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Portal dosimetry in wedged beams

Portal dosimetry using electronic portal imaging devices (EPIDs) is often applied to verify high‐energy photon beam treatments. Due to the change in photon energy spectrum, the resulting dose values are, however, not very accurate in the case of wedged beams if the pixel‐to‐dose conversion for the s...

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Autores principales: Spreeuw, Hanno, Rozendaal, Roel, Camargo, Priscilla, Mans, Anton, Wendling, Markus, Olaciregui‐Ruiz, Igor, Sonke, Jan‐Jakob, Van Herk, Marcel, Mijnheer, Ben
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5690135/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26103497
http://dx.doi.org/10.1120/jacmp.v16i3.5375
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author Spreeuw, Hanno
Rozendaal, Roel
Camargo, Priscilla
Mans, Anton
Wendling, Markus
Olaciregui‐Ruiz, Igor
Sonke, Jan‐Jakob
Van Herk, Marcel
Mijnheer, Ben
author_facet Spreeuw, Hanno
Rozendaal, Roel
Camargo, Priscilla
Mans, Anton
Wendling, Markus
Olaciregui‐Ruiz, Igor
Sonke, Jan‐Jakob
Van Herk, Marcel
Mijnheer, Ben
author_sort Spreeuw, Hanno
collection PubMed
description Portal dosimetry using electronic portal imaging devices (EPIDs) is often applied to verify high‐energy photon beam treatments. Due to the change in photon energy spectrum, the resulting dose values are, however, not very accurate in the case of wedged beams if the pixel‐to‐dose conversion for the situation without wedge is used. A possible solution would be to consider a wedged beam as another photon beam quality requiring separate beam modeling of the dose calculation algorithm. The aim of this study was to investigate a more practical solution: to make aSi EPID‐based dosimetry models also applicable for wedged beams without an extra commissioning effort of the parameters of the model. For this purpose two energy‐dependent wedge multiplication factors have been introduced to be applied for portal images taken with and without a patient/phantom in the beam. These wedge multiplication factors were derived from EPID and ionization chamber measurements at the EPID level for wedged and nonwedged beams, both with and without a polystyrene slab phantom in the beam. This method was verified for an EPID dosimetry model used for wedged beams at three photon beam energies (6, 10, and 18 MV) by comparing dose values reconstructed in a phantom with data provided by a treatment planning system (TPS), as a function of field size, depth, and off‐axis distance. Generally good agreement, within 2%, was observed for depths between dose maximum and 15 cm. Applying the new model to EPID dose measurements performed during ten breast cancer patient treatments with wedged 6 MV photon beams showed that the average isocenter underdosage of 5.3% was reduced to 0.4%. Gamma‐evaluation (global [Formula: see text]) of these in vivo data showed an increase in percentage of points with [Formula: see text] from 60.2% to 87.4%, while [Formula: see text] reduced from 1.01 to 0.55. It can be concluded that, for wedged beams, the multiplication of EPID pixel values with an energy‐dependent correction factor provides good agreement between dose values determined by an EPID and a TPS, indicating the usefulness of such a practical solution. PACS numbers: 87.55.km, 87.55.kd, 87.55.Qr, 87.56a.ng
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spelling pubmed-56901352018-04-02 Portal dosimetry in wedged beams Spreeuw, Hanno Rozendaal, Roel Camargo, Priscilla Mans, Anton Wendling, Markus Olaciregui‐Ruiz, Igor Sonke, Jan‐Jakob Van Herk, Marcel Mijnheer, Ben J Appl Clin Med Phys Radiation Oncology Physics Portal dosimetry using electronic portal imaging devices (EPIDs) is often applied to verify high‐energy photon beam treatments. Due to the change in photon energy spectrum, the resulting dose values are, however, not very accurate in the case of wedged beams if the pixel‐to‐dose conversion for the situation without wedge is used. A possible solution would be to consider a wedged beam as another photon beam quality requiring separate beam modeling of the dose calculation algorithm. The aim of this study was to investigate a more practical solution: to make aSi EPID‐based dosimetry models also applicable for wedged beams without an extra commissioning effort of the parameters of the model. For this purpose two energy‐dependent wedge multiplication factors have been introduced to be applied for portal images taken with and without a patient/phantom in the beam. These wedge multiplication factors were derived from EPID and ionization chamber measurements at the EPID level for wedged and nonwedged beams, both with and without a polystyrene slab phantom in the beam. This method was verified for an EPID dosimetry model used for wedged beams at three photon beam energies (6, 10, and 18 MV) by comparing dose values reconstructed in a phantom with data provided by a treatment planning system (TPS), as a function of field size, depth, and off‐axis distance. Generally good agreement, within 2%, was observed for depths between dose maximum and 15 cm. Applying the new model to EPID dose measurements performed during ten breast cancer patient treatments with wedged 6 MV photon beams showed that the average isocenter underdosage of 5.3% was reduced to 0.4%. Gamma‐evaluation (global [Formula: see text]) of these in vivo data showed an increase in percentage of points with [Formula: see text] from 60.2% to 87.4%, while [Formula: see text] reduced from 1.01 to 0.55. It can be concluded that, for wedged beams, the multiplication of EPID pixel values with an energy‐dependent correction factor provides good agreement between dose values determined by an EPID and a TPS, indicating the usefulness of such a practical solution. PACS numbers: 87.55.km, 87.55.kd, 87.55.Qr, 87.56a.ng John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2015-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5690135/ /pubmed/26103497 http://dx.doi.org/10.1120/jacmp.v16i3.5375 Text en © 2015 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Radiation Oncology Physics
Spreeuw, Hanno
Rozendaal, Roel
Camargo, Priscilla
Mans, Anton
Wendling, Markus
Olaciregui‐Ruiz, Igor
Sonke, Jan‐Jakob
Van Herk, Marcel
Mijnheer, Ben
Portal dosimetry in wedged beams
title Portal dosimetry in wedged beams
title_full Portal dosimetry in wedged beams
title_fullStr Portal dosimetry in wedged beams
title_full_unstemmed Portal dosimetry in wedged beams
title_short Portal dosimetry in wedged beams
title_sort portal dosimetry in wedged beams
topic Radiation Oncology Physics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5690135/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26103497
http://dx.doi.org/10.1120/jacmp.v16i3.5375
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