G. Kalaitzakis
University of Crete
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Publication
Featured researches published by G. Kalaitzakis.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2018
Eleftherios Kavroulakis; Panagiotis G. Simos; G. Kalaitzakis; Thomas G. Maris; Dimitra Karageorgou; Ioannis Zaganas; Simeon Panagiotakis; Maria Basta; Efrosini Papadaki
Existing indices of white matter integrity such as fractional anisotropy and magnetization transfer ratio may not provide optimal specificity to myelin content. In contrast, myelin water fraction (MWF) derived from the multiecho T2 relaxation time technique may serve as a more direct measure of myelin content.
Medical Physics | 2016
E. Pappas; N Papanikolaou; G. Kalaitzakis; T. Boursianis; D Makris; Vasileios Lahanas; I Genitsarios; Sotirios Stathakis; L Watts; Thomas G. Maris; Evangelos Pappas
PURPOSE To validate dose calculation and delivery accuracy of a recently introduced mono-isocentric technique for the treatment of multiple brain metastases in a realistic clinical case. METHODS Anonymized CT scans of a patient were used to model a hollow phantom that duplicates anatomy of the skull. A 3D printer was used to construct the phantom of a radiologically bone-equivalent material. The hollow phantom was subsequently filled with a polymer gel 3D dosimeter which also acted as a water-equivalent material. Irradiation plan consisted of 5 targets and was identical to the one delivered to the specific patient except for the prescription dose which was optimized to match the gel dose-response characteristics. Dose delivery was performed using a single setup isocenter dynamic conformal arcs technique. Gel dose read-out was carried out by a 1.5 T MRI scanner. All steps of the corresponding patients treatment protocol were strictly followed providing an end-to-end quality assurance test. Pseudo-in-vivo measured 3D dose distribution and calculated one were compared in terms of spatial agreement, dose profiles, 3D gamma indices (5%/2mm, 20% dose threshold), DVHs and DVH metrics. RESULTS MR-identified polymerized areas and calculated high dose regions were found to agree within 1.5 mm for all targets, taking into account all sources of spatial uncertainties involved (i.e., set-up errors, MR-related geometric distortions and registration inaccuracies). Good dosimetric agreement was observed in the vast majority of the examined profiles. 3D gamma index passing rate reached 91%. DVH and corresponding metrics comparison resulted in a satisfying agreement between measured and calculated datasets within targets and selected organs-at-risk. CONCLUSION A novel, pseudo-in-vivo QA test was implemented to validate spatial and dosimetric accuracy in treatment of multiple metastases. End-to-end testing demonstrated that our gel dosimetry phantom is suited for such QA procedures, allowing for 3D analysis of both targeting placement and dose.
Medical Physics | 2016
P Papanikolaou; L Watts; E. Pappas; G. Kalaitzakis; Thomas G. Maris; N Kirby; K Rasmussen; A Gutierrez; Sotirios Stathakis
PURPOSE Spatially fractionated radiation therapy, also known as GRID therapy, is used to treat large solid tumors by irradiating the target to a single dose of 10-20Gy through spatially distributed beamlets. We have investigated the use of a 3D gel for dosimetric characterization of GRID therapy. METHODS GRID therapy is an external beam analog of volumetric brachytherapy, whereby we produce a distribution of hot and cold dose columns inside the tumor volume. Such distribution can be produced with a block or by using a checker-like pattern with MLC. We have studied both types of GRID delivery. A cube shaped acrylic phantom was filled with polymer gel and served as a 3D dosimeter. The phantom was scanned and the CT images were used to produce two plans in Pinnacle, one with the grid block and one with the MLC defined grid. A 6MV beam was used for the plan with a prescription of 1500cGy at dmax. The irradiated phantom was scanned in a 3T MRI scanner. RESULTS 3D dose maps were derived from the MR scans of the gel dosimeter and were found to be in good agreement with the predicted dose distribution from the RTP system. Gamma analysis showed a passing rate of 93% for 5% dose and 2mm DTA scoring criteria. Both relative and absolute dose profiles are in good agreement, except in the peripheral beamlets where the gel measured slightly higher dose, possibly because of the changing head scatter conditions that the RTP is not fully accounting for. Our results have also been benchmarked against ionization chamber measurements. CONCLUSION We have investigated the use of a polymer gel for the 3D dosimetric characterization and evaluation of GRID therapy. Our results demonstrated that the planning system can predict fairly accurately the dose distribution for GRID type therapy.
Physica Medica | 2016
Thomas G. Maris; Evangelos Pappas; T. Boursianis; G. Kalaitzakis; Nikos Papanikolaou; L. Watts; Michalis Mazonakis; John Damilakis
Physica Medica | 2014
T. Boursianis; G. Kalaitzakis; S. Veneti; E. Pappas; John Damilakis; Thomas G. Maris
Physica Medica | 2018
Katerina Nikiforaki; G. Kalaitzakis; Georgios Ioannidis; Thomas G. Maris; Kostas Marias; Apostolos H. Karantanas
Physica Medica | 2018
Androniki Kozana; T. Boursianis; G. Kalaitzakis; Maria Raissaki; Thomas G. Maris
Physica Medica | 2018
G. Kalaitzakis; T. Boursianis; Androniki Kozana; Evangelos Pappas; Maria Raissaki; Thomas G. Maris
Physica Medica | 2016
G. Kalaitzakis; Nikos Papanikolaou; T. Boursianis; E. Pappas; V. Lahanas; D Makris; Sotirios Stathakis; L. Watts; Efstathios P. Efstathopoulos; Thomas G. Maris; Evangelos Pappas
Physica Medica | 2016
T. Boursianis; G. Kalaitzakis; Katerina Nikiforaki; Irene Tsiapa; Efrosini Papadaki; Apostolos H. Karantanas; Thomas G. Maris