Improving IMRT quality control efficiency using an amorphous silicon electronic portal imager
- 14 October 2005
- journal article
- radiation therapy-physics
- Published by Wiley in Medical Physics
- Vol. 32 (11) , 3267-3278
- https://doi.org/10.1118/1.2074227
Abstract
An amorphous silicon electronic portal imaging device (EPID) has been investigated to determine its usefulness and efficiency for performing linear accelerator quality control checks specific to step and shoot intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). Several dosimetric parameters were measured using the EPID: dose linearity and segment to segment reproducibility of low dose segments, and delivery accuracy of fractions of monitor units. Results were compared to ion chamber measurements. Low dose beam flatness and symmetry were tested by overlaying low dose beam profiles onto the profile from a stable high‐dose exposure and visually checking for differences. Beam flatness and symmetry were also calculated and plotted against dose. Start‐up reproducibility was tested by overlaying profiles from twenty successive two monitor unit segments. A method for checking the MLC leaf calibration was also tested, designed to be used on a daily or weekly basis, which consisted of summing the images from a series of matched fields. Daily images were co‐registered with, then subtracted from, a reference image. A threshold image showing dose differences corresponding to positional errors was generated and the number of pixels with such dose differences used as numerical parameter to which a tolerance can be applied. The EPID was found to be a sensitive relative dosemeter, able to resolve dose differences of . However, at low absolute doses a reproducible dosimetric nonlinearity of up to 7% due to image lag/ghosting effects was measured. It was concluded that although the EPID is suitable to measure segment to segment reproducibility and fractional monitor unit delivery accuracy, it is still less useful than an ion chamber as a tool for dosimetric checks. The symmetry/flatness test proved to be an efficient method of checking low dose profiles, much faster than any of the alternative methods. The MLC test was found to be extremely sensitive to sudden changes in MLC calibration but works best with a composite reference image consisting of an average of five successive days’ images. When used in this way it proved an effective and efficient daily check of MLC calibration. Overall, the amorphous silicon EPID was found to be a suitable device for IMRT QC although it is not recommended for dosimetric tests. Automatic procedures for low monitor unit profile analysis and MLC leaf positioning yield considerable time‐savings over traditional film techniques.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Use of an amorphous silicon electronic portal imaging device for multileaf collