Abstract
Anthropomorphic phantoms with tissue equivalency are required in radiotherapy for quality assurance of imaging and dosimetric processes used in radiotherapy treatments. Commercial phantoms are expensive and provide limited approximation to patient geometry and tissue equivalency. In this study, a 5cm thick anthropomorphic thoracic slab phantom was designed and 3D printed using models exported from a CT dataset to demonstrate the feasibility of manufacturing anthropomorphic 3D printed phantoms onsite in a clinical radiotherapy department. The 3D printed phantom was manufactured with polylactic acid with an in-fill density of 80% to simulate tissue density and 26% to simulate lung density. A common radio-opacifier, barium sulfate (BaSO4), was added 6% w/w to an epoxy resin mixture to simulate similar HU numbers for bone equivalency. A half-cylindrical shape was cropped away from the spine region to allow insertion of the bone equivalent mixture. Two Gafchromic™ EBT3 film strips were inserted into the 3D printed phantom to measure the delivery of two stereotactic radiotherapy plans targeting lung and bone lesions respectively. Results were analysed within SNC Patient with a low dose threshold of 10% and a gamma criterion of 3%/2mm and 5%/1mm. The resulting gamma pass rate across both criterions for lung and bone were ≥ 95% and approximately 85% respectively. Results shows that a cost-effective anthropomorphic 3D printed phantom with realistic heterogeneity simulation can be fabricated in departments with access a suitable 3D printer, which can be used for performing commissioning and quality assurance for stereotactic type radiotherapy to lesions in the presence of heterogeneity.
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