Technical note: Visual, rapid, scintillation point dosimetry for in vivo MV photon beam radiotherapy treatments

Author:

Decker Savannah M.1,Bruza Petr1,Zhang Rongxiao2,Williams Benjamin B.3,Jarvis Lesley A.23,Pogue Brian W.1,Gladstone David J.123

Affiliation:

1. Thayer School of Engineering Dartmouth College Hanover New Hampshire USA

2. Geisel School of Medicine Dartmouth College Hanover New Hampshire USA

3. Dartmouth Cancer Center Dartmouth Health Lebanon New Hampshire USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWhile careful planning and pre‐treatment checks are performed to ensure patient safety during external beam radiation therapy (EBRT), inevitable daily variations mean that in vivo dosimetry (IVD) is the only way to attain the true delivered dose. Several countries outside the US require daily IVD for quality assurance. However, elsewhere, the manual labor and time considerations of traditional in vivo dosimeters may be preventing frequent use of IVD in the clinic.PurposeThis study expands upon previous research using plastic scintillator discs for optical dosimetry for electron therapy treatments. We present the characterization of scintillator discs for in vivo x‐ray dosimetry and describe additional considerations due to geometric complexities.MethodsPlastic scintillator discs were coated with reflective white paint on all sides but the front surface. An anti‐reflective, matte coating was applied to the transparent face to minimize specular reflection. A time‐gated iCMOS camera imaged the discs under various irradiation conditions. In post‐processing, background‐subtracted images of the scintillators were fit with Gaussian‐convolved ellipses to extract several parameters, including integral output, and observation angle.ResultsDose linearity and x‐ray energy independence were observed, consistent with ideal characteristics for a dosimeter. Dose measurements exhibited less than 5% variation for incident beam angles between 0° and 75° at the anterior surface and 0–60 at the posterior surface for exit beam dosimetry. Varying the angle between the disc surface and the camera lens did not impact the integral output for the same dose up to 55°. Past this point, up to 75°, there is a sharp falloff in response; however, a correction can be used based on the detected width of the disc. The reproducibility of the integral output for a single disc is 2%, and combined with variations from the gantry angle, we report the accuracy of the proposed scintillator disc dosimeters as ±5.4%.ConclusionsPlastic scintillator discs have characteristics that are well‐suited for in vivo optical dosimetry for x‐ray radiotherapy treatments. Unlike typical point dosimeters, there is no inherent readout time delay, and an optical recording of the measurement is saved after treatment for future reference. While several factors influence the integral output for the same dose, they have been quantified here and may be corrected in post‐processing.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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