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Application of a practical method for the isocenter pointin vivodosimetry by a transit signal

Authors :
Angelo Piermattei
Nicola Di Napoli
Francesco Deodato
Luigi Azario
Numa Cellini
Francesco Cellini
Vincenzo Fusco
Savino Cilla
Luca Grimaldi
Andrea Fidanzio
Maria Antonietta Gambacorta
G. Stimato
Lucio Trodella
Gabriella Macchia
G. D'Onofrio
Diego Gaudino
Luciano Iadanza
Sara Ramella
Sergio Zucca
Alessio G. Morganti
Mario Balducci
A. Russo
Rolando Maria D'Angelillo
Piermattei, Angelo
Fidanzio, Andrea
Azario, Luigi
Grimaldi, Luca
D'Onofrio, Guido
Cilla, Savino
Stimato, Gerardina
Gaudino, Diego
Ramella, Sara
D'Angelillo, Rolando
Cellini, Francesco
Trodella, Lucio
Russo, Aniello
Iadanza, Luciano
Zucca, Sergio
Fusco, Vincenzo
Di Napoli, Nicola
Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta
Balducci, Mario
Cellini, Numa
Deodato, Francesco
Macchia, Gabriella
Morganti, Alessio G.
Source :
Physics in Medicine and Biology. 52:5101-5117
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2007.

Abstract

This work reports the results of the application of a practical method to determine the in vivo dose at the isocenter point, D(iso), of brain thorax and pelvic treatments using a transit signal S(t). The use of a stable detector for the measurement of the signal S(t) (obtained by the x-ray beam transmitted through the patient) reduces many of the disadvantages associated with the use of solid-state detectors positioned on the patient as their periodic recalibration, and their positioning is time consuming. The method makes use of a set of correlation functions, obtained by the ratio between S(t) and the mid-plane dose value, D(m), in standard water-equivalent phantoms, both determined along the beam central axis. The in vivo measurement of D(iso) required the determination of the water-equivalent thickness of the patient along the beam central axis by the treatment planning system that uses the electron densities supplied by calibrated Hounsfield numbers of the computed tomography scanner. This way it is, therefore, possible to compare D(iso) with the stated doses, D(iso,TPS), generally used by the treatment planning system for the determination of the monitor units. The method was applied in five Italian centers that used beams of 6 MV, 10 MV, 15 MV x-rays and (60)Co gamma-rays. In particular, in four centers small ion-chambers were positioned below the patient and used for the S(t) measurement. In only one center, the S(t) signals were obtained directly by the central pixels of an EPID (electronic portal imaging device) equipped with commercial software that enabled its use as a stable detector. In the four centers where an ion-chamber was positioned on the EPID, 60 pelvic treatments were followed for two fields, an anterior-posterior or a posterior-anterior irradiation and a lateral-lateral irradiation. Moreover, ten brain tumors were checked for a lateral-lateral irradiation, and five lung tumors carried out with three irradiations with different gantry angles were followed. One center used the EPID as a detector for the S(t) measurement and five pelvic treatments with six fields (many with oblique incidence) were followed. These last results are reported together with those obtained in the same center during a pilot study on ten pelvic treatments carried out by four orthogonal fields. The tolerance/action levels for every radiotherapy fraction were 4% and 5% for the brain (symmetric inhomogeneities) and thorax/pelvic (asymmetric inhomogeneities) irradiations, respectively. This way the variations between the total measured and prescribed doses at the isocenter point in five fractions were well within 2% for the brain treatment, and 4% for thorax/pelvic treatments. Only 4 out of 90 patients needed new replanning, 2 patients of which needed a new CT scan.

Details

ISSN :
13616560 and 00319155
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics in Medicine and Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....927b24ac1a7e98fd26f27160fca0639c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/52/16/026