Publication
Title
Alanine/EPR dosimetry applied in the verification of a total body irradiation protocol and treatment planning dose calculation using a humanoid phantom
Author
Abstract
Purpose: To avoid complications in total body irradiation (TBI), it is important to achieve a homogeneous dose distribution throughout the body and to deliver a correct dose to the lung which is an organ at risk. The purpose of this work was to validate the TBI dose protocol and to check the accuracy of the 3D dose calculations of the treatment planning system. Methods: Dosimetry based on alanine/electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) was used to measure dose at numerous locations within an anthropomorphic phantom (Alderson (R)) that was irradiated in a clinical TBI beam setup. The alanine EPR dosimetry system was calibrated against water calorimetry in a Co-60 beam and the absorbed dose was determined by the use of "dose-normalized amplitudes" <(A)overbar>(D). The dose rate of the TBI beam was checked against a Farmer ionization chamber. The phantom measurements were compared to 3D dose calculations from a treatment planning system (Pinnacle (R)) modeled for standard dose calculations. Results: Alanine dosimetry allowed accurate measurements which were in accordance with ionization chamber measurements. The combined relative standard measurement uncertainty in the Alderson phantom was U(r)((A) over bar (D)) = 0.6%. The humanoid phantom was irradiated to a reference dose of 10 Gy, limiting the lung dose to 7.5 Gy. The ratio of the average measured dose midplane in the craniocaudal direction to the reference dose was 1.001 with a spread of +/- 4.7% (1 sd). Dose to the lung was measured in 26 locations and found, in average, 1.8% lower than expected. Lung dose was homogeneous in the ventral-dorsal direction but a dose gradient of 0.10 Gy cm(-1) was observed in the craniocaudal direction midline within the lung lobe. 3D dose calculations (Pinnacle (R)) were found, in average, 2% lower compared to dose measurements on the body axis and 3% lower for the lungs. Conclusions: The alanine/EPR dosimetry system allowed accurate dose measurements which enabled the authors to validate their TBI dose protocol. Dose calculations based on a collapsed cone convolution dose algorithm modeled for regular treatments are accurate within 3% and can further be improved when the algorithm is modeled for TBI. (C) 2010 American Association of Physicists in Medicine. [DOI: 10.1118/1.3496355]
Language
English
Source (journal)
Medical physics. - New York, N.Y.
Publication
New York, N.Y. : 2010
ISSN
0094-2405 [print]
2473-4209 [online]
DOI
10.1118/1.3496355
Volume/pages
37 :12 (2010) , p. 6292-6299
ISI
000285849400019
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Publication type
Subject
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 08.05.2013
Last edited 02.02.2023
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