency, And Accuracy Of Combining Deep-Learning-Based Synthetic Ct And Auto-Contouring For Daily Cbct-Based Online Adaptive Radiation Therapy, An Qin, J Xu, N O'Connell, Xuanfeng Ding, Shupeng Chen, D Thill
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: To evaluate the feasibility of deep-learning and CBCT-based online adaptive radiotherapy(ART) in thorax, Head&Neck, and pelvic regions. Methods: The study utilized ADMIRE(Advanced Medical Image Registration Engine), a research software designed to enable fast online ART through: (1)synthetic CT(sCT) generation from CBCT, (2)automatic segmentation of critical organs(OARs), and(3)deformable image registration(DIR) to transfer the target volume. ADMIRE trained a modified Cycle-Generative-Adversarial-Networks with Structural Similarity Index Map(SSIM) loss term to generate sCT, while the auto-segmentation model was based on a 3D-ResUnet with modification. Site-specific models were trained for three anatomic sites: thorax, pelvic, and head&neck, and for both networks. The study included …
Comparison Of Vmat Beam Complexity With Different Mlc Collimator Rotation And Their Impact On Psqa Pass Rates, David T. To, Michael G. Snyder, Jian Liang
Comparison Of Vmat Beam Complexity With Different Mlc Collimator Rotation And Their Impact On Psqa Pass Rates, David T. To, Michael G. Snyder, Jian Liang
Conference Presentation Abstracts
Purpose: I t has been previously shown that utilizing a collimator angle of ±45° has demonstrated a reduction in MU and VMAT beam complexity. Studies have demonstrated this for VMAT prostate plans with small sample size. In this study we evaluate multiple collimator angles with a larger sample size and different treatment sites. Methods: A total of 17273 VMAT beams were evaluated with beam collimator rotations of 0°, ±5°, ±10°, ±15°, ±30°, ±45°, and ±90°. QA Gamma pass rates for our institution use a 3%/2mm criteria 10% threshold with 95% limit pass rate utilizing Sun Nuclear ArcCheck (helical diode array). …
Fiducial Markers Allow Accurate And Reproducible Delivery Of Liver Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy, Marina Moskalenko, Bernard L. Jones, Adam Mueller, Shirley Lewis, Jay C. Shiao, Sara J. Zakem, Tyler P. Robin, Karyn A. Goodman
Fiducial Markers Allow Accurate And Reproducible Delivery Of Liver Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy, Marina Moskalenko, Bernard L. Jones, Adam Mueller, Shirley Lewis, Jay C. Shiao, Sara J. Zakem, Tyler P. Robin, Karyn A. Goodman
Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers
Fiducial markers are utilized for image guided radiotherapy (IGRT) alignment during the delivery of liver stereotactic body radiosurgery (SBRT). There are limited data demonstrating the impact of matching fiducials on the accuracy of liver SBRT. This study quantifies the benefit of fiducial-based alignment and improvements in inter-observer reliability. Nineteen patients with 24 liver lesions were treated with SBRT. Target localization was performed using fiducial markers on cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT). Each CBCT procedure was retrospectively realigned to match both the liver edge and fiducial markers. The shifts were recorded by seven independent observers. Inter-observer variability was analyzed by calculating the …
Comparison Of Clinical And Radiographic Efficacy Of Particles Versus Nbca/Onyx In Middle Meningeal Artery Embolization For Chronic Subdural Hematoma, Jane Khalife, Mohamed Salem, Victoria Wong, Allen Karimov, Brian Jankowitz, Jan Karl Burkhardt, Hamza Shaikh, Daniel Tonetti, Pratit Patel, Tudor Jovin, Ajith Thomas
Comparison Of Clinical And Radiographic Efficacy Of Particles Versus Nbca/Onyx In Middle Meningeal Artery Embolization For Chronic Subdural Hematoma, Jane Khalife, Mohamed Salem, Victoria Wong, Allen Karimov, Brian Jankowitz, Jan Karl Burkhardt, Hamza Shaikh, Daniel Tonetti, Pratit Patel, Tudor Jovin, Ajith Thomas
Rowan-Virtua Research Day
Different embolic materials are utilized in MMA embolization of chronic subdural hematoma per operators’ discretion. We aim to compare the clinical and radiographic efficacy of different embolic materials in a pooled retrospective cohort of two US centers.
