Literature DB >> 20964198

Implementation of radiochromic film dosimetry protocol for volumetric dose assessments to various organs during diagnostic CT procedures.

Samuel Brady1, Terry Yoshizumi, Greta Toncheva, Donald Frus.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: The authors present a means to measure high-resolution, two-dimensional organ dose distributions in an anthropomorphic phantom of heterogeneous tissue composition using XRQA radiochromic film. Dose distributions are presented for the lungs, liver, and kidneys to demonstrate the organ volume dosimetry technique. XRQA film response accuracy was validated using thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLDs).
METHODS: XRQA film and TLDs were first exposed at the center of two CTDI head phantoms placed end-to-end, allowing for a simple cylindrical phantom of uniform scatter material for verification of film response accuracy and sensitivity in a computed tomography (CT) exposure geometry; the TLD and film dosimeters were exposed separately. In a similar manner, TLDs and films were placed between cross-sectional slabs of a 5 yr old anthropomorphic phantom's thorax and abdomen regions. The anthropomorphic phantom was used to emulate real pediatric patient geometry and scatter conditions. The phantom consisted of five different tissue types manufactured to attenuate the x-ray beam within 1%-3% of normal tissues at CT beam energies. Software was written to individually calibrate TLD and film dosimeter responses for different tissue attenuation factors, to spatially register dosimeters, and to extract dose responses from film for TLD comparison. TLDs were compared to film regions of interest extracted at spatial locations corresponding to the TLD locations.
RESULTS: For the CTDI phantom exposure, the film and TLDs measured an average difference in dose response of 45% (SD +/- 2%). Similar comparisons within the anthropomorphic phantom also indicated a consistent difference, tracking along the low and high dose regions, for the lung (28%) (SD +/- 8%) and liver and kidneys (15%) (SD +/- 4%). The difference between the measured film and TLD dose values was due to the lower response sensitivity of the film that arose when the film was oriented with its large surface area parallel to the main axis of the CT beam. The consistency in dose response difference allowed for a tissue specific correction to be applied. Once corrected, the average film response agreed to better than 3% (SD +/- 2%) for the CTDI scans, and for the anthropomorphic phantom scans: 3% (SD +/- 3%) for the lungs, 5% (SD +/- 3%) for the liver, and 4% (SD +/- 3%) for the kidneys. Additionally, XRQA film measured a heterogeneous dose distribution within the organ volumes. The extent of the dose distribution heterogeneity was not measurable with the TLDs due to the limitation on the number of TLDs loadable in the regions of the phantom organs. In this regard, XRQA film demonstrated an advantage over the TLD method by discovering a 15% greater maximum dose to lung in a region unmeasured by TLDs.
CONCLUSIONS: The films demonstrated a lower sensitivity to absorbed dose measurements due to the geometric inefficiency of measuring dose from a beam situated end-on to the film. Once corrected, the film demonstrated equivalent dose measurement accuracy as TLD detectors with the added advantage of relatively simple measurement of high-resolution dose distributions throughout organ volumes.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20964198      PMCID: PMC2937053          DOI: 10.1118/1.3476455

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  16 in total

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6.  Dose and energy dependence of response of Gafchromic XR-QA film for kilovoltage x-ray beams.

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9.  A method for describing the doses delivered by transmission x-ray computed tomography.

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10.  A study of GafChromic XR Type R film response with reflective-type densitometers and economical flatbed scanners.

Authors:  G Thomas; R Y L Chu; Frank Rabe
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2.  Size-specific dose estimate (SSDE) provides a simple method to calculate organ dose for pediatric CT examinations.

Authors:  Bria M Moore; Samuel L Brady; Amy E Mirro; Robert A Kaufman
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 4.071

3.  Using GafChromic film to estimate the effective dose from dental cone beam CT and panoramic radiography.

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4.  Dosimetric changes with computed tomography automatic tube-current modulation techniques.

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5.  An investigation of image guidance dose for breast radiotherapy.

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Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2013-05-06       Impact factor: 2.102

6.  Gafchromic XR-QA2 film as a complementary dosimeter for hand-monitoring in CTF-guided biopsies.

Authors:  Sandra Sarmento; Joana Pereira; Maria José Sousa; Luís Cunha; Anabela G Dias; Miguel F Pereira; Augusto D Oliveira; João V Cardoso; Luis M Santos; Margarida Gouvêa; Joana Lencart; João G Alves; João A M Santos
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7.  Radiochromic film based dosimetry of image-guidance procedures on different radiotherapy modalities.

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  7 in total

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