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J Am Med Inform Assoc 1997;4:327-339 doi:10.1136/jamia.1997.0040327
  • Medical Imaging Informatics
  • Review

The Use of Medical Images in Planning and Delivery of Radiation Therapy

  1. Ira J Kalet,
  2. Mary M Austin-Seymour
  1. Affiliation of the authors: Radiation Oncology Department, University of Washington, Seattle, WA
  1. Correspondence and reprints: Ira J. Kalet, Radiation Oncology Department, University of Washington, Box 356043, Seattle, Washington 98195-6043. E-mail: ira{at}radonc.washington.edu
  • Received 25 February 1997
  • Accepted 19 May 1997

Abstract

The authors provide a survey of how images are used in radiation therapy to improve the precision of radiation therapy plans, and delivery of radiation treatment. In contrast to diagnostic radiology, where the focus is on interpretation of the images to decide if disease is present, radiation therapy quantifies the extent of the region to be treated, and relates it to the proposed treatment using a quantitative modeling system called a radiation treatment planning (RTP) system. This necessitates several requirements of image display and manipulation in radiation therapy that are not usually important in diagnosis. The images must have uniform spatial fidelity: i.e., the pixel size must be known and consistent throughout individual images, and between spatially related sets. The exact spatial relation of images in a set must be known. Radiation oncologists draw on images to define target volumes; dosimetrists use RTP systems to superimpose quantitative models of radiation beams and radiation dose distributions on the images and on the sets of organ and target contours derived from them. While this mainly uses transverse cross-sectional images, projected images are also important, both those produced by the radiation treatment simulator and the treatment machines, and so-called “digital reconstructed radiographs,” computed from spatially related sets of cross-sectional images. These requirements are not typically met by software produced for radiologists but are addressed by RTP systems. This review briefly summarizes ongoing work on software development in this area at the University of Washington Department of Radiation Oncology.

Footnotes

  • This work was supported in part by grant number R01 LM04174 from the National Library of Medicine. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the sponsoring agencies.

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