The Quest for “Artifact-Free” Imaging: Choosing IGRT-Compatible Positioning Tools

Introduction

Image-Guided Radiotherapy (IGRT) has become the backbone of modern radiation oncology. From daily setup verification to adaptive decision-making, the quality of on-board imaging directly affects clinical confidence and treatment accuracy.

Yet, despite advances in imaging hardware and reconstruction algorithms, one persistent challenge remains: artifacts caused by positioning and immobilization tools. These artifacts can obscure anatomy, degrade registration accuracy, and introduce unnecessary uncertainty.

This article explores why truly “artifact-free” imaging is an aspirational goal—and how choosing IGRT-compatible positioning tools brings clinics closer to achieving it.


Why Imaging Artifacts Matter in IGRT

Artifacts in IGRT imaging are not merely aesthetic imperfections. They have direct clinical consequences, including:

  • Reduced soft-tissue visibility
  • Distorted anatomical boundaries
  • Compromised image registration
  • Increased reliance on bony anatomy alone

In high-precision treatments with tight margins, even subtle imaging degradation can impact setup accuracy and adaptive decisions.


Positioning Tools as a Source of Artifacts

Positioning and immobilization devices are routinely present during simulation and treatment imaging. Common artifact sources include:

  • High-density materials
  • Non-uniform thickness
  • Embedded metal components
  • Sharp edges and structural transitions

When these features intersect with kV, MV, or CBCT imaging beams, they can produce streaking, shading, or scatter-related artifacts.


What Defines IGRT-Compatible Positioning Tools?

IGRT-compatible positioning tools are designed with imaging performance in mind, not just mechanical function.

Key design principles include:

  • Low-density, radiolucent materials
  • Homogeneous internal structure
  • Absence of unnecessary metal components
  • Smooth geometric transitions

These characteristics help minimize beam hardening, scatter, and reconstruction errors.


Material Selection and Imaging Performance

1. Low-Z Materials for Reduced Beam Interaction

Materials with low effective atomic numbers interact less with imaging photons, resulting in:

  • Reduced streak artifacts
  • Improved contrast resolution
  • More accurate HU representation

This is particularly important for CBCT-based soft-tissue visualization.


2. Uniform Density and Thickness

Even radiolucent materials can produce artifacts if density or thickness varies abruptly. High-quality positioning tools are engineered to maintain uniformity across the imaging field of view.


Impact on Image Registration and Setup Accuracy

Artifact-reduced imaging improves the reliability of:

  • Automatic and manual image registration
  • Soft-tissue alignment strategies
  • Six-degree-of-freedom couch corrections

When anatomy is clearly visualized, setup decisions are faster, more confident, and more reproducible.


IGRT in Advanced Treatment Techniques

In modern workflows such as:

  • SBRT and SRS
  • Adaptive radiotherapy
  • MRI-guided or hybrid IGRT systems

Imaging quality becomes even more critical. Positioning tools that introduce artifacts can negate the benefits of advanced imaging technologies.


Balancing Rigidity, Comfort, and Imaging Quality

A common concern is that improving imaging compatibility may compromise rigidity or patient comfort. Well-designed IGRT-compatible tools achieve balance by:

  • Combining structural stiffness with radiolucent materials
  • Distributing pressure evenly for patient comfort
  • Maintaining geometric stability without imaging penalties

Good design eliminates false trade-offs.


Clinical and Operational Benefits

Selecting IGRT-compatible positioning tools delivers tangible clinical benefits:

  • Fewer repeat scans
  • Faster setup and registration
  • Reduced uncertainty in adaptive decisions
  • Improved workflow efficiency

Over time, these advantages translate into improved treatment consistency and patient throughput.


Manufacturer Perspective: Designing for Imaging Integrity

From a manufacturer’s perspective, IGRT compatibility requires:

  • Imaging-based design validation
  • Artifact testing across imaging modalities
  • Close collaboration with clinical physicists
  • Continuous refinement based on clinical feedback

Positioning tools must be developed as part of the imaging system—not external to it.


Conclusion

The pursuit of “artifact-free” imaging in IGRT is ultimately a pursuit of clarity, confidence, and precision. While no system is completely immune to artifacts, thoughtfully designed, IGRT-compatible positioning tools can dramatically reduce their impact.

By minimizing imaging interference at the source, clinics can fully leverage the capabilities of modern IGRT technologies and make more confident decisions—every fraction, every patient.

In IGRT, what you see determines what you treat.

kevin clarke

Product R&D Engineer | Radiotherapy Immobilization Specialist • Current Role: Product R&D at Guangzhou Maidfirm Medical Equipment Co., Ltd. • Expertise: Radiotherapy auxiliary equipment, thermoplastic materials, and manufacturing process optimization. • The Edge: Extensive frontline experience collaborating with top-tier manufacturers to turn complex R&D blueprints into high-precision medical tools. • Mission: Improving patient outcomes through better design and flawless execution.

Related Articles

Enhancing Setup Reproducibility in Head & Neck Radiotherapy:

The Science of Thermoplastic Mask Fit Introduction Head and neck radiotherapy presents one of the greatest challenges in modern radiation oncology. The complex anatomy, proximity of critical organs at risk…

Managing Respiratory Motion in Abdominal SBRT: Best Practices for High-Precision Positioning

Introduction Stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) has transformed the management of abdominal malignancies by enabling the delivery of ablative doses with sub-millimeter precision. However, this precision is constantly challenged by a…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You missed it

Enhancing Setup Reproducibility in Head & Neck Radiotherapy:

Enhancing Setup Reproducibility in Head & Neck Radiotherapy:

Gentle Precision: Balancing Patient Comfort and Setup Rigidity in Pediatric Radiotherapy

Gentle Precision: Balancing Patient Comfort and Setup Rigidity in Pediatric Radiotherapy

Protecting OARs in Complex Head & Neck Treatments: Advanced Immobilization Strategies

Protecting OARs in Complex Head & Neck Treatments: Advanced Immobilization Strategies

Supine vs. Prone Positioning for Breast Cancer: Choosing the Right Auxiliary System for Your Clinic

Supine vs. Prone Positioning for Breast Cancer: Choosing the Right Auxiliary System for Your Clinic

Reducing Heart and Lung Exposure: Innovative Positioning Solutions in Left-Sided Breast Radiotherapy

Reducing Heart and Lung Exposure: Innovative Positioning Solutions in Left-Sided Breast Radiotherapy

Managing Respiratory Motion in Abdominal SBRT: Best Practices for High-Precision Positioning

Managing Respiratory Motion in Abdominal SBRT: Best Practices for High-Precision Positioning