Abstract

BackgroundThe availability of photon and electron spectra in digital form from current accelerators and Monte Carlo (MC) systems is scarce, and one of the packages widely used refers to linacs with a reduced clinical use nowadays. Such spectra are mainly intended for the MC calculation of detector-related quantities in conventional broad beams, where the use of detailed phase-space files (PSFs) is less critical than for MC-based treatment planning applications, but unlike PSFs, spectra can easily be transferred to other computer systems and users.MethodsA set of spectra for a range of Varian linacs has been calculated using the PENELOPE/PRIMO MC system. They have been extracted from PSFs tallied for field sizes of 10 cm × 10 cm and 15 cm × 15 cm for photon and electron beams, respectively. The influence of the spectral bin width and of the beam central axis region used to extract the spectra have been analyzed.ResultsSpectra have been compared to those by other authors showing good agreement with those obtained using the, now superseded, EGS4/BEAM MC code, but significant differences with the most widely used photon data set. Other spectra, particularly for electron beams, have not been published previously for the machines simulated in this work. The influence of the bin width on the spectrum mean energy for 6 and 10 MV beams has been found to be negligible. The size of the region used to extract the spectra yields differences of up to 40% for the mean energies in 10 MV beams, but the maximum difference for TPR 20,10 values derived from depth-dose distributions does not exceed 2% relative to those obtained using the PSFs. This corresponds to kQ differences below 0.2% for a typical Farmer-type chamber, considered to be negligible for reference dosimetry. Different configurations for using electron spectra have been compared for 6 MeV beams, concluding that the geometry used for tallying the PSFs used to extract the spectra must be accounted for in subsequent calculations using the spectra as a source.ConclusionsAn up-to-date set of consistent spectra for Varian accelerators suitable for the calculation of detector-related quantities in conventional broad beams has been developed and made available in digital form.

Highlights

  • It is well-known that a comprehensive phase-space file (PSF) characterizing the energy, position, direction and statistical weight of all the particle generations emerging from a clinical accelerator and reaching the surface of a phantom or a patient, provides a suitable source for Monte Carlo (MC) radiotherapy dosimetry calculations

  • The PSF-extracted spectra for the photon and electron beams are shown in Figs. 1 and 2, respectively, where, to enable comparison, they have been normalized to their respective integrals

  • An up-to-date set of consistent photon and electron spectra for a range of Varian accelerators has been calculated using the PENELOPE/PRIMO MC system. They have been extracted from PSFs calculated for field sizes of 10 cm × 10 cm and 15 cm × 15 cm for photon and electron beams, respectively, at an SSD of 100 cm using a bin width of 50 keV

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Summary

Introduction

It is well-known that a comprehensive phase-space file (PSF) characterizing the energy, position, direction and statistical weight of all the particle generations emerging from a clinical accelerator and reaching the surface of a phantom or a patient, provides a suitable source for Monte Carlo (MC) radiotherapy dosimetry calculations These include the calculation of detector-related quantities in PSFs are necessary for MC simulations involving the extended 3-D geometries of patient CT data, but the (2019) 14:6 necessity can be relaxed to some extent for the simulation of detector-related quantities, as those included in dosimetry protocols [4,5,6,7,8], since equivalent results are obtained [9]. Such spectra are mainly intended for the MC calculation of detector-related quantities in conventional broad beams, where the use of detailed phase-space files (PSFs) is less critical than for MC-based treatment planning applications, but unlike PSFs, spectra can be transferred to other computer systems and users

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