Conventional vs MR-Linac Workflow: A Radiation Therapist’s Perspective

By Dr. Hafsa Zameer

Abstract:

Background:

The integration of magnetic resonance imaging with linear
accelerator technology (MR-Linac) has transformed
radiotherapy practice by enabling superior soft-tissue
visualization and online adaptive planning. Compared with
conventional Linac systems, which rely on CT-based
simulation and cone-beam CT (CBCT) for setup verification,
the MR-Linac allows real-time imaging and plan modification
based on daily anatomical changes. This evolution has
significantly influenced the workflow and clinical
responsibilities of radiation therapists.

Objective:

To compare the conventional Linac and MR-Linac workflows
from a radiation therapist’s perspective, highlighting
differences in imaging, treatment adaptation, and professional
responsibilities.

Method:

A descriptive workflow comparison was conducted, outlining
each treatment phase—from simulation to treatment delivery.
Key differences were analyzed regarding image acquisition,
patient positioning, plan verification, adaptation, and quality
assurance.

Results:

Conventional Linac workflows follow an offline planning
process with fixed treatment plans and limited daily variation.
MR-Linac workflows incorporate daily MR imaging, online
contour review, adaptive plan optimization, and real-time
motion monitoring. These steps increase treatment time but
enhance target precision and organ-at-risk sparing. Radiation
therapists have expanded roles in MR image assessment,
adaptive decision support, MR safety, and patient
communication.

Conclusions:

The MR-Linac introduces a dynamic, adaptive workflow that
elevates treatment precision and expands the radiation
therapist’s role. As frontline professionals, therapists are integral to the success of MR-guided adaptive radiotherapy,
requiring ongoing training, multidisciplinary collaboration,
and workflow refinement to ensure safe and efficient clinical
implementation.

Journal Insights

Journal of the European Society for Radiotherapy and Oncology and affiliated to the Canadian Association of Radiation Oncology.

Radiotherapy and Oncology, also known as the Green journal, aims at driving innovation in radiation oncology. It publishes high impact articles describing original …

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About the Author

Radiology and Imaging, Cancer Research, Oncology

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