A round-robin gamma stereotactic radiosurgery dosimetry interinstitution comparison of calibration protocols
Language English Country United States Media print
Document type Comparative Study, Journal Article, Multicenter Study, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
26520764
DOI
10.1118/1.4934376
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Radiotherapy Dosage MeSH
- Phantoms, Imaging MeSH
- Calibration standards MeSH
- Clinical Protocols standards MeSH
- Radiosurgery instrumentation methods standards MeSH
- Radiometry methods standards MeSH
- Water MeSH
- Air MeSH
- Gamma Rays therapeutic use MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Multicenter Study MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Comparative Study MeSH
- Geographicals
- United States MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Water MeSH
PURPOSE: Absorbed dose calibration for gamma stereotactic radiosurgery is challenging due to the unique geometric conditions, dosimetry characteristics, and nonstandard field size of these devices. Members of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) Task Group 178 on Gamma Stereotactic Radiosurgery Dosimetry and Quality Assurance have participated in a round-robin exchange of calibrated measurement instrumentation and phantoms exploring two approved and two proposed calibration protocols or formalisms on ten gamma radiosurgery units. The objectives of this study were to benchmark and compare new formalisms to existing calibration methods, while maintaining traceability to U.S. primary dosimetry calibration laboratory standards. METHODS: Nine institutions made measurements using ten gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units in three different 160 mm diameter spherical phantoms [acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) plastic, Solid Water, and liquid water] and in air using a positioning jig. Two calibrated miniature ionization chambers and one calibrated electrometer were circulated for all measurements. Reference dose-rates at the phantom center were determined using the well-established AAPM TG-21 or TG-51 dose calibration protocols and using two proposed dose calibration protocols/formalisms: an in-air protocol and a formalism proposed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) working group for small and nonstandard radiation fields. Each institution's results were normalized to the dose-rate determined at that institution using the TG-21 protocol in the ABS phantom. RESULTS: Percentages of dose-rates within 1.5% of the reference dose-rate (TG-21+ABS phantom) for the eight chamber-protocol-phantom combinations were the following: 88% for TG-21, 70% for TG-51, 93% for the new IAEA nonstandard-field formalism, and 65% for the new in-air protocol. Averages and standard deviations for dose-rates over all measurements relative to the TG-21+ABS dose-rate were 0.999±0.009 (TG-21), 0.991±0.013 (TG-51), 1.000±0.009 (IAEA), and 1.009±0.012 (in-air). There were no statistically significant differences (i.e., p>0.05) between the two ionization chambers for the TG-21 protocol applied to all dosimetry phantoms. The mean results using the TG-51 protocol were notably lower than those for the other dosimetry protocols, with a standard deviation 2-3 times larger. The in-air protocol was not statistically different from TG-21 for the A16 chamber in the liquid water or ABS phantoms (p=0.300 and p=0.135) but was statistically different from TG-21 for the PTW chamber in all phantoms (p=0.006 for Solid Water, 0.014 for liquid water, and 0.020 for ABS). Results of IAEA formalism were statistically different from TG-21 results only for the combination of the A16 chamber with the liquid water phantom (p=0.017). In the latter case, dose-rates measured with the two protocols differed by only 0.4%. For other phantom-ionization-chamber combinations, the new IAEA formalism was not statistically different from TG-21. CONCLUSIONS: Although further investigation is needed to validate the new protocols for other ionization chambers, these results can serve as a reference to quantitatively compare different calibration protocols and ionization chambers if a particular method is chosen by a professional society to serve as a standardized calibration protocol.
Department of Medical Physics University of Wisconsin Madison Madison Wisconsin 53705
Department of Radiation Oncology Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina 27710
Department of Radiation Oncology The Cleveland Clinic Foundation Cleveland Ohio 44195
Department of Radiation Oncology Tufts University School of Medicine Boston Massachusetts 02111
Department of Radiation Oncology University California San Francisco San Francisco California 94143
Department of Radiation Oncology University of Southern California Los Angeles California 90033
Department of Radiation Oncology Wake Forest University Winston Salem North Carolina 27157
Department of Radiation Oncology Washington University St Louis Missouri 63110
Gamma Knife Center Washington Hospital Healthcare System Fremont California 94538
Imaging and Radiation Oncology Core Houston UT MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston Texas 77030
Medical Physics Department Hospital Na Homolce Prague 15030 Czech Republic
Radiation Oncology Department University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 15232
References provided by Crossref.org