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Concurrent kilovoltage CBCT imaging and megavoltage beam delivery: Suppression of cross-scatter with 2D antiscatter grids and grid-based scatter sampling

The concept of using kilovoltage (kV) and megavoltage (MV) beams concurrently has potential applications in cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) guided radiation therapy, such as single breath hold scans, metal artifact reduction, and simultaneous imaging during MV treatment delivery. However, MV cross-scatter generated during MV beam delivery degrades CBCT image quality. To address this, a 2D antiscatter grid and cross scatter correction method were investigated. a 3D printed, tungsten 2D antiscatter grid prototype was utilized to reduce MV cross-scatter fluence in kV projections during concurrent MV beam delivery. Remaining cross-scatter was corrected by using the 2D grid itself as a cross-scatter intensity sampling device, referred as Grid-based Scatter Sampling. To test this approach, kV CBCT acquisitions were performed while delivering 6 and 10 MV beams, mimicking high dose rate treatment delivery scenarios. MV cross-scatter suppression performance of the proposed approach was evaluated in projections and CBCT images of phantoms. 2D grid reduced the intensity of MV cross-scatter in kV projections by a factor of 3 on the average. Remaining MV cross-scatter estimated by Grid-based Scatter Sampling was within 7% of measured reference intensity values. CBCT image quality was improved substantially during concurrent kV-MV beam delivery. Median Hounsfield Unit (HU) inaccuracy was up to 191 HU without our methods, and it was reduced to 3 HU with our 2D grid and scatter correction approach. Our methods provided a factor of 2-6 improvement in contrast-to-ratio. Results indicate that our approach can successfully minimize the effects of high energy cross-scatter in concurrent kV CBCT imaging and megavoltage treatment delivery.

preprint2022arXivOpen access

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