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Feasibility study of a plastic scintillating plate-based treatment beam fluence monitoring system for use in pencil beam scanning proton therapy

Authors
Jeong, SeonghoonChung, KwangzooAhn, Sung HwanLee, BoramSeo, JaehyeonYoon, Myonggeun
Issue Date
Feb-2020
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
dose monitoring; pencil beam scanning proton therapy; plastic scintillating plate
Citation
MEDICAL PHYSICS, v.47, no.2, pp.703 - 712
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume
47
Number
2
Start Page
703
End Page
712
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/57863
DOI
10.1002/mp.13922
ISSN
0094-2405
Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this study was to describe a plastic scintillating plate-based gantry-attachable dosimetry system for pencil beam scanning proton therapy to monitor entrance proton beam fluence, and to evaluate the dosimetric characteristics of this system and its feasibility for clinical use. Methods The dosimetry system, consisting of a plastic scintillating plate and a CMOS camera, was attached to a dedicated scanning nozzle and scintillation during proton beam irradiation was recorded. Dose distribution was calculated from the accumulated recorded frames. The dosimetric characteristics (energy dependency, dose linearity, dose rate dependency, and reproducibility) of the gantry-attachable dosimetry system for use with therapeutic proton beams were measured, and the feasibility of this system during clinical use was evaluated by determining selected quality assurance items at our institution. Results The scintillating plate shortened the range of the proton beam by the water-equivalent thickness of the plate and broadened the spatial profile of the single proton spot by 11% at 70 MeV. The developed system functioned independently of the beam energy (<1.3%) and showed dose linearity, and also functioned independently of the dose rate. The feasibility of the system for clinical use was evaluated by comparing the measured quality assurance dose distribution to that of the treatment planning system. The gamma passing rate with a criterion of 3%/3 mm was 97.58%. Conclusions This study evaluated the dosimetric characteristics of a plastic scintillating plate-based dosimetry system for use with scanning proton beams. The ability to account for the interference of the dosimetry system on the therapeutic beam enabled offline monitoring of the entrance beam fluence of the pencil beam scanning proton therapy independent of the treatment system with high resolution and in a cost-effective manner.
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