Evaluation of the Visibility and Artifacts of 11 Common Fiducial Markers for Image-Guided Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy in the Abdomen
Jordan M. Slagowski, Lauren E. Colbert, Irina M. Cazacu, Ben S. Singh,, Rachael Martin, Eugene J. Koay, Cullen M. Taniguchi, Albert C. Koong, Manoop, S. Bhutani, Joseph M. Herman, and Sam Beddar

TL;DR
This study quantitatively evaluates the visibility and artifacts of 11 common fiducial markers used in image-guided SBRT, providing guidance for optimal selection based on size, material, and shape.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive comparison of fiducial markers' visibility and artifacts across different imaging modalities, aiding clinical decision-making.
Findings
Gold fiducials with 0.35-0.43 mm diameter are preferred by physicians.
Larger fiducials increase contrast and artifacts in imaging.
Carbon fiducials produce the least artifacts.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to quantitatively evaluate the visibility and artifacts of commercially available fiducial markers in order to optimize their selection for image-guided stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT). From six different vendors, we selected 11 fiducials commonly used in image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT); the fiducials varied in material composition (gold, platinum, carbon), shape (cylindrical, notched/linear, coiled, ball-like, step), and size measured in terms of diameter (0.28-1.0 mm) and length (3.0-20.0 mm). Each fiducial was centered in 4-mm bolus within a 13-cm-thick water-equivalent phantom. Fiducials were imaged with use of a simulation computed tomography (CT) scanner, a CT-on-rails system, and an onboard cone-beam CT system. Acquisition parameters were set according to clinical protocols. Visibility was assessed in terms of contrast and the…
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