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Development of a scatter correction technique and its application to HDR I 192 r multicatheter breast brachytherapy
Author(s) -
Poon Emily,
Verhaegen Frank
Publication year - 2009
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 - 10.1118/1.3157105
Subject(s) - imaging phantom , brachytherapy , dosimetry , nuclear medicine , monte carlo method , medicine , physics , mathematics , radiation therapy , radiology , statistics
This article introduces a scatter correction (SC) technique for high‐dose‐rate (HDR)I192 r brachytherapy dose calculations in the absence of a full scatter environment near the skin. The technique uses dosimetry data derived by Monte Carlo (MC) simulations for the Nucletron microSelectron v2 HDRI192 r source. The data include the primary and scatter components of the radial dose function and the anisotropy function in addition to a SC table. The dose to a point of interest for each dwell position is estimated by first calculating the primary and scatter doses in an infinite water phantom. The scatter dose is then scaled by a SC factor that depends on the distances between the point of interest, the dwell positions, and the body contour of the patient. SC calculations in water phantoms of three different shapes, as well as computed tomography‐based geometries of 18 multicatheter breast patients, are compared with Task Group 43 (TG‐43) and PTRAN_CT MC calculations. The SC calculations show improvement over TG‐43 for all test cases while taking 50% longer to run. The target and skin doses for the breast patient plans are unaffected by tissue inhomogeneities, as indicated by an agreement better than 1% between the SC and MC results. On average, TG‐43 overestimates the target coverage by 2% and the dose to the hottest 0.1cm 3( D 0.1 cc)of the skin by 5%. The low‐density lung causes the lung and heartD 0.1 ccto differ by up to 3% for the SC method and by 2%–5% for TG‐43 compared with MC calculations. The SC technique is suitable for HDRI192 r dose calculations near the skin provided that the dose is nearly unperturbed by internal inhomogeneities. It has been validated for multicatheter breast brachytherapy.
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