Influence Of Pretreatment Magnetic Resonance Imaging On Local Therapy Decisions For Intermediate-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients, Christian Skowronski, Andrew Shanholtzer, Brent Yelton, Muayad Almahariq, Daniel Krauss
Influence Of Pretreatment Magnetic Resonance Imaging On Local Therapy Decisions For Intermediate-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients, Christian Skowronski, Andrew Shanholtzer, Brent Yelton, Muayad Almahariq, Daniel Krauss
Posters
Prostate cancer has the third highest incidence rate and is the second leading cause of cancer death for men in the United States. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides superior soft tissue delineation serving as a valuable tool for both diagnosis and treatment planning. With minimal data regarding utility on diagnosis and treatment planning for intermediate-risk prostate cancer, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network’s guidelines indicate MRI as optional in intermediate-risk prostate cancer evaluation. This project aims to elucidate whether MRI affects radiation treatment decisions for intermediate-risk prostate cancer.
Outcomes Of Locally Advanced Lung Cancer Patients Treated With 60 Gy Vs. 70 Gy, Batoul Nasser, Muyad Almahariq, Inga Grills
Outcomes Of Locally Advanced Lung Cancer Patients Treated With 60 Gy Vs. 70 Gy, Batoul Nasser, Muyad Almahariq, Inga Grills
Posters
The standard form of treatment for locally advanced lung cancer is to prescribe the conventional dose of 60 Gy radiation therapy (RT) concurrently with chemotherapy. However, five-year overall survival is still less than 20%. These outcomes remain poor due to both distant and local regional recurrence. The literature suggests that local regional control and overall survival is strongly associated with doses of radiotherapy that are higher than 60 Gy. However, when escalating radiation dose was prescribed exceeding 70 Gy, the overall survival rates plateaued. The primary goal of this study is to determine if there is a marked difference in …
Dose To The Left Anterior Descending Artery Correlates With Cardiac Events After Irradiation For Breast Cancer, Brittany Silverman, Andrew Zureick, Vincent Grzywacz, Muayad Almahariq, Aleksander Vayntraub, Joshua Dilworth
Dose To The Left Anterior Descending Artery Correlates With Cardiac Events After Irradiation For Breast Cancer, Brittany Silverman, Andrew Zureick, Vincent Grzywacz, Muayad Almahariq, Aleksander Vayntraub, Joshua Dilworth
Posters
Although global heart dose has been associated with late cardiac toxic effects in patients who received radiation therapy for breast cancer, data detailing the clinical significance of cardiac substructure dosimetry are limited. We investigated whether dose to the left anterior descending artery (LAD) correlates with adverse cardiac events.
Impact Of Structured Reporting Template On The Quality Of Hrct Radiology Reports For Interstitial Lung Disease, Han G. Ngo, Girish B. Nair, Sayf Al-Katib
Impact Of Structured Reporting Template On The Quality Of Hrct Radiology Reports For Interstitial Lung Disease, Han G. Ngo, Girish B. Nair, Sayf Al-Katib
Posters
This QI study compared the completeness of HRCT radiology reports before and after the implementation of a disease-specific structured reporting template for suspected cases of interstitial lung disease (ILD).
Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Artificial Intelligence Pipeline For Oropharyngeal Cancer Radiotherapy Treatment Guidance, Kareem Wahid
Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)
Oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) is a widespread disease and one of the few domestic cancers that is rising in incidence. Radiographic images are crucial for assessment of OPC and aid in radiotherapy (RT) treatment. However, RT planning with conventional imaging approaches requires operator-dependent tumor segmentation, which is the primary source of treatment error. Further, OPC expresses differential tumor/node mid-RT response (rapid response) rates, resulting in significant differences between planned and delivered RT dose. Finally, clinical outcomes for OPC patients can also be variable, which warrants the investigation of prognostic models. Multiparametric MRI (mpMRI) techniques that incorporate simultaneous anatomical and functional information …
Tumor Locations Impact On Cardiac Toxicity In Women That Received Partial Breast Irradiation, Sara Diltz, Muayad Almahariq, Joshua Dilworth
Tumor Locations Impact On Cardiac Toxicity In Women That Received Partial Breast Irradiation, Sara Diltz, Muayad Almahariq, Joshua Dilworth
Posters
Accelerated partial breast irradiation (APBI) is an appropriate modality for select women with low-risk breast cancer. While APBI delivers radiation dose to a smaller volume of breast tissue compared to whole breast irradiation, dose to the heart and coronary vessels may be relatively high, depending on the proximity of the treatment device to these structures. The primary goal of this study is to determine if the risk of adverse cardiac events depends on tumor location in women receiving APBI.
