- Title
- The impact of MLC transmitted radiation on EPID dosimetry for dynamic MLC beams
- Creator
- Vial, Philip; Greer, Peter B.; Hunt, Peter; Oliver, Lyn; Baldock, Clive
- Relation
- Medical Physics Vol. 35, Issue 4, p. 1267-1277
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.2885368
- Publisher
- American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM)
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2008
- Description
- The purpose of this study was to experimentally quantify the change in response of an amorphous silicon (a-Si) electronic portal imaging device (EPID) to dynamic multileaf collimator (dMLC) beams with varying MLC-transmitted dose components and incorporate the response into a commercial treatment planning system (TPS) EPID prediction model. A combination of uniform intensity dMLC beams and static beams were designed to quantify the effect of MLC transmission on EPID response at the central axis of 10×10 cm² beams, at off-axis positions using wide dMLC beam profiles, and at different field sizes. The EPID response to MLC transmitted radiation was 0.79±0.02 of the response to open beam radiation at the central axis of a 10×10 cm² field. The EPID response to MLC transmitted radiation was further reduced relative to the open beam response with off-axis distance. The EPID response was more sensitive to field size changes for MLC transmitted radiation compared to open beam radiation by a factor of up to 1.17 at large field sizes. The results were used to create EPID response correction factors as a function of the fraction of MLC transmitted radiation, off-axis distance, and field size. Software was developed to apply the correction factors to each pixel in the TPS predicted EPID image. The corrected images agreed more closely with the measured EPID images in areas of intensity modulated fields with a large fraction of MLC transmission and, as a result the accuracy of portal dosimetry with a-Si EPIDs can be improved. Further investigation into the detector response function and the radiation source model are required to achieve improvements in accuracy for the general case.
- Subject
- amorphous semiconductors; biomedical equipment; biomedical imaging; collimators; dosimetry; intensity modulation; silicon
- Identifier
- uon:5040
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/42901
- Identifier
- ISSN:0094-2405
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