Title: Radiation Protection in Radiotherapy
1Radiation Protection inRadiotherapy
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Radiotherapy
- Part 10
- Medical Exposure Good Practice including
Radiation Protection in External Beam Radiotherapy
2IAEA BSS Medical Exposure
- Exposure incurred by patients as part of their
own medical or dental diagnosis and treatment - by persons, other than occupationally exposed,
knowingly while voluntarily helping in support
and comfort of patients - by volunteers in a program of biomedical research
involving their exposure
3Medical Exposure Patients
- In external beam radiotherapy (EBT) the quality
of the treatment depends essentially on two
parameters - the accurate dose given, and
- the exact localization of that dose in a
well-defined target (by avoiding normal
surrounding tissues as much as possible)
4External beam radiotherapy
- Support persons during irradiation not
applicable - no one must be in the treatment room
during irradiation - Children are to be sedated or anesthetized during
irradiation
5External beam
- Volunteers not possible in the conventional way,
however considered must be - participants in clinical trials
- patients who undergo radiotherapy and are
evaluated for other radiation effects - patients who undergo radiotherapy and have their
treatment modified to answer research questions.
6Objectives of the lecture(s)
- Be aware of the implications of optimization on
equipment design - Be able to discuss methods to ensure accurate
dosimetry - Be able to understand the optimization process in
radiotherapy planning and the delivery of the
dose to the appropriate target - Be familiar with the radiotherapy treatment
planning process
7Contents
- Lecture 1 Equipment and Design
- Lecture 2 Dosimetry
- Lecture 3 Radiotherapy Treatment Planning
- Lecture 4 Treatment Verification and Reporting
8Radiation Protection inRadiotherapy
IAEA Training Material on Radiation Protection in
Radiotherapy
- Part 10
- Good Practice in EBT
- Lecture 1 Equipment design
9Equipment in radiotherapy
- Radiotherapy relies - probably more than many
other medical specialties - on equipment - Equipment design and performance is therefore of
paramount importance for radiotherapy
10Objectives
- Be familiar with the design considerations as
stipulated by appendix II in the BSS - Be able to apply these design considerations in
the context of radiotherapy equipment - Be aware of relevant international standards and
other documents which provide specification for
external beam radiotherapy equipment
11Contents
- 1. Design considerations
- 2. Features of safe design in practice
- 3. Operational considerations
12Design Considerations (BSS appendix II.11)
- Equipment used in medical exposure shall be so
designed that - failure of a single component of the system be
promptly detectable so that any unplanned medical
exposure of patients is minimized - the incidence of human error in the delivery of
unplanned medical exposure be minimized
13Requires Defense in Depth
- Redundant safety features
- Interactive equipment interface
- Self checks
- Intuitive software
14Design Considerations BSS II.12
- Registrants and licensees shall
- (a) taking into account information provided by
suppliers, identify possible equipment failures
and human errors that could result in unplanned
medical exposures - (b) take all reasonable measures to prevent
failures and errors, including the selection of
suitably qualified personnel, the establishment
of adequate procedures for the calibration,
quality assurance and operation of diagnostic and
therapeutic equipment, and the provision to
personnel of appropriate training and periodic
retraining in the procedures, including
protection and safety aspects
15This would have prevented the following accident
- Maintenance problem...
- A misadjustment of the electron energy of an
accelerator resulted in overdosage of 27
patients the doses were between 3 and 10 times
higher than intended, causing several deaths - Frequent failures of an accelerator, with
frequent interruption of the treatments led to
the decision to operate in physical mode this
decision resulted in one death
16Accident after maintenance
- Contributing factors to the accident (amongst
others) - It was possible to operate the machine with the
energy selector disabled - Conflicting displays and signals on the control
panel were misinterpreted (the energy selector
indicated different energy than an instrument on
the control panel)
Both factors should have been eliminated by good
design
17Design Considerations BSS II.12 (continued)
- Registrants and licensees shall
- (c) take all reasonable measures to minimize the
consequences of failures and errors that may
occur - (d) develop appropriate contingency plans for
responding to events that may occur, display
plans prominently, and periodically conduct
practice drills
18Mitigation and emergency plans
- Discussed in part 13 of the course
19Design Considerations BSS II.13
- Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers - (a) the equipment conform to applicable standards
of the International Electrotechnical Commission
(IEC) and the ISO or to equivalent national
standards - (b) performance specifications and operating and
maintenance instructions, including protection
and safety instructions, be provided in a major
world language understandable to the users and in
compliance with the relevant IEC or ISO standards
with regard to 'accompanying documents', and that
this information be translated into local
languages when appropriate
20IEC standards
- In reference list
- Often adopted into national standards - these may
contain additional requirements - http//www.iec.ch/
21Design Considerations BSS II.13 (cont.)
- Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers - (c) where practicable, the operating terminology
(or its abbreviations) and operating values be
displayed on operating consoles in a major world
language acceptable to the user - (d) radiation beam control mechanisms be
provided, including devices that indicate clearly
and in a fail-safe manner whether the beam is
on or off
22In radiotherapy practice
- Clear Indicators shall be provided at the control
console and in the treatment room to show when
the equipment is in operation - A secondary independent indicator (e.g. a
radiation monitor inside the treatment room) may
also be useful
23General Safety Requirements
- Warning Signals and Signs
RADIATION DO NOT ENTER When RED LIGHT is on.
24Design Considerations BSS II.13 (cont.)
- Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers - (e) as nearly as practicable, the exposure be
limited to the area being examined or treated by
using collimating devices aligned with the
radiation beam - (f) the radiation field within the examination or
treatment area without any radiation beam
modifiers (such as wedges) be as uniform as
practicable and the non-uniformity be stated by
the supplier - (g) exposure rates outside the examination or
treatment area due to radiation leakage or
scattering be kept as low as reasonably
achievable
25In radiotherapy practice
- From a practical point these are the most
important stipulations regarding medical exposure
within the BSS - They direct the user towards conformal (limit the
area) intensity modulated (homogenous dose
distribution) radiotherapy using best possible
equipment (leakage is minimized)
26Conformity
- Shielding of areas which shall not be irradiated
- Use of blocks - best customized for each
individual patient
27Customization of blocks
- Use block outline on simulator film to cut the
block shape into a Styrofoam block
Huestis
28Customization of blocks
- Pour low melting alloy into foam
- Customized blocks include divergence of the beam
- Blocks are mounted on trays
29Conformal radiotherapy
- Conform the treated volume (receiving a
therapeutic dose) to the planning target volume - shield all areas surrounding it
- MLC is an option for this
30Quick Question
- What are the differences between blocks and MLC
for shielding in practice?
31Blocks versus MLC
- Blocks
- More work
- Lifting of heavy blocks required
- No leakage
- Divergence covered
- Isolated blocks (e.g. larynx shield) possible
- MLC
- Interleaf leakage needs to be considered
- Flexible
- Dynamic shielding possible
- Required for most IMRT
- High initial investment, no additional cost per
patient
32Intensity modulation
- Optimize the dose distribution
- Make dose in the target homogenous
- Minimize dose out of the target
- Different techniques
- physical compensators
- intensity modulation using multileaf collimators
33Physical Compensator
34Compensator manufacturing
- Sheets of lead glued together (compare previous
slide) - Automatic milling into foam - this can be filled
with low melting alloy or steel shot
Par Scientific
35Compensator manufacturing
- Several manufactures of automatic compensator
cutters - QC for each compensator is required
Huestis
36Intensity Modulation
MLC pattern 1
- Achieved using a Multi Leaf Collimator (MLC)
- The field shape can be altered
- either step-by-step or
- dynamically while dose is delivered
MLC pattern 2
MLC pattern 3
Intensity map
37BSS appendix II Requirements for radiation
generators and irradiation installations for
radiotherapy
- II.15. Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers, shall ensure that - (a) radiation generators and irradiation
installations include provisions for
selection, reliable indication and
confirmation (when appropriate and to the
extent feasible) of operational parameters
such as type of radiation, indication of
energy, beam modifiers (such as filters),
treatment distance, field size, beam
orientation and either treatment time or
preset dose
38Two important thoughts
- Radiotherapy depends on manufacturers and should
be working with them to achieve common goals - Many parameters determine a particular radiation
treatment - equipment should both allow
unambiguous selection of these parameters AND
indication of what has been selected
39BSS appendix II Design criteria specific to
radiotherapy
- II.15. Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers, shall ensure that - ... (b) irradiation installations using
radioactive sources be fail-safe in the sense
that the source will be automatically shielded in
the event of an interruption of power and will
remain shielded until the beam control mechanism
is reactivated from the control panel ...
40Fail to safety concept
- If something fails the unit automatically turns
the beam OFF - This includes power failures
- X Ray units / linacs turn off
- radioactive sources must be withdrawn
automatically e.g. via a spring mechanism or
gravity (fail safe)
41BSS appendix II Design criteria specific to
radiotherapy
- II.15. Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers, shall ensure that - ...
- (c) high energy radiotherapy equipment
- (i) have at least two independent 'fail to
safety' systems for terminating the irradiation
and - (ii) be provided with safety interlocks or other
means designed to prevent the clinical use of the
machine in conditions other than those selected
at the control panel
42In radiotherapy practice
- These 'fail to safety' systems for terminating
the irradiation could be for example - two independent integrating in-beam dosimeters
(e.g. most linacs) - or two independent timers (e.g. 60-Co units)
- or an integrating dosimeter and timer
- Each system should be capable of terminating the
exposure
43A linac control example
Additional timer
Two independent dosimeters MU1 and MU2
Varian
44A kV X Ray unit
Two independent timers elapsed time and
remaining time
45BSS appendix II Design criteria specific to
radiotherapy
- II.15. Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers, shall ensure that - ...
- (d) the design of safety interlocks be such that
operation of the installation during maintenance
procedures, if interlocks are bypassed, could be
performed only under direct control of the
maintenance personnel using appropriate devices,
codes or keys
46Safety requirement
- All modes of the equipment must be accessible
only via a key and password - This affects in particular physics or
maintenance modes, in which interlocks can be
overwritten and system parameters changed - No treatment must be performed in service mode
NEVER give your password to anyone...
47BSS appendix II Design criteria specific to
radiotherapy
- II.15. Registrants and licensees, in specific
co-operation with suppliers, shall ensure that - ...
- (e) radioactive sources for either teletherapy
or brachytherapy be so constructed that they
conform to the definition of a sealed source and
- (f) when appropriate, monitoring equipment be
installed or be available to give warning of an
unusual situation in the use of radiation
generators and radionuclide therapy equipment.
48In radiotherapy practice...
- This is a wide ranging requirement
- Usually it is sufficient if conditions which
affect correct operation do just make the
treatment unit inoperable - One may then check later WHY this is the case...
49A note on suppliers
- All the BSS quotes so far have included the
phrase in specific co-operation with suppliers - This emphasizes the close collaboration which is
required between manufacturers and operators of a
radiotherapy facility - The collaboration is essential in regards to
- documentation
- service/maintenance
- training