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1.
PurposeTo determine the surface dose of a water phantom using a semiconductor detector for diagnostic kilovoltage x-ray beams.MethodsAn AGMS-DM+ semiconductor detector was calibrated in terms of air kerma measured with an ionization chamber. Air kerma was measured for 20 x-ray beams with tube voltages of 50–140 kVp and a half-value layer (HVL) of 2.2–9.7 mm Al for given quality index (QI) values of 0.4, 0.5, and 0.6, and converted to the surface dose. Finally, the air kerma and HVL measured by the AGMS-DM+ detector were expressed as a ratio of the surface dose for 10 × 10 and 20 × 20 cm2 fields. The ratio of both was represented as a function of HVL for the given QI values and verified by comparing it with that calculated using the Monte Carlo method.ResultsThe air kerma calibration factor, CF, for the AGMS-DM+ detector ranged from 0.986 to 1.016 (0.9% in k = 1). The CF values were almost independent of the x-ray fluence spectra for the given QI values. The ratio of the surface dose to the air kerma determined by the PTW 30,013 chamber and the AGMS-DM+ detector was less than 1.8% for the values calculated using the Monte Carlo method, and showed a good correlation with the HVL for the given QI values.ConclusionIt is possible to determine the surface dose of a water phantom from the air kerma and HVL measured by a semiconductor detector for given QI values.  相似文献   

2.
PurposeTo estimate the surface dose in diagnostic radiology in real time based on the relationship between the incident air kerma and the surface dose.MethodsThe air kerma for 20 X-ray beams with tube voltages of 50–140 kV and a half-value layer (HVL) of 2.27–9.65 mm Al was measured using an ionization chamber. The beam quality was classified based on the quality indexes (QIs) of 0.4, 0.5, and 0.6, which are defined as the ratio of the effective energy to the maximum energy corresponding to the tube potential. The surface dose for 20 X-ray beams was evaluated based on the measured air kerma, backscatter factor, and ratio of the mass–energy absorption coefficients of water to air, which were calculated using the Monte Carlo method. Finally, the relationship between the air kerma and the surface dose was investigated for X-ray beams with the specific QI values.ResultsThe surface dose at a water phantom was represented by a linear approximation of R2 > 0.98, with the air kerma, regardless of the X-ray beam quality. The surface dose estimated based on a linear approximation with the air kerma indicated an agreement within 8% with that evaluated by the chamber measurements at HVL > 3.4 mm Al.ConclusionIt is possible to estimate the surface dose in real time using the linear relationship between the incident air kerma and the surface dose regardless of the X-ray beam quality by accepting ±10% uncertainty in the surface dose estimation.  相似文献   

3.
PurposeThis study aims to investigate the relationship between backscatter factors and Al-half-value-layers (Al-HVL) by making the quality index (QI) a parameter for diagnostic kilovoltage x-ray beams.MethodsBackscatter factors, Bw, for x-ray fluence spectra were calculated from the weighted average of Bw for monoenergetic photons of between 8 and 140 keV with field sizes of 10 cm × 10 cm to 40 cm × 40 cm. The value of Bw for monoenergetic photons was calculated from the ratio of the water kerma at the surface of a water phantom and that at the same point free-in-air using the EGSnrc/cavity code. The weighted averaged backscatter factors were validated by comparing them with those of direct Monte Carlo calculations for the x-ray fluence spectra. The Bw for the x-ray fluence spectra were classified by a QI of 0.35, 0.4, 0.5, 0.6, and 0.7 specified by the ratio of the effective energy and maximum energy. The relationship between Bw and Al-HVL was evaluated for the given QI values. The x-ray fluence spectra were generated for tube voltages of 40–140 kVp with Al-HVLs of 0.5–13.2 mm using the SpekCalc program.ResultsThe weighted averaged backscatter factors for x-ray fluence spectra agreed within 0.7% with those of the direct Monte Carlo calculations. The backscatter factors were represented by the fitting curves of R2 > 0.99 with Al-HVL for the given QI values.ConclusionsIt is possible to obtain Bw more accurately by using QI specified by the measured Al-HVL.  相似文献   

