Technical note: Radiological clinical equivalence for phantom materials in carbon ion therapy

Author:

Taylor Paige A.12,Mirandola Alfredo3,Ciocca Mario3,Hartzell Shannon4,Vai Alessandro3,Alvarez Paola1,Howell Rebecca M.12,Koay Eugene J.25,Peeler Christopher R.12,Peterson Christine B.26,Kry Stephen F.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiation Physics The University of MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

2. Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

3. Department of Medical Physics Centro Nazionale di Adroterapia Oncologica Pavia Italy

4. Department of Radiation Oncology Mayo Clinic Jacksonville Florida USA

5. Department of Gastrointestinal Radiation Oncology The University of MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

6. Department of Biostatistics The University of MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractPurposeAs carbon ion radiotherapy increases in use, there are limited phantom materials for heterogeneous or anthropomorphic phantom measurements. This work characterized the radiological clinical equivalence of several phantom materials in a therapeutic carbon ion beam.MethodsEight materials were tested for radiological material‐equivalence in a carbon ion beam. The materials were computed tomography (CT)‐scanned to obtain Hounsfield unit (HU) values, then irradiated in a monoenergetic carbon ion beam to determine relative linear stopping power (RLSP). The corresponding HU and RLSP for each phantom material were compared to clinical carbon ion calibration curves. For absorbed dose comparison, ion chamber measurements were made in the center of a carbon ion spread‐out Bragg peak (SOBP) in water and in the phantom material, evaluating whether the material perturbed the absorbed dose measurement beyond what was predicted by the HU‐RLSP relationship.ResultsPolyethylene, solid water (Gammex and Sun Nuclear), Blue Water (Standard Imaging), and Techtron HPV had measured RLSP values that agreed within ±4.2% of RLSP values predicted by the clinical calibration curve. Measured RLSP for acrylic was 7.2% different from predicted. The agreement for balsa wood and cork varied between samples. Ion chamber measurements in the phantom materials were within 0.1% of ion chamber measurements in water for most materials (solid water, Blue Water, polyethylene, and acrylic), and within 1.9% for the rest of the materials (balsa wood, cork, and Techtron HPV).ConclusionsSeveral phantom materials (Blue Water, polyethylene, solid water [Gammex and Sun Nuclear], and Techtron HPV) are suitable for heterogeneous phantom measurements for carbon ion therapy. Low density materials should be carefully characterized due to inconsistencies between samples.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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