A two-dimensional liquid-filled ionization chamber array prototype for small-field verification: characterization and first clinical tests |
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Authors: | Luis Brualla-González Faustino Gómez Aurora Vicedo Diego M González-Castaño Araceli Gago-Arias Antonio Pazos Martín Zapata Joan V Roselló Juan Pardo-Montero |
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Affiliation: | Hospital General de Valencia, ERESA, Servicio de Radiofísica, Valencia, Spain. |
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Abstract: | In this work we present the design, characterization and first clinical tests of an in-house developed two-dimensional liquid-filled ionization chamber prototype for the verification of small radiotherapy fields and treatments containing such small fields as in radiosurgery, which consists of 2?mm × 2?mm pixels arranged on a 16×8 rectangular grid. The ionization medium is isooctane. The characterization of the device included the study of depth, field-size and dose-rate dependences, which are sufficiently moderate for a good operation at therapy radiation levels. However, the detector presents an important anisotropic response, up to ? 12% for front versus near-lateral incidence, which can impact the verification of full treatments with different incidences. In such a case, an anisotropy correction factor can be applied. Output factors of small square fields measured with the device show a small systematic over-response, less than 1%, when compared to unshielded diode measurements. An IMRT radiosurgery treatment has been acquired with the liquid-filled ionization chamber device and compared with film dosimetry by using the gamma method, showing good agreement: over 99% passing rates for 1.2% and 1.2?mm for an incidence-per-incidence analysis; 100% passing rates for tolerances 1.8% and 1.8?mm when the whole treatment is analysed and the anisotropy correction factor is applied. The point dose verification for each incidence of the treatment performed with the liquid-filled ionization chamber agrees within 1% with a CC01 ionization chamber. This prototype has shown the utility of this kind of technology for the verification of small fields/treatments. Currently, a larger device covering a 5?cm × 5?cm area is under development. |
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