4.
PurposeWe investigated the impact of transverse magnetic fields on the dose response of a nanoDot optically stimulated luminescence dosimetry (OSLD) in megavoltage photon beams.MethodsThe nanoDot OSLD response was calculated via Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. The responses RQ and RQ,B without and with the transverse magnetic fields of 0.35–3 T were analyzed as a function of depth at a 10 cm × 10 cm field for 4–18 MV photons in a solid water phantom. All responses were determined based on comparisons with the response under the reference conditions (depth of 10 cm and a 10 cm × 10 cm field) for 6 MV without the magnetic field. In addition, the influence of air-gaps on the nanoDot response in the magnetic field was estimated according to Burlin’s general cavity theory.ResultsThe RQ as a function of depth for 4–18 MV ranged from 1.013 to 0.993, excepting the buildup region. The RQ,B increased from 2.8% to 1.5% at 1.5 T and decreased from 3.0% to 1.1% at 3 T in comparison with RQ as the photon energy increased. The depth dependence of RQ,B was less than 1%, excepting the buildup region. The top air-gap and the bottom air- gap were responsible for the response reduction and the response increase, respectively.ConclusionsThe response RQ,B varied depending on the magnetic field intensity, and the variation of RQ,B reduced as the photon beam energy increased. The air-gaps affected the dose deposition in the magnetic fields.  相似文献   

5.

Aim

Using flattened and unflattened photon beams, this study investigated the spectral variations of surface photon energy and energy fluence in the bone heterogeneity and beam obliquity.

Background

Surface dose enhancement is a dosimetric concern when using unflattened photon beam in radiotherapy. It is because the unflattened photon beam contains more low-energy photons which are removed by the flattening filter of the flattened photon beam.

Materials and methods

We used a water and bone heterogeneity phantom to study the distributions of energy, energy fluence and mean energy of the 6 MV flattened and unflattened photon beams (field size = 10 cm × 10 cm) produced by a Varian TrueBEAM linear accelerator. These elements were calculated at the phantom surfaces using Monte Carlo simulations. The photon energy and energy fluence calculations were repeated with the beam angle turned from 0° to 15°, 30° and 45° in the water and bone phantom.

Results

Spectral results at the phantom surfaces showed that the unflattened photon beams contained more photons concentrated mainly in the low-energy range (0–2 MeV) than the flattened beams associated with a flattening filter. With a bone layer of 1 cm under the phantom surface and within the build-up region of the 6 MV photon beam, it is found that both the flattened and unflattened beams had slightly less photons in the energy range <0.4 MeV compared to the water phantom. This shows that the presence of the bone decreased the low-energy photon backscatters to the phantom surface. When both the flattened and unflattened photon beams were rotated from 0° to 45°, the number of photon and mean photon energy increased. This indicates that both photon beams became more hardened or penetrate when the beam angle increased. In the presence of bone, the mean energies of both photon beams increased. This is due to the absorption of low-energy photons by the bone, resulting in more beam hardening.

Conclusions

This study explores the spectral relationships of surface photon energy and energy fluence with bone heterogeneity and beam obliquity for the flattened and unflattened photon beams. The photon spectral information is important in studies on the patient''s surface dose enhancement using unflattened photon beams in radiotherapy.  相似文献   

6.
External electron radiotherapy is performed using a cone or applicator to collimate the beam. However, because of a trade-off between collimation and scattering/bremsstrahlung X-ray production, applicators generate a small amount of secondary radiation (leakage). We investigate the peripheral dose outside the radiation field of a Varian-type applicator. The dose and fluence outside the radiation field were analyzed in a detailed Monte Carlo simulation. The differences between the calculation results and data measured in a water phantom in an ionization chamber were less than ±1% in regions more than 3 mm below the surface of the phantom and at the depth of dose maximum. The calculated fluence was analyzed inside and outside the radiation field on a plane just above the water phantom surface. Changing the electron energy affected the off-axis fluence distribution outside the radiation field; however, the size of the applicator had little effect on this distribution. For each energy, the distributions outside the radiation field were similar to the dose distribution at shallow depths in the water phantom. The effect of secondary electrons generation by photon transmission through the alloy making up the lowest scraper was largest in the region from the field edge to directly below the cutout and at higher beam energies. The results of the Monte Carlo simulation confirm that the peripheral dose outside the field is significantly affected by radiation scattered or transmitted from the applicator, and the effect increases with the electron energy.  相似文献   

7.
The aim of this study was to determine the surface doses using GafChromic EBT films and compare them with plane-parallel ionization chamber measurements for 6 and 18 MV high energy photon beams. The measurements were made in a water equivalent solid phantom in the build-up region of the 6 and 18 MV photon beams at 100 cm SSD for various field sizes. Markus type plane-parallel ion chamber with fixed-separation between collecting electrodes was used to measure the percent depth doses. GafChromic EBT film measurements were performed both on the phantom surface and maximum dose depth at the same geometry with ion chamber measurements. The surface doses found using GafChromic EBT film were 15%, 20%, 29%and 39% ± 2% (1SD) for 6 MV photons, 6%, 11%, 23% and 32% ± 2% (1SD) for 18 MV photons at 5, 10, 20 and 30 cm2 field sizes, respectively. GafChromic EBT film provides precise measurements for surface dose in the high energy photons. Agreement between film and plane-parallel chamber measurements was found to be within ±3% for 18 MV photon beams. There was 5% overestimate on the surface doses when compared with the plane-parallel chamber measurements for all field sizes in the 6 MV photon beams.  相似文献   

8.
PurposeTo investigate the image quality characteristics for virtual monoenergetic images compared with conventional tube-voltage image with dual-layer spectral CT (DLCT).MethodsHelical scans were performed using a first-generation DLCT scanner, two different sizes of acrylic cylindrical phantoms, and a Catphan phantom. Three different iodine concentrations were inserted into the phantom center. The single-tube voltage for obtaining virtual monoenergetic images was set to 120 or 140 kVp. Conventional 120- and 140-kVp images and virtual monoenergetic images (40–200-keV images) were reconstructed from slice thicknesses of 1.0 mm. The CT number and image noise were measured for each iodine concentration and water on the 120-kVp images and virtual monoenergetic images. The noise power spectrum (NPS) was also calculated.ResultsThe iodine CT numbers for the iodinated enhancing materials were similar regardless of phantom size and acquisition method. Compared with the iodine CT numbers of the conventional 120-kVp images, those for the monoenergetic 40-, 50-, and 60-keV images increased by approximately 3.0-, 1.9-, and 1.3-fold, respectively. The image noise values for each virtual monoenergetic image were similar (for example, 24.6 HU at 40 keV and 23.3 HU at 200 keV obtained at 120 kVp and 30-cm phantom size). The NPS curves of the 70-keV and 120-kVp images for a 1.0-mm slice thickness over the entire frequency range were similar.ConclusionVirtual monoenergetic images represent stable image noise over the entire energy spectrum and improved the contrast-to-noise ratio than conventional tube voltage using the dual-layer spectral detector CT.  相似文献   

9.
Irradiation, delivered by a synchrotron facility, using a set of highly collimated, narrow and parallel photon beams spaced by 1 mm or less, has been termed Microbeam Radiation Therapy (MRT). The tolerance of healthy tissue after MRT was found to be better than after standard broad X-ray beams, together with a more pronounced response of malignant tissue. The microbeam spacing and transverse peak-to-valley dose ratio (PVDR) are considered to be relevant biological MRT parameters. We investigated the MRT concept for proton microbeams, where we expected different depth-dose profiles and PVDR dependences, resulting in skin sparing and homogeneous dose distributions at larger beam depths, due to differences between interactions of proton and photon beams in tissue. Using the FLUKA Monte Carlo code we simulated PVDR distributions for differently spaced 0.1 mm (sigma) pencil-beams of entrance energies 60, 80, 100 and 120 MeV irradiating a cylindrical water phantom with and without a bone layer, representing human head. We calculated PVDR distributions and evaluated uniformity of target irradiation at distal beam ranges of 60–120 MeV microbeams. We also calculated PVDR distributions for a 60 MeV spread-out Bragg peak microbeam configuration. Application of optimised proton MRT in terms of spot size, pencil-beam distribution, entrance beam energy, multiport irradiation, combined with relevant radiobiological investigations, could pave the way for hypofractionation scenarios where tissue sparing at the entrance, better malignant tissue response and better dose conformity of target volume irradiation could be achieved, compared with present proton beam radiotherapy configurations.  相似文献   

