Title: Radiation Protection in Radiotherapy
1Radiation Protection inRadiotherapy
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Radiotherapy
- Part 2
- Radiation Physics
- Lecture 2 Dosimetry and Equipment
2Rationale
- Radiation dose delivered to the target and
surrounding tissues is one of the major
predictors of radiotherapy treatment outcome
(compare part 3 of the course). It is generally
assumed that the dose must be accurately
delivered within /-5 of the prescribed dose to
ensure the treatment aims are met.
3Objectives
- To understand the relevance of radiation dose and
dosimetry for radiotherapy - To be able to explain the difference between
absolute and relative dosimetry - To be able to discuss the features of the most
common dosimeters in radiotherapy ionization
chambers, semiconductors, thermoluminescence
dosimeters (TLD) and film
4Contents of lecture 2
- 1. Absolute and relative dosimetry
- 2. The dosimetric environment phantoms
- 3. Dosimetric techniques
- physical background
- practical realization
51. Absolute and relative dosimetry
- Absolute dosimetry is a technique that yields
information directly on absorbed dose in Gy. This
absolute dosimetric measurement is also referred
to as calibration. All further measurements are
then compared to this known dose under reference
conditions. This means - relative dosimetry is performed. In general no
conversion coefficients or correction factors are
required in relative dosimetry since it is only
the comparison of two dosimeter readings, one of
them being in reference conditions.
6Absolute dosimetry
- Required for every radiation quality once
- Determination of absorbed dose (in Gy) at one
reference point in a phantom - Well defined geometry (example for a linear
accelerator measurements in water, at 100cm FSD,
10x10cm2 field size, depth 10cm - Follows protocols (compare part 10)
7Absolute dosimetry
- Required for every radiation quality once
- Determination of absolute dose (in Gy) at one
reference point in a phantom - Well defined geometry Eg. water phantom, 100cm
FSD, 10x10cm2 field size, depth 10cm - Follows protocols (compare part 10)
Of tremendous importance If the absolute
dosimetry is incorrect EVERYTHING will be wrong
8Quick Question
- A dose of 1Gy delivers a huge quantity of energy
to the patient - is it true or false?
9Answer
FALSE 1Gy 1J/kg. Delivering this amount of
energy would raise the temperature of tissue by
less than 0.001oC. Even for a 100kg person it is
much less than the energy consumed with a bowl of
muesli please note the amount of energy in food
is often listed on the package.
10Relative dosimetry
- Relates dose under non-reference conditions to
the dose under reference conditions - Typically at least two measurements are required
- one in conditions where the dose shall be
determined - one in conditions where the dose is known
11Examples for relative dosimetry
- Characterization of a radiation beam
- percentage depth dose, tissue maximum ratios or
similar - profiles
- Determination of factors affecting output
- field size factors, applicator factors
- filter factors, wedge factors
- patient specific factors (e.g. electron cut-out)
12Percentage depth dose measurement
- Variation of dose in a medium (typically water)
with depth - Includes attenuation and inverse square law
components
13Percentage depth dose
Relates dose at different depths in water (or the
patient) to the dose at the depth of dose
maximum - note that the y axis is relative!!!
14TAR, TMR, TPR
- Relative dosimetry for isocentric treatment
set-up (compare part 5) - All can be converted into percentage depth dose
- TAR ratio of dose in phantom with x cm
overlaying tissue to dose at the same point in
air - TMR ratio of dose with x cm overlaying tissue
to dose at dose maximum (detector position fixed) - TPR as TMR but as a ratio to dose at a reference
point (e.g. 10cm overlaying tissue)
15TMR, TPR
- Mimics isocentric conditions
- TMR is a special case of TPR where the reference
phantom depth is depth of maximum dose
16PDD and TMR
Strong ISL dependence
- Percentage depth dose (PDD) changes with distance
of the patient to the source due to variations in
the inverse square law (ISL), TAR, TMR and TPR do
not.
Weak ISL dependence
17Output factors
- Compare dose with dose under reference conditions
- different field sizes
- wedge factor
- tray factor
- applicator factor
- electron cutout factor
18Example wedge factor
Dose under reference conditions
Could also involve different field sizes
and/or different depths of the detector in the
phantom
19Quick Question
- Is a Half Value Layer measurement for the
determination of X Ray quality absolute or
relative dosimetry?
