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Medical physics

Medical physics

Geometric distortion characterization using QUASAR™ MRID3D in radiation oncology: 1.5T MRI and 0.35T MR-LINAC

20 May 2022 Sponsored by Modus QA

Available to watch now, Modus QA explores the QUASAR™ MRID3D Geometric Distortion Analysis System

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MR-guided radiation therapy (MRgRT) has been running routine clinical practice. However, MRgRT requires robust imaging spatial integrity to achieve accurate dose calculations and high-quality plan delivery.

Throughout this webinar, we will review how to characterize the spatial integrity of 1.5T MRI and 0.35T MR-LINAC using QUASAR™ MRID3D Geometric Distortion Analysis System in radiation oncology.

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Taeho Kim, PhD, DABR, is an associate professor of radiation oncology and joined the medical physics faculty in 2018. He currently has two primary interests in medical physics research: MRI-guided radiotherapy and respiratory motion management in clinical practice. Kim received his PhD in physics in 2007 from Washington University in St Louis. He completed two post-doctoral fellowships, one in MRI (radiology, University of Utah) and the other in radiation therapy (radiation oncology, Stanford University). He completed his medical physics residency in the CAMPEP-accredited medical physics programme at the University of Virginia. He worked on several medical physics research projects including respiratory motion management using MRI-guided audiovisual biofeedback, an integrated MRI-linear accelerator project, and quasi-breath-hold biofeedback in radiation oncology. He has extensive clinical research experience in medical physics and MRI from several universities.

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