10.
This study investigates the superficial dose from FFF beams in comparison with the conventional flattened ones using a Monte Carlo (MC) method. Published phase-space files which incorporated real geometry of a TrueBeam accelerator were used for the dose calculation in phantom and clinical cases. The photon fluence on the central axis is 3 times that of a flattened beam for a 6 MV FFF beam and 5 times for a 10 MV beam. The mean energy across the field in air at the phantom surface is 0.92–0.95 MeV for the 6 MV FFF beam and 1.18–1.30 MeV for the corresponding flattened beam. At 10 MV, the values are 1.52–1.72 and 2.15–2.87 MeV for the FFF and flattened beams, respectively. The phantom dose at the depth of 1 mm in the 6 MV FFF beam is 6% ± 2.5% (of the maximum dose) higher compared to the flattened beam for a 25 × 25 cm2 field and 14.6% ± 1.9% for the 2 × 2 cm2 field. For the 10 MV beam, the corresponding differences are 3.4% ± 1.5% and 10.7% ± 0.6%. The skin dose difference at selected points on the patient's surface between the plans using FFF and flattened beams in the head-and-neck case was 6.5% ± 2.3% (1SD), and for the breast case it was 6.4% ± 2.3%. The Monte Carlo simulations showed that due to the lower mean energy in the FFF beam, the clinical superficial dose is higher without the flattening filter compared to the flattened beam.  相似文献   

11.
PurposeThis study aimed to investigate the energy response of a radiophotoluminescent glass dosimeter (RGD) for diagnostic kilovoltage x-ray beams by Monte Carlo (MC) calculations and measurements.MethodsThe uniformity and reproducibility of GD-352M (with Sn filter) and GD-302M (no filter) were tested with 45 RGDs in free air. Subsequently, the RGD response was obtained as a function of an Al-HVL using the parameter, quality index (QI), which is defined as the ratio of the effective energy (keV) to the maximum energy (keV) of the photons. The x-ray fluence spectra with QI of 0.4, 0.5, and 0.6 were set for tube voltages of 50 ~ 137.6 kVp. The RGD response was calculated in free air using the MC method and verified by the air kerma, Kair, measured using an ionization chamber.ResultsThe uniformity and reproducibility of the 45 RGDs were ± 2.3% and ± 2.7% for GD-352M and ± 0.7% and ± 1.6% for GD-302M at the one standard deviation level, respectively. The calculated RGD response was 0.965 to 1.062 at Al-HVL 2.73 mm or more for GD-352M and varied from 3.9 to 2.8 for GD-302M. Both RGD responses exhibited a good correlation with the Al-HVL for the given QI. Kair measured by RGDs for each beam quality with a QI of 0.5 was in the range of −5%~0.8% for GD-352M and −1.8%~3% for GD-302M, relative to the chamber measurements.ConclusionsThe RGD response was indicated as a function of the Al-HVL for the given QI, and it presented a good correlation with the Al-HVL.  相似文献   

12.
BackgroundHigh-energy photon and electron therapeutic beams generated in medical linear accelerators can cause the electronuclear and photonuclear reactions in which neutrons with a broad energy spectrum are produced. A low-energy component of this neutron radiation induces simple capture reactions from which various radioisotopes originate and in which the radioactivity of a linac head and various objects in the treatment room appear.AimThe aim of this paper is to present the results of the thermal/resonance neutron fluence measurements during therapeutic beam emission and exemplary spectra of gamma radiation emitted by medical linac components activated in neutron reactions for four X-ray beams and for four electron beams generated by various manufacturers’ accelerators installed in typical concrete bunkers in Polish oncological centers.Materials and methodsThe measurements of neutron fluence were performed with the use of the induced activity method, whereas the spectra of gamma radiation from decays of the resulting radioisotopes were measured by means of a portable high-purity germanium detector set for field spectroscopy.ResultsThe fluence of thermal neutrons as well as resonance neutrons connected with the emission of a 20 MV X-ray beam is ~106 neutrons/cm2 per 1 Gy of a dose in water at a reference depth. It is about one order of magnitude greater than that for the 15 MV X-ray beams and about two orders of magnitude greater than for the 18–22 MeV electron beams regardless of the type of an accelerator.ConclusionThe thermal as well as resonance neutron fluence depends strongly on the type and the nominal potential of a therapeutic beam. It is greater for X-ray beams than for electrons. The accelerator accessories and other large objects should not be stored in a treatment room during high-energy therapeutic beam emission to avoid their activation caused by thermal and resonance neutrons. Half-lives of the radioisotopes originating from the simple capture reaction (n,γ) (from minutes to hours) are long enough to accumulate radioactivity of components of the accelerator head. The radiation emitted by induced radioisotopes causes the additional doses to staff operating the accelerators.  相似文献   

