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Radiochromic film for spot-scanning QA provides high spatial resolution and efficiency gains from one-shot irradiation for multiple depths. However, calibration can be a tedious procedure which may limit widespread use. Moreover, since there may be an energy dependence, which manifests as a depth dependence, this may require additional measurements for each patient. We present a one-scan protocol to simplify the procedure. A calibration using an EBT3 film, exposed by a 6-level step-wedge plan on a ProteusPLUS proton system (IBA, Belgium), was performed at depths of 18, 20, 24cm using Plastic Water (CIRS, Norfolk, VA). The calibration doses ranged from 65-250 cGy(RBE) (relative biological effectiveness) for proton energies of 170-200 MeV. A clinical prostate+nodes plan was used for validation. The planar doses at selected depths were measured with EBT3 films and analyzed using One-scan protocol (one-scan digitization of QA film and at least one film exposed to a known dose). The gamma passing rates, dose-difference maps, and profiles of 2D planar doses measured with EBT3 film and IBA MatriXX-PT, versus the RayStation TPS calculations were analyzed and compared. The EBT3 film measurement results matched well with the TPS calculation data with an average passing rate of ~95% for 2%/2mm and slightly lower passing rates were obtained from an ion chamber array detector. We were able to demonstrate that the use of a proton step-wedge provided clinically acceptable results and minimized variations between film-scanner orientation, inter-scan, and scanning conditions. Furthermore, for relative dosimetry (calibration is not done at the time of experiment) it could be derived from no more than two films exposed to known doses (one could be zero) for rescaling the master calibration curve at each depth. The sensitivity of the calibration to depth variations has been explored. One-scan protocol results appear to be comparable to that of the ion chamber array detector. The use of a proton step-wedge for calibration of EBT3 film potentially increases efficiency in patient-specific QA of proton beams.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ijmpcero.2017.62011 | DOI Listing |
Phys Med Biol
September 2025
Department of Nuclear Medicine, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh 160012, India.
Personalized dosimetry in radiopharmaceutical therapy offers superior accuracy over generic methods, though absorbed dose (AD) estimates vary due to differing techniques. While Monte Carlo simulation (MCS) is precise but complex, gafchromic film dosimetry offers a simpler alternative with strong agreement to MCS for-AD. We present a cost-effective, high-resolution gafchromic film dosimetry using a custom polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) phantom for Rhenium-188.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Phys
August 2025
Medical Physics Laboratory, Division of Health Science, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Osaka, Suita-Shi, Osaka, Japan.
Background: Proton pencil beam scanning (PBS) is susceptible to dose degradation because of interplay effects on moving targets. For cases of unacceptable motion, respiratory-gated (RG) irradiation is an effective alternative to free breathing (FB) irradiation. However, the introduction of RG irradiation with larger gate widths (GW) is hindered by interplay effects, which are analogous to those observed with FB irradiation.
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August 2025
Univ. Grenoble Alpes, INSERM, UA07 STROBE, 2280 rue de la piscine, Saint-Martin d'Hères, 38400, France.
Microbeam Radiation Therapy (MRT) is currently on the verge of entering the clinical phase, necessitating robust quality assurance (QA) with appropriate dosimeters to ensure patient safety. However, MRT dosimetry presents significant challenges due to its intrinsic characteristics, including steep dose gradients with alternating high and low dose regions-referred to as peaks and valleys (valley doses comprising only 5-7% of peak doses)-micrometric resolution requirements, the use of low-to-medium energy X-rays and extremely high dose rates of up to 16 kGy/s. Currently, Gafchromic films are considered the gold standard for patient QA.
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July 2025
Department of Neurosurgery, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, 12 Wulumuqi Road (M), Shanghai, 200040, China.
Dose verification in preclinical CyberKnife-based stereotactic radiosurgery (CK-SRS) of intracranial tumors is complicated by the unique characteristics of the system, including its highly conformal, non-coplanar radiation delivery and small-field irradiation. This raises concerns about the reliability of dosimetric measurements in CK-SRS radiobiological studies, emphasizing the need for standardized dosimetry protocols to improve dose accuracy and reproducibility. This study aims to evaluate a fully 3D-printed mouse phantom as a tool for preclinical intracranial CK-SRS dose verification.
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July 2025
Department of Radiation Oncology, Asan Medical Center, 88, Olympic-ro 43-gil, Songpa-gu, Seoul, 05505, Korea.
This study evaluates a novel three-dimensional (3D) quality assurance (QA) device, the Mobile Phosphor Probe (MPP), for pretreatment dose verification in Gamma Knife (GK) stereotactic radiosurgery. The MPP system consists of a cylindrical phantom with a phosphor screen, an imaging unit with a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera, and a motorized driving unit. Dose distributions are reconstructed from images using a lookup table, which correlates CCD pixel optical density with dose values, calibrated against EBT3 film readings.
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