Title: Radiation Protection in Radiotherapy
1Radiation Protection inRadiotherapy
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Radiotherapy
- Part 10
- Good Practice in EBT
- Lecture 1 (cont.) Equipment design
23. Operational Considerations
- General Considerations include the following
requirements - Operation of a radiotherapy facility must be
authorized by the relevant regulatory authority - Suitably trained staff must be available
- All changes to equipment, purchases and
decommissioning must be reported to the relevant
regulatory authority - Some guidance on equipment specifications is
given in part 5 of the course - part 18 will
provide more information on regulatory
requirements
3Operation of equipment
- radiation generators and irradiation
installations include provisions for selection,
reliable indication and confirmation of
operational parameters such as - type of radiation
- indication of energy
- beam modifiers (such as filters)
- treatment distance
- field size
- beam orientation
- either treatment time or preset dose
4Most of this information is provided by computer
interface
type of radiation indication of energy beam
modifiers treatment distance field size beam
orientation treatment time preset dose
Varian
5Most of this information is provided by computer
interface
type of radiation indication of energy beam
modifiers treatment distance field size beam
orientation treatment time preset dose
6Acceptance Testing and Commissioning
- Acceptance testing verifying that the machine
fulfils all the specifications given by the
manufacturer and the ones agreed on as
requirements for purchase. In addition to this
the unit should fulfil ALL safety requirements as
documented by national and international
standards (e.g. IEC documents) - Commissioning ensuring that the unit is suitable
for patient treatment within a certain
department. This includes preparation of planning
data and verification thereof.
7Operational Considerations
- Comprehensive acceptance testing and
commissioning tests shall be carried out by
appropriately qualified experts prior to initial
treatment - A comprehensive quality assurance programme with
the participation of appropriate qualified
experts in the relevant fields shall be
established
8Commissioning
- Commissioning of radiotherapy equipment is a very
important and complex process - Only qualified experts should perform the
commissioning and certify that a treatment unit
is fit for use on patients - One needs to know all specs of the equipment AND
have the appropriate tools (water phantom, ion
chamber, )
9Commissioning
- The commissioning process is not only informed by
the equipment itself but also by its intended use
and its role within the department. - e.g. a linac which shall be used primarily for
stereotactic radiotherapy will require a
different set of tests than a unit which will be
used for prostate patients...
10Commissioning
- Protocols exist which provide guidance through
the commissioning process (see reference list) - A subset of the commissioning process can serve
as protocol for ongoing quality assurance - Commissioning of new equipment leads to
requirements for training of staff
11Qualification and Training
- Accreditation or certification schemes exist from
many professional organisations or boards - The skills required are practical and theoretical
- Experience essential
- More on this in part 18 of the course
12Safety first...
- Once the equipment has been installed, the first
commissioning tests should be - preliminary radiation survey as soon as the
equipment is powered to ensure that it is safe to
proceed - once the equipment has been fully set up and
tuned, carry out a full survey outside the
treatment room - survey the shielding attached to the equipment
13Records are essential
They must be complete, easily accessible and
understandable
They serve both as baseline for future evaluation
of the equipment and QA and as data which may be
required for legal purposes...
14Summary
- Good design of equipment provides the best
safeguard against accidents - Design criteria should follow the defense in
depth principle - Understanding radiotherapy equipment and its
operation is essential for the commissioning
process
15Where to Get More Information
16IEC reference list
- International Electrotechnical Commission.
Particular requirements for medical electron
accelerators in the range of 1MeV to 50MeV,
Section Two Radiation safety for equipment,
International Standard 601-2-1, part 2 Geneva
Bureau Central de la Commission Electrotechnique
Internationale 1981 - International Electrotechnical Commission.
Particular requirements for the safety of
remote-controlled automatically-driven gamma-ray
afterloading equipment, International Standard
601-2-17. Geneva Bureau Central de la Commission
Electrotechnique Internationale 1989 - International Electrotechnical Commission.
Medical electron accelerators functional
performance characteristics, International
Standard 976. Geneva Bureau Central de la
Commission Electrotechnique Internationale 1989 - International Electrotechnical Commission.
Medical electron accelerators in the range 1 to
50MeV guidelines for functional performance
characteristics, International Standard 977.
Geneva Bureau Central de la Commission
Electrotechnique Internationale 1989 - International Electrotechnical Commission.
Radiotherapy simulators - functional performance
characteristics, International Standard 1168.
Geneva Bureau Central de la Commission
Electrotechnique Internationale 1993 - International Electrotechnical Commission.
Electromedical Equipment Particular
requirements for the safety of radiotherapy
treatment planning systems, International
Standard 62083. Geneva Bureau Central de la
Commission Electrotechnique Internationale 1998.
17Any questions?
18Question
- Please explain how the defense in depth
principle can be (and has been) applied to
ensuring that a linear accelerator is turned off
after the correct dose is given to the patient.
19Acknowledgment
- Malcolm Millar, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne,
Australia