基于统计过程控制的非正态放疗计划个体化质量保证

Translated title of the contribution: Patient-specific quality assurance for non-normal radiotherapy plans based on statistical process control

Juan Deng, Gaoyuan Liu, Chuou Yin, Jiang Liu, Guojian Mei, Ling Hua, Shutong Yu, Xinhui Fu, Chen Lin, Tian Li, Yibao Zhang

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

Abstract

Objective To apply statistical process control (SPC) techniques to the quality assurance of non-normal radiotherapy plans through Johnson transformation, establishing patient-specific tolerance and action limits based on treatment sites and dose/distance assessment criteria, thereby enhancing the intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) verification accuracy and dose delivery precision. Methods In this study, 951 gamma analysis data of patient-specific quality assurance (PSQA) executed on the Halcyon accelerator platform were selected and categorized into six groups based on treatment sites, including brain (102 cases), head and neck (100 cases), breast (229 cases), lung (154 cases), esophagus (223 cases), and pelvic (143 cases) groups. The six groups of data were statistically analyzed through Anderson-Darling normality tests (α = 0.05) using Minitab 21 software. Non-normal data were transformed into normal data through Johnson transformation and then were used to establish treatment site-specific tolerance and action limits, which were compared with the Shewhart control charts based on normal distributions. Results The PSQA result of the six groups all exhibited non-normal distributions (P < 0.05). Through Johnson transformation, the tolerance and action limits for the head and neck, breast, lung, esophagus, and pelvic areas under the 3%/2 mm criterion ranged from 95.13% to 96.16% and 94.19% to 95.91%, respectively. In contrast, the tolerance and action limits ranged from 91.15% to 94.86% and 89.94% to 94.78% under the 2%/2 mm criterion. Directly applying Shewhart control charts without normality assumptions yielded higher tolerance limits compared to the application of Johnson transformation, increasing the false positive rate in the non-normal PSQA process. Conclusions Applying the SPC techniques directly to a non-normal process can lead to an increased false alarm rate and wrong process interpretation. The SPC techniques combined with Johnson transformation enable more effective monitoring of a non-normal PSQA process, facilitating timely identification of potential factors that may lead to an out-of-control process based on the treatment site-specific limits.

Translated title of the contributionPatient-specific quality assurance for non-normal radiotherapy plans based on statistical process control
Original languageChinese (Simplified)
Pages (from-to)296-301
Number of pages6
JournalChinese Journal of Radiological Medicine and Protection
Volume45
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Apr 2025

Keywords

  • Non-normal distribution
  • Patientspecific quality assurance
  • Radiotherapy
  • Statistical process control

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Radiological and Ultrasound Technology
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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