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On dosimetric characteristics of detectors for relative dosimetry in small fields: a multicenter experimental study.

Bozidar CasarIgnasi MendezEduard GershkevitshSonja WegenerDavid JaffrayRobert HeatonCsilla PesznyakGabor StelczerWojciech BulskiKrzysztof ChełminskiGeorgiy SmirnovNatalia AntipinaAndrew W BeavisNicholas Oliver HardingSlaven JurkovićMin-Sig HwangM Saiful Huq
Published in: Physics in medicine and biology (2023)

In this multicentric collaborative study, we aimed to verify whether the selected radiation detectors satisfy the requirements of TRS-483 Code of Practice for relative small field dosimetry in megavoltage photon beams used in radiotherapy, by investigating four dosimetric characteristics. Furthermore, we intended to analyze and complement the recommendations given in TRS-483.
Approach:
Short-term stability, dose linearity, dose-rate dependence, and leakage were determined for 17 types of detectors considered suitable for small field dosimetry. Altogether, 47 detectors were used in this study across ten institutions. Photon beams with 6 and 10 MV, with and without flattening filters, generated by Elekta Versa HDTM or Varian TrueBeamTM linear accelerators, were used.
Main Results:
The tolerance level of 0.1% for stability was fulfilled by 70% of the data points. For the determination of dose linearity, two methods were considered. Results from the use of a stricter method show that the guideline of 0.1% for dose linearity is not attainable for most of the detectors used in the study. Following the second approach (squared Pearson's correlation coefficient r2), it was found that 100% of the data fulfill the criteria r2 > 0.999 (0.1% guideline for tolerance). Less than 50% of all data points satisfied the published tolerance of 0.1% for dose-rate dependence. Almost all data points (98.2%) satisfied the 0.1% criterion for leakage.
Significance:
For short-term stability (repeatability), it was found that the 0.1% guideline could not be met. Therefore, a less rigorous criterion of 0.25% is proposed. For dose linearity, our recommendation is to adopt a simple and clear methodology and to define an achievable tolerance based on the experimental data. For dose-rate dependence, a realistic criterion of 1% is proposed instead of the present 0.1%. Agreement was found with published guidelines for background signal (leakage).&#xD.
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