Abstract

Silicon-diode-based detectors are commonly used for the dosimetry of small radiotherapy beams due to their relatively small volumes and high sensitivity to ionizing radiation. Nevertheless, silicon-diode-based detectors tend to over-respond in small fields because of their high density relative to water. For that reason, detector-specific beam correction factors () have been recommended not only to correct the total scatter factors but also to correct the tissue maximum and off-axis ratios. However, the application of to in-depth and off-axis locations has not been studied. The goal of this work is to address the impact of the correction factors on the calculated dose distribution in static non-conventional photon beams (specifically, in stereotactic radiosurgery with circular collimators). To achieve this goal, the total scatter factors, tissue maximum, and off-axis ratios were measured with a stereotactic field diode for 4.0-, 10.0-, and 20.0-mm circular collimators. The irradiation was performed with a Novalis® linear accelerator using a 6-MV photon beam. The detector-specific correction factors were calculated and applied to the experimental dosimetry data for in-depth and off-axis locations. The corrected and uncorrected dosimetry data were used to commission a treatment planning system for radiosurgery planning. Various plans were calculated with simulated lesions using the uncorrected and corrected dosimetry. The resulting dose calculations were compared using the gamma index test with several criteria. The results of this work presented important conclusions for the use of detector-specific beam correction factors ( in a treatment planning system. The use of for total scatter factors has an important impact on monitor unit calculation. On the contrary, the use of for tissue-maximum and off-axis ratios has not an important impact on the dose distribution calculation by the treatment planning system. This conclusion is only valid for the combination of treatment planning system, detector, and correction factors used in this work; however, this technique can be applied to other treatment planning systems, detectors, and correction factors.

Highlights

  • Problems related with the dosimetry of small radiotherapy photon beams have been extensively discussed in the literature [1]

  • The goal of this study is to address the impact of the detector-specific beam correction factors on the calculated dose distribution in static non-conventional photon beams

  • We evaluated the impact of detector-specific beam correction factors on the calculated dose distribution in static non-conventional photon beams using circular collimators

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Summary

Introduction

Problems related with the dosimetry of small radiotherapy photon beams have been extensively discussed in the literature [1]. In response these problems, many detectors have been manufactured for the dosimetry of small photon beams with certain advantages and disadvantages [2]. Silicon-diode-based detectors have been selected as the detector of choice [4,5,6,7,8] These detectors tend to over-respond in small fields due to their high density relative to water. To minimize this over-response, the use of detector-specific beam correction factors has been proposed by Alfonso et al [9]. By means of that approach, the correction factors can account for the difference in the detector response between small beams and the machine-specific reference field

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