4.6 Article

A multiobjective gradient-based dose optimization algorithm for external beam conformal radiotherapy

Journal

PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 8, Pages 2161-2175

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/46/8/309

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A multiobjective gradient-based algorithm has been developed for the purpose of dose distribution optimization in external beam conformal radiotherapy. This algorithm is based on the concept of gathering the values of all objectives into a single value. The weighting factors of the composite objective values are varied in different steps, allowing the reconstruction of the trade-off surfaces (three or more objectives) or curves (two objectives) which define the boundary between the feasible and non-feasible domain regions. The analysis of these curves allows the decision-maker to select the solution that best fits the clinical goals. In contrast to all the other algorithms, our method provides not a single solution but a sample of solutions representing all possible clinical importance factors (weights) for the objectives used. The application of this algorithm to two test cases shows that a correct selection for the importance factors to multiply the individual objectives in the global objective value is not trivial and that the location and shape of the boundary region between the feasible and non-feasible solution regions are case dependent. Provided that the individual objective functions are analytically differentiable and that the number of objectives is the range of two to three, the computation times are acceptable for clinical use. Furthermore, the optimization for a unique combination of importance factors within the aggregate objective function is performed in less than I min.

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