High Dose Rate Brachytherapy Monotherapy Versus External Beam Radiotherapy With Hdr Brachytherapy Boost For Unfavorable Intermediate Prostate Cancer Patients, Doyle Lang, Benjamin Willen, Daniel J. Krauss, Sirisha R. Nandalur
High Dose Rate Brachytherapy Monotherapy Versus External Beam Radiotherapy With Hdr Brachytherapy Boost For Unfavorable Intermediate Prostate Cancer Patients, Doyle Lang, Benjamin Willen, Daniel J. Krauss, Sirisha R. Nandalur
Posters
Prostate cancer is the most common male malignancy by incidence in the world. Treatment differs by the patient’s risk stratification. For the treatment of unfavorable intermediate-risk prostate cancer, external beam radiotherapy with high-dose-rate brachytherapy boost was the accepted treatment but high-dose-rate brachytherapy as monotherapy has been proposed as a potentially viable treatment option. External beam radiotherapy treatment involves shooting high-energy photons or particle radiation through normal healthy tissue to hit the tumor directly. High-dose-rate brachytherapy involves inserting radioactive seeds into the tumor. Studies are needed to compare toxicity profiles and relative outcomes between the two treatment options.
Imaging-Based Modules For Musculoskeletal Anatomy & Pathology In Preclinical Medical Education, Ameen Suhrawardy, Tarek Almsaddi, Sarah Fried, Sayf Al-Katib, Drew Moore, Malli Barremkala
Imaging-Based Modules For Musculoskeletal Anatomy & Pathology In Preclinical Medical Education, Ameen Suhrawardy, Tarek Almsaddi, Sarah Fried, Sayf Al-Katib, Drew Moore, Malli Barremkala
Posters
Many medical students report a lack of adequate orthopedic and musculoskeletal (MSK) teaching in the preclinical medical curriculum. As gross anatomy is emphasized in pre-clinical education, students may feel a disconnect from clinical anatomy proficiency. This project assesses the efficacy of a preclinical image-based module to teach MSK anatomy and pathology concepts to preclinical medical students.
The Safe And Effective Clinical Deployment Of Artificial Intelligence Tools, Kelly Nealon
The Safe And Effective Clinical Deployment Of Artificial Intelligence Tools, Kelly Nealon
Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)
18 million new cancer cases are diagnosed each year. Roughly half of these patients will be treated with radiation therapy, a complex technique that requires an interdisciplinary team of clinical staff and expensive equipment to be delivered safely. Cancer centers in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC) have an especially difficult time meeting the demands of radiation therapy as the complexity of treatment techniques increase, with only 37% of patients in these regions having access to the care they need. Artificial Intelligence (AI) based tools are being developed to simplify the treatment planning and quality assurance processes to increase the number …
Improving Dose-Response Correlations For Locally Advanced Nsclc Patients Treated With Imrt Or Pspt, Yulun He
Improving Dose-Response Correlations For Locally Advanced Nsclc Patients Treated With Imrt Or Pspt, Yulun He
Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)
The standard of care for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is concurrent chemo-radiotherapy. Despite recent advancements in radiation delivery methods, the median survival time of NSCLC patients remains below 28 months. Higher tumor dose has been found to increase survival but also a higher rate of radiation pneumonitis (RP) that affects breathing capability. In fear of such toxicity, less-aggressive treatment plans are often clinically preferred, leading to metastasis and recurrence. Therefore, accurate RP prediction is crucial to ensure tumor coverage to improve treatment outcome. Current models have associated RP with increased dose but with limited accuracy as they …