13.
GATE/GEANT is a Monte Carlo code dedicated to nuclear medicine that allows calculation of the dose to organs of voxel phantoms. On the other hand, MIRD is a well-developed system for estimation of the dose to human organs. In this study, results obtained from GATE/GEANT using Snyder phantom are compared to published MIRD data. For this, the mathematical Snyder phantom was discretized and converted to a digital phantom of 100 × 200 × 360 voxels. The activity was considered uniformly distributed within kidneys, liver, lungs, pancreas, spleen, and adrenals. The GATE/GEANT Monte Carlo code was used to calculate the dose to the organs of the phantom from mono-energetic photons of 10, 15, 20, 30, 50, 100, 200, 500, and 1000 keV. The dose was converted into specific absorbed fraction (SAF) and the results were compared to the corresponding published MIRD data. On average, there was a good correlation (r 2>0.99) between the two series of data. However, the GATE/GEANT data were on average −0.16 ± 6.22% lower than the corresponding MIRD data for self-absorption. Self-absorption in the lungs was considerably higher in the MIRD compared to the GATE/GEANT data, for photon energies of 10–20 keV. As for cross-irradiation to other organs, the GATE/GEANT data were on average +1.5 ± 8.1% higher than the MIRD data, for photon energies of 50–1000 keV. For photon energies of 10–30 keV, the relative difference was +7.5 ± 67%. It turned out that the agreement between the GATE/GEANT and the MIRD data depended upon absolute SAF values and photon energy. For 10–30 keV photons, where the absolute SAF values were small, the uncertainty was high and the effect of cross-section prominent, and there was no agreement between the GATE/GEANT results and the MIRD data. However, for photons of 50–1,000 keV, the bias was negligible and the agreement was acceptable.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Two different sets of Monte Carlo computations were carried out for the study of dose penetration of monoenergetic, low-energy (10 to 100 keV) photon beams incident on slabs of tissue. One program took into account coherent scattering and considered electron binding when finding the angle of scattering during incoherent scattering; the other simpler program, customarily used at higher energies, largely ignored these effects. For calculations at the source photon energy of 100 keV, it was found that there was negligible difference in dose distribution in the slab between the more and less complex type of calculations. The same thing was found to be true for the 30 and 10-keV source photon energies only for shallow penetration distances; and at deeper penetrations the simple approach tended to overestimate the dose appreciably. It is concluded that for penetration of low-energy photon beams into tissue, accurate calculational results cannot be assured with the neglect of coherent scattering effects and electron binding considerations in determining the scattering angles except for shallow depths of penetration.  相似文献   

16.
A microversion of a computerized tomograph (CT) is described, in which the object is subjected to a successive series of translations with rotation by a small angle in between. The spatial resolution is determined by collimators and translation step lengths and is today, with clinical X-ray tube, of the order of 100 μm. The use of synchrotron radiation instead of X-ray tubes offers the advantages of much higher fluence rates, which can be used to diminish the exposure times from days to minutes or to increase the spatial resolution from 100 μm to about 1 μm. The possibility to receive monoenergetic photons of selectable energy makes it possible to avoid spectral hardening image artifacts, as well as to optimize the information sampling with regard to average absorbed dose or exposure time. Selectable photon energies are valuable also for tomochemistry applications.  相似文献   

17.

Aim

The aim of the paper is to examine the relation between the increase of the photon dose in water in the region of electronic disequilibrium – so-called build-up region – and the distance of the bolus from the water surface for the applied parameters of X-ray beams.

Materials and methods

PDD measurements were carried out using the plane-parallel ionization chamber Markus in the automatic water phantom IBA BluePhantom with OmniPro-Accept V7 (IBA Dosimetry GmbH, Schwarzenbruck, Germany). All measurements were performed for different field sizes and for 6 MV and 15 MV X-ray beams, respectively. A water-equivalent RW3 slab (Goettingen White Water) produced by PTW was used as a bolus.

Results

Placing a bolus in an irradiated field changes the shape of the PDD curve in the build-up region in comparison with the one obtained for an open field. All results has been inserted in tables and figures.

Conclusion

The closer the bolus is to the water surface, the smaller the depth of the maximum dose in the phantom for all investigated fields and energies. The changes in the build-up region are important, even if the bolus does not touch the surface of the water phantom. The influence of the bolus can be ignored when the bolus-surface distance equals 25 cm for 6MV X-ray beams and 39 cm for 15 MV X-ray beams.  相似文献   

18.
AimTo determine the energy and dose dependence of GafChromic EBT3-V3 film over an energy range 0.2 mm Al HVL to 6 MV.BackgroundThe decay scheme of a brachytherapy source may be complex and the spectrum of energy can be wide. LiF TLDs are the golden standard recommended for dosimetric measures in brachytherapy, for their energy independence, but TLDs could be not available in some centres. An alternative way to perform dose measurements is to use GafChromic films, but they show energy dependence.Methods and materialsFilms have been irradiated at increasing dose with three different beams: 6 MV beam, TPR20, 10 = (0.684 ± 0.01), HVL = (2.00 ± 0.01)mmAl and HVL = (0.20 ± 0.01)mmAl. Calibration curves were generated using the same dose range (0cGy to 850cGy) for the three energies. Using the 6 MV calibration curve as reference, the film response in terms of net optical density (OD) was evaluated.ResultsThe difference in the calibration curve obtained by irradiating the film with 6 MV and 2 mm Al HVL energy beams is less than 3 %, within the calibration uncertainty, in the dose range 500-850cGy. The OD of EBT3-V3 film is significantly lower at 0.2 mmAl HVL compared to 6 MV, showing differences up to 25 %.ConclusionWithin the range 6 MV-2 mm Al HVL and dose higher than 500cGy, GafChromic EBT3-V3 films are energy independent. In this dose range, films can be calibrated in a simple geometry, using a 6 MV Linac beam, and can be used for brachytherapy sources dose measures. The use of EBT3 films can be extended to reference dosimetry in Ir-192 clinical brachytherapy.  相似文献   

19.
PurposeTo evaluate the use of pseudo-monoenergetic reconstructions (PMR) from dual-energy computed tomography, combined with the iterative metal artefact reduction (iMAR) method.MethodsPseudo-monoenergetic CT images were obtained using the dual-energy mode on the Siemens Somatom Definition AS scanner. A range of PMR combinations (70–130 keV) were used with and without iMAR. A Virtual Water™ phantom was used for quantitative assessment of error in the presence of high density materials: titanium, alloys 330 and 600. The absolute values of CT number differences (AD) and normalised standard deviations (NSD) were calculated for different phantom positions. Image quality was assessed using an anthropomorphic pelvic phantom with an embedded hip prosthesis. Image quality was scored blindly by five observers.ResultsAD and NSD values revealed differences in CT number errors between tested sets. AD and NSD were reduced in the vicinity of metal for images with iMAR (p < 0.001 for AD/NSD). For ROIs away from metal, with and without iMAR, 70 keV PMR and pCT AD values were lower than for the other reconstructions (p = 0.039). Similarly, iMAR NSD values measured away from metal were lower for 130 keV and 70 keV PMR (p = 0.002). Image quality scores were higher for 70 keV and 130 keV PMR with iMAR (p = 0.034).ConclusionThe use of 70 keV PMR with iMAR allows for significant metal artefact reduction and low CT number errors observed in the vicinity of dense materials. It is therefore an attractive alternative to high keV imaging when imaging patients with metallic implants, especially in the context of radiotherapy planning.  相似文献   

20.
Background and purposeThe Medical Physics Division of the Portuguese Physics Society (DFM_SPF) in collaboration with the IAEA, carried out a national auditing project in radiotherapy, between September 2011 and April 2012. The objective of this audit was to ensure the optimal usage of treatment planning systems. The national results are presented in this paper.Material and methodsThe audit methodology simulated all steps of external beam radiotherapy workflow, from image acquisition to treatment planning and dose delivery. A thorax CIRS phantom lend by IAEA was used in 8 planning test-cases for photon beams corresponding to 15 measuring points (33 point dose results, including individual fields in multi-field test cases and 5 sum results) in different phantom materials covering a set of typical clinical delivery techniques in 3D Conformal Radiotherapy.ResultsAll 24 radiotherapy centers in Portugal have participated. 50 photon beams with energies 4–18 MV have been audited using 25 linear accelerators and 32 calculation algorithms.In general a very good consistency was observed for the same type of algorithm in all centres and for each beam quality.ConclusionsThe overall results confirmed that the national status of TPS calculations and dose delivery for 3D conformal radiotherapy is generally acceptable with no major causes for concern. This project contributed to the strengthening of the cooperation between the centres and professionals, paving the way to further national collaborations.  相似文献   

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