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AAPM Task Group 329: Reference dose specification for dose calculations: Dose‐to‐water or dose‐to‐muscle?
Author(s) -
Kry Stephen F.,
Feygelman Vladimir,
Balter Peter,
Knöös Tommy,
Charlie Ma C.M.,
Snyder Michael,
Tonner Brian,
Vassiliev Oleg N.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1002/mp.13995
Subject(s) - dosimetry , calibration , nuclear medicine , absorbed dose , effective dose (radiation) , linear particle accelerator , reference dose , radiation treatment planning , computer science , medical physics , medicine , mathematics , physics , radiation therapy , radiology , statistics , beam (structure) , computer security , risk assessment , optics
Linac calibration is done in water, but patients are comprised primarily of soft tissue. Conceptually, and specified in NRG/RTOG trials, dose should be reported as dose‐to‐muscle to describe the dose to the patient. Historically, the dose‐to‐water of the linac calibration was often converted to dose‐to‐muscle for patient calculations through manual application of a 0.99 dose‐to‐water to dose‐to‐muscle correction factor, applied during the linac clinical reference calibration. However, many current treatment planning system (TPS) dose calculation algorithms approximately provide dose‐to‐muscle (tissue), making application of a manual scaling unnecessary. There is little guidance on when application of a scaling factor is appropriate, resulting in highly inconsistent application of this scaling by the community. In this report we provide guidance on the steps necessary to go from the linac absorbed dose‐to‐water calibration to dose‐to‐muscle in patient, for various commercial TPS algorithms. If the TPS does not account for the difference between dose‐to‐water and dose‐to‐muscle, then TPS reference dose scaling is warranted. We have tabulated the major vendors' TPS in terms of whether they approximate dose‐to‐muscle or calculate dose‐to‐water and recommend the correction factor required to report dose‐to‐muscle directly from the TPS algorithm. Physicists should use this report to determine the applicable correction required for specifying the reference dose in their TPS to achieve this goal and should remain attentive to possible changes to their dose calculation algorithm in the future.