Discrepancy of Intensity Modulation Radiation Therapy Dose Delivery due to the Dose-Dynamic Multi-Leaf Collimator Gravity Effect
- Authors
- Lee, Jeong-Woo; Chung, Jin-Beom; Lee, Doo-Hyun; Park, Jeong-Hoon; Choe, Bo-Young; Suh, Tae-Suk; Jang, Hong-Seok; Hong, Semie; Park, Byung-Moon; Kang, Min-Young; Choi, Kyoung-Sik; Kim, You-Hyun
- Issue Date
- 12월-2008
- Publisher
- KOREAN PHYSICAL SOC
- Keywords
- DMLC; Gravity effect; IMRT; Two-dimensional ion chamber matrix
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY, v.53, no.6, pp.3436 - 3443
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN PHYSICAL SOCIETY
- Volume
- 53
- Number
- 6
- Start Page
- 3436
- End Page
- 3443
- URI
- https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/122310
- DOI
- 10.3938/jkps.53.3436
- ISSN
- 0374-4884
- Abstract
- The aim of the present study was to investigate the multi-leaf collimator (MLC) gravity effect on intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) dose-dynamic delivery at different gantry angles. The non-uniform fluence for IMRT was generated by means of dose-dynamic MLC (DMLC) performances, which were multiple static segments (MSS) or fully dynamic sliding window (SW) delivery methods at different gantry angles. SW delivery is quite similar to MSS with regard to MLC sliding pattern through the X1 to X2 jaw direction, except that it is irradiated during DMLC movement. To determine how the DMLC gravity affects the IMRT dose fluence, we mounted a two-dimensional ion chamber matrix (MatriXX, Scanditronix-Wellhofer, Schwarzenbruck, Germany) to a linear accelerator (CL 21EX, Varian, Palo Alto, CA, USA). Individual IMRT dose-dynamic segments were applied by using MSS and SW for 6-MV photon beams at five different gantry angles: 0 degrees (neutral gravity), 45 degrees (semi-along gravity), 90 degrees (vertical-along gravity), 315 degrees (semi-against gravity) and 270 degrees (against gravity). To test the correlation of leaf speed and gravity, we delivered half monitor units (MUs) for planned closes for absolute dose comparison. Strict gamma-index (dose difference: 2%; distance to agreement: 2 mm) histograms were used for quantitative analyses of the discrepancy. The dose distribution by MSS under neutral gravity (gantry 0 degrees) with 137 MUs at a prescribed (lose (45 cGy) point, which was in the low gradient area, was used as a reference for the other results. The gamma-index histograms showed an increased tendency of the dose discrepancy toward the gravity-along direction rather than toward the gravity-against direction. The acceptable proportional ranges below 1 of the gamma-index were 96.2 - 99.6% (mean: 97.6%), 92.6 - 93.5% (mean: 93.0%), 90.4 - 92.6% (mean: 91.3%)1 94.6 - 98.0% (mean: 96.4%) and 92.9 - 96.8% (mean: 95.0%) for neutral, semi-along, vertical-along, semi-against and vertical-against gravity of the positions of MLC segments, respectively. we noted that MSS deliveries were more stable than were the SW deliveries (unacceptable gamma-index range 1.0 - 2.0: mean 3.6% for MSS and 5.4% for W). For the dose measurement on the prescribed dose point, all measurements showed a good agreement within an average of 2%. Our experiment conclusively demonstrated that the DAMC gravity affects the IMRT dose distribution. The effect may impact more severely in the gravity along direction and SW while the leaf speed is not influenced so much.
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Collections - College of Health Sciences > Department of Radiologic Science > 1. Journal Articles
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