20Answer
- Relative dosimetry
- we relate the dose with different aluminium or
copper filters in the beam to the dose without
the filters to determine which filter thickness
attenuates the beam to half its original
intensity - the result is independent of the actual dose
given - we could measure for 10s or 20s or 60s
each time, as long as we ensure the irradiation
is identical for all measurements
212. The dosimetric environment
- Phantoms
- A phantom represents the radiation properties of
the patient and allows the introduction of a
radiation detector into this environment, a task
that would be difficult in a real patient. - A very important example is the scanning water
phantom. - Alternatively, the phantom can be made of slabs
of tissue mimicking material or even shaped as a
human body (anthropomorphic).
22Scanning water phantom
23Slab phantoms
24Tissue equivalent materials
- Many specifically manufactured materials such as
solid water (previous slide), white water,
plastic water, - Polystyrene (good for megavoltage beams, not
ideal for low energy photons) - Perspex (other names PMMA, Plexiglas) - tissue
equivalent composition, but with higher physical
density - correction is necessary.
25Anthropomorphic phantom
Whole body phantom ART
26Allows placement of radiation detectors in the
phantom (shown here are TLDs)
Includes inhomogeneities
27RANDO phantom
torso
CT slice through lung
Head with TLD holes
28Pediatric phantom
29Some remarks on phantoms
- It is essential that they are tested prior to use
- physical measurements - weight, dimensions
- radiation measurements - CT scan, attenuation
checks - Cheaper alternatives can also be used
- wax for shaping of humanoid phantoms
- cork as lung equivalent
- As long as their properties and limitations are
known - they are useful
303. Radiation effects and dosimetry
31Principles of radiation detection
- Ionization chamber
- Geiger Mueller Counter
- Thermoluminescence dosimetry
- Film
- Semiconductors
32Detection of Ionization in Air
Ion chamber
Adapted from Collins 2001
33Detection of Ionization in Air
Adapted from Metcalfe 1998
34Ionometric measurements
- Ionization Chamber
- 200-400V
- Measures exposure which can be converted to dose
- not very sensitive
- Geiger Counter
- gt700V
- Every ionization event is counted
- Counter of events not a dosimeter
- very sensitive
35Ionization Chambers
600cc chamber
Thimble chambers
36Cross section through a Farmer type chamber (from
Metcalfe 1996)
37Ionization Chambers
- Farmer 0.6 cc chamber and electrometer
- Most important chamber in radiotherapy dosimetry
38Electrometer
From the chamber
39Ionization chambers
- Relatively large volume for small signal (1Gy
produces approximately 36nC in 1cc of air) - To improve spatial resolution at least in one
dimension parallel plate type chambers are used.
40Parallel plate chambers
From Metcalfe et al 1996
41Parallel Plate Ionization Chambers
- Used for
- low energy X Rays (lt 60 KV)
- Electrons of any energy but rated as the
preferred method for energies lt 10 MeV and
essential for energies lt 5 MeV - Many types available in different materials and
sizes - Often sold in combination with a suitable slab
phantom
42Parallel Plate Ionization Chambers - examples
- Markus chamber
- small
- designed for electrons
- Holt chamber
- robust
- embedded in polystyrene slab
43Well type ionization chamber
- For calibration of brachytherapy sources
Brachytherapy source
44Ionization chamber type survey meters
- not as sensitive as G-M devices but not affected
by - pulsed beams such as occur with accelerators
- because of the above,
- this is the preferred
- device around high
- energy radiotherapy
- accelerators
45Geiger-Mueller Counter
- Not a dosimeter - just a counter of radiation
events - Very sensitive
- Light weight and convenient to use
- Suitable for miniaturization
46Geiger-Mueller (G-M) Devices
- Useful for
- area monitoring
- room monitoring
- personnel monitoring
- Care required in regions of high dose rate or
pulsed beams as reading may be inaccurate
47Thermoluminescence dosimetry (TLD)
- Small crystals
- Many different materials
- Passive dosimeter - no cables required
- Wide dosimetric range (?Gy to 100s of Gy)
- Many different applications
48Various TLD types
49Simplified scheme of the TLD process
50TLD glow curves
51Glow curves
- Allow research
- Are powerful QA tools - does the glow curve look
OK? - Can be used for further evaluation
- May improve the accuracy through glow curve
deconvolution
52The role of different dopants
53Importance of thermal treatment
- Determines the arrangement of impurities
- sensitivity
- fading
- response to different radiation qualities
- Maintain thermal treatment constant...
54Dose response of LiFMg,Tiwide dosimetric
range watch supralinearity
55Variation of TLD response with radiation quality
56Materials oh what a choice...
- LiFMg,Ti (the gold standard)
- CaF2 (all natural, or with Mn, Dy or Tm)
- CaSO4
- BeO
- Al2O3 C (record sensitivity ? 1uGy)
- LiFMg,Cu,P (the new star?)
57TLD reader
- photomultiplier based
- planchet and hot N2 gas heating available
58What can one expect...
- Reproducibility single chip ? 2 (0.1Gy, 1SD)
- Accuracy (4 chips standard, 2 chips measurement)
? 3 (0.1Gy, 95 confidence) - about 30 minutes per measurement...
59Radiographic film
- Reduction of silver halide to silver
- Requires processing ---gt problems with
reproducibility - Two dimensional dosimeter
- High spatial resolution
- High atomic number ---gt variations of response
with radiation quality
60Radiographic film
Often prepacked for ease of use
Cross section
61Film dose response
- Evaluation of film via optical density
- OD log (I0 / I)
- Densitometers are commercially available
62Radiographic film dosimetry in practice
- Depends on excellent processor QA
- Commonly used for demonstration of dose
distributions - Problems with accuracy and variations in response
with X Ray energy
63Radiochromic film
- New development
- No developing
- Not (very) light sensitive
- Better tissue equivalence
- Expensive
64Semiconductor Devices
Diodes for water phantom measurements
65Diodes
Mostly used like a photocell generating a voltage
proportional to the dose received.
From Metcalfe et al. 1996
66Metal Oxide SemiconductorField Effect Transistor
MOSFETs extremely small sensitive volume
From Metcalfe et al. 1996
671. irradiation
2. Charge carriers trapped in Si substrate
3. Current between source and drain altered
68Readout after irradiation gate bias required to
maintain constant current
Gate bias during irradiation determines
sensitivity
69Diodes and other Solid State Devices
- Advantages
- direct reading
- sensitive
- small size
- waterproofing possible
- Disadvantages
- temperature sensitive
- sensitivity may change --gt re-calibration
necessary - regular QA procedures need to be followed
70Summary of lecture 2
71General Summary Physics
- In radiotherapy, photons (X Rays and gamma rays)
and electrons are the most important radiation
types - Accuracy of dose delivery is essential for good
practice in radiotherapy - Absolute dosimetry determines the absorbed dose
in Gray at a well-defined reference point.
Relative dosimetry relates then the dose in all
other points or the dose under different
irradiation conditions to this absolute
measurement. - There are many different techniques available for
dosimetry - none is perfect and it requires
training and experience to choose the most
appropriate technique for a particular purpose
and interpret the results
72Where to Get More Information
- Medical physicists
- Textbooks
- Khan F. The physics of radiation therapy. 1994.
- Metcalfe P. Kron T. Hoban P. The physics of
radiotherapy X-rays from linear accelerators.
1997. - Cember H. Introduction to health physics. 1983
- Williams J Thwaites D. Radiotherapy Physics.
1993.
73Any questions?
74Question
- Which radiation detectors could be useful for in
vivo dosimetry and why?
75In radiotherapy the dose delivered to the patient
is typically too large for radiographic film
which in addition to this is light sensitive.
Ionisation chambers are often fragile and require
high voltage, both not ideal when working with
patients. Therefore, TLDs are often used as
detectors for in vivo dosimetry. They are small,
do not require cables for the measurement and
there are materials which are virtually tissue
equivalent. TLDs can be complemented by diodes if
an immediate reading ( active dosimetry) is
required. As TLDs, diodes are solid state
dosimeters and therefore sensitive and small.
Other detectors of interest in this group would
be MOSFETs. A different class of in vivo
dosimeters are exit dose detectors in the form of
electronic portal imaging (compare part 5). They
may prove very useful for on-line verification.