6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265b47
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Phantom development for daily checks in electron intraoperative radiotherapy with a mobile linac.
José Luis Bonet-sanchoVicente GonzálezAntonio J. García-sánchezIgnacio Pérez-calatayudJose Perez-calatayudJose ChimenoJ. ColladoEnrique Sanchis-sánchezVicente CarmonaEnrique SanchisM.j. Pérez-calatayudsubject
Intraoperative radiotherapyMaterials scienceFlatness (systems theory)BiophysicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyElectronsLinear particle acceleratorImaging phantom030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineOpticsDosimetryIonizationDosimetryRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadiometrybusiness.industryPhantoms ImagingDetectorRadiotherapy DosageGeneral MedicineQuality assurance030220 oncology & carcinogenesisParticle AcceleratorsbusinessQuality assuranceBeam (structure)description
Abstract Purpose IORT with mobile linear accelerators is a well-established modality where the dose rate and, therefore, the dose per pulse are very high. The constancy of the dosimetric parameters of the accelerator has to be checked daily. The aim of this work is to develop a phantom with embedded detectors to improve both accuracy and efficiency in the daily test of an IORT linac at the surgery room. Methods The developed phantom is manufactured with transparent polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), allocating 6 parallel-plate chambers: a central one to evaluate the on-axis beam output, another on-axis one placed at a fixed depth under the previous one to evaluate the energy constancy and four off-axis chambers to evaluate the flatness and symmetry. To analyse the readings a specific application has been developed. Results For all chambers and energies, the mean saturation and polarization corrections were smaller than 0.7%. The beam is monitored at different levels of the clinical beam. Output, energy constancy and flatness correlate very well with the correspondent values with the complete applicator. During the first six months of clinical use the beam dosimetric parameters showed excellent stability. Conclusions A phantom has been developed with embedded parallel plate chambers attached to the upper applicator part of an IORT linac. The phantom allows a very efficient setup reducing the time to check the parameters. It provides complete dosimetric information (output, energy and flatness) with just one shot and using ionization chambers with minimum saturation effect, as this highly pulsed beam requires.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-20 | Physica medica : PM : an international journal devoted to the applications of physics to medicine and biology : official journal of the Italian Association of Biomedical Physics (AIFB) |