<i>VirtualDose</i>: a software for reporting organ doses from CT for adult and pediatric patients

Aiping Ding(Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute), Yiming Gao(Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute), Haikuan Liu(Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute), P Caracappa(Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute), D Long(University of Florida), Wesley E. Bolch(University of Florida), Bob Liu(Massachusetts General Hospital), Xiaobin Xu(Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)
Physics in Medicine and Biology
July 2, 2015
Cited by 125Open Access
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Abstract

This paper describes the development and testing of VirtualDose--a software for reporting organ doses for adult and pediatric patients who undergo x-ray computed tomography (CT) examinations. The software is based on a comprehensive database of organ doses derived from Monte Carlo (MC) simulations involving a library of 25 anatomically realistic phantoms that represent patients of different ages, body sizes, body masses, and pregnant stages. Models of GE Lightspeed Pro 16 and Siemens SOMATOM Sensation 16 scanners were carefully validated for use in MC dose calculations. The software framework is designed with the 'software as a service (SaaS)' delivery concept under which multiple clients can access the web-based interface simultaneously from any computer without having to install software locally. The RESTful web service API also allows a third-party picture archiving and communication system software package to seamlessly integrate with VirtualDose's functions. Software testing showed that VirtualDose was compatible with numerous operating systems including Windows, Linux, Apple OS X, and mobile and portable devices. The organ doses from VirtualDose were compared against those reported by CT-Expo and ImPACT-two dosimetry tools that were based on the stylized pediatric and adult patient models that were known to be anatomically simple. The organ doses reported by VirtualDose differed from those reported by CT-Expo and ImPACT by as much as 300% in some of the patient models. These results confirm the conclusion from past studies that differences in anatomical realism offered by stylized and voxel phantoms have caused significant discrepancies in CT dose estimations.


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