A Monte Carlo-based dosimetric characterization of Esteya

Monte Carlo simulation dosimetry electronic brachytherapy simulation efficiency surface treatment x-ray source

Journal

Medical physics
ISSN: 2473-4209
Titre abrégé: Med Phys
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 0425746

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Jan 2019
Historique:
received: 14 06 2018
revised: 07 10 2018
accepted: 23 10 2018
pubmed: 6 11 2018
medline: 22 1 2019
entrez: 4 11 2018
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The purpose of this work is threefold: First, to obtain the phase space of an electronic brachytherapy (eBT) system designed for surface skin treatments. Second, to explore the use of some efficiency enhancing (EFEN) strategies in the determination of the phase space. Third, to use the phase space previously obtained to perform a dosimetric characterization of the Esteya eBT system. The Monte Carlo study of the 69.5 kVp x-ray beam of the Esteya In our EFEN strategy, the interaction forcing variance reduction (VRIF) technique increases efficiency by a factor ~20. Tailoring the transport parameters values (C1 and C2) does not increase the efficiency in a significant way. Applying a universal cutoff energy EABS of 10 keV saves 84% of CPU time while showing negligible impact on the calculated results. Disabling the electron transport by imposing an electron energy cutoff of 70 keV (except for the target) saves an extra 8% (losing in the process 1.2% of the photons). The Gaussian energy source (FWHM = 10%, centered at the nominal kVp, homogeneous electron distribution) shows characteristic K-lines in its energy spectrum, not observed experimentally. The average photon energy using an ideal source (mono-energetic, homogeneous electron distribution) was 36.19 ± 0.09 keV, in agreement with the published measured data of 36.2 ± 0.2 keV. The use of a Gaussian-distributed electron source (mono-energetic) increases the penumbra by 50%, which is closer to the measurement results. The maximum discrepancy of the calculated percent depth dose with the corresponding measured values is 4.5% (at the phantom surface, less than 2% beyond 1 mm depth) and 5% (for the 80% of the field) in the dose profile. Our results agree with the findings published by other authors and are consistent within the expected Type A and B uncertainties. Our results agree with the published measurement results within the reported uncertainties. The observed differences in PDD, dose profiles, and photon spectrum come from three main sources of uncertainty: intermachine variations, measurements, and Monte Carlo calculations. It has been observed that a mono-energetic source with a Gaussian electron distribution over the focal spot is a suitable choice to reproduce the experimental data.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30390317
doi: 10.1002/mp.13275
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

356-369

Subventions

Organisme : Universitat de València
ID : UV-INV-AE17-707705

Informations de copyright

© 2018 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Auteurs

Christian Valdes-Cortez (C)

Department of Atomic, Molecular and Nuclear Physics, University of Valencia, Burjassot, 46100, Spain.
Radiotherapy Department, Centro Oncológico de Antofagasta, Los Pumas, 10255, Antofagasta, Chile.

Yury Niatsetski (Y)

R&D Elekta Brachytherapy, Waardgelder 1, 3905 TH, Veenendaal, The Netherlands.

Jose Perez-Calatayud (J)

Unidad Mixta de Investigación en Radiofísica e Instrumentación Nuclear en Medicina (IRIMED), Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria La Fe (IIS-La Fe)-Universitat de Valencia (UV), E-46026, Valencia, Spain.
Radiotherapy Department, La Fe Hospital, E-46026, Valencia, Spain.

Facundo Ballester (F)

Department of Atomic, Molecular and Nuclear Physics, University of Valencia, Burjassot, 46100, Spain.
Unidad Mixta de Investigación en Radiofísica e Instrumentación Nuclear en Medicina (IRIMED), Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria La Fe (IIS-La Fe)-Universitat de Valencia (UV), Burjassot, 46100, Spain.

Javier Vijande (J)

Department of Atomic, Molecular and Nuclear Physics, University of Valencia, Burjassot, 46100, Spain.
Unidad Mixta de Investigación en Radiofísica e Instrumentación Nuclear en Medicina (IRIMED), Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria La Fe (IIS-La Fe)-Universitat de Valencia (UV), Burjassot, 46100, Spain.

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