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Surface dosimetry for oblique tangential photon beams: A Monte Carlo simulation study
Author(s) -
Chow James C. L.,
Grigorov Grigor N.
Publication year - 2008
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 - 10.1118/1.2818956
Subject(s) - imaging phantom , monte carlo method , dosimetry , percentage depth dose curve , physics , photon , optics , beam (structure) , linear particle accelerator , materials science , nuclear medicine , ionization chamber , mathematics , ionization , medicine , ion , statistics , quantum mechanics
The effect of beam obliquity on the surface relative dose profiles for the tangential photon beams was studied. The 6 and 15 MV photon beams with 4 × 4 and 10 × 10   cm 2field sizes produced by a Varian 21 EX linear accelerator were used. Phase‐space models of the photon beams were created using Monte Carlo simulations based on the EGSnrc code, and were verified using film measurements. The relative dose profiles in the phantom skin, at 2 mm depth from the surface of the half‐phantom geometry, or HPG, were calculated for increasing gantry angles from 270 to 280 deg clockwise. Relative dose profiles of a full phantom enclosing the whole tangential beam (full phantom geometry, or FPG) were also calculated using Monte Carlo simulation as a control for comparison. The results showed that, although the relative dose profiles in the phantom skin did not change significantly with an oblique beam using a FPG, the surface relative depth dose was increased for the HPG. In the HPG, with 6 MV photon beams and field size = 10 × 10   cm 2 , when the beam angle, starting from 270 deg, was increased from 1 to 3 deg, the relative depth doses in the phantom skin were increased from 68 % to 79 % at 10 cm depth. This increase in dose was slightly larger than the dose from 15 MV photon beams with the same field size and beam angles, where the relative depth doses in phantom skin were increased from 81 % to 87 % at 10 cm depth. A parameter called the percent depth dose (PDD) ratio, defined as the relative depth dose from the HPG to the relative depth dose from the FPG at a given depth along the phantom skin, was used to evaluate the effect of the phantom–air interface. It is found that the PDD ratio increased significantly when the beam angle was changed from zero to 1–3 degrees. Moreover, the PDD ratio, for a given field size, experienced a greater increase for 6 MV than for 15 MV. For the same photon beam energy, the PDD ratio increased more with a 4 × 4   cm 2field compared to 10 × 10   cm 2 . The results in this study will be useful for physicists and dosimetrists to predict the surface relative dose variations when using clinical tangential‐like photon beams in radiation therapy.

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