Abstract
Background and purposeFor dosimetry in magnetic resonance (MR) guided radiotherapy, assessing the magnetic field correction factors of air-vented ionization chambers is crucial. Novel MR-optimized chambers reduce MR-imaging artefacts, enhancing their quality assurance utility. This study aimed to characterize two new MR-optimized ionization chambers with sensitive volumes of 0.07 and 0.016cm3 regarding magnetic field correction factors and intra-type variation and compare them to their conventional counterparts. Material and methodsFive chambers of each type were evaluated in a water phantom, using a clinical linear accelerator and an electromagnet, as well as a 1.5 T MR-linac system. The magnetic field correction factor kB→,Q, addressing the change of response caused by a magnetic field, was assessed together with its intra-type variation. MR-optimized and conventional chambers were compared using a Mann-Whitney U-Test. ResultsConsidering 1.5 T and a perpendicular chamber orientation, we observed significant differences in the magnetic field-induced change in chamber reading between the two 0.016cm3 chamber versions (p = 0.03). For a 7MV beam, MR-optimized chambers (0.016/0.07 cm3) showed kB→,Q values of 1.0426(66) and 1.0463(44), compared to 1.0319(53) and 1.0480(41) of their conventional counterparts. In anti-parallel orientation, kB→,Q was 1.0012(69) and 0.9863(49) for the MR-optimized chambers. The average intra-type variation of kB→,Q over all chamber types was 0.3%. ConclusionMagnetic field correction factors were successfully determined for four ionization chamber types, including two new MR-optimized versions, allowing their use in MR-linac absolute dosimetry. Evaluation of the intra-type variation enabled the assessment of their contribution to the uncertainty of tabulated kB→,Q.
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