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Comparison of two commercial detector arrays for IMRT quality assurance
Author(s) -
Li Jonathan G.,
Yan Guanghua,
Liu Chihray
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of applied clinical medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.83
H-Index - 48
ISSN - 1526-9914
DOI - 10.1120/jacmp.v10i2.2942
Subject(s) - detector , ionization chamber , reproducibility , quality assurance , calibration , optics , nuclear medicine , coefficient of variation , sensitivity (control systems) , dose profile , dosimetry , materials science , physics , ionization , mathematics , statistics , medicine , ion , electronic engineering , pathology , quantum mechanics , engineering , external quality assessment
Two commercially available detector arrays were compared for their use in the quality assurance of patient‐specific IMRT treatment plans: one a diode‐based array (MapCHECK) and the other an ion chamber‐based array (MatriXX). The dependence of the response of detectors on field size, dose rate, and radiation energy was measured and compared with reference measurements using a Farmer‐type ionization chamber. The linearity of the detector response, short‐term and long‐term reproducibility, statistical uncertainty as a function of delivered dose, and the validity of the array calibration were also examined to understand the stability and uncertainty of the systems. No field size or SSD dependence was observed within the range of the field sizes and SSDs used in the study at both 6 MV and 18 MV photon energies. Both detector arrays showed negligible errors ( < 1 % ) when measuring doses of more than ~ 8   cGy , but exhibited errors of ~ 3 % when measuring doses on the order of 1 cGy. While the MapCHECK showed a stable short‐term reproducibility to within measurement error, the MatriXX showed a slow but continuous increase in readings during the initial one‐hour period (about 0.8%). The MapCHECK also showed a slightly better array sensitivity correction with all the detectors having less than 1% discrepancy and more than 90% of the detectors within 0.5% variation, whereas about 60% of the MatriXX detectors showed a less than 0.5% variation and ~ 8 % exhibited a larger than 1% discrepancy. MatriXX detectors also displayed a volume‐averaging effect consistent with its detector size of ~ 4.5   mm in diameter. Excellent passing rates were obtained for both detector arrays when compared with the planar dose distributions from the treatment planning system for three 6 MV IMRT fields and three 18 MV IMRT fields after the volume‐averaging effect of the MatriXX was taken into account. PACS number: 87.55.km; 87.55.Qr; 87.56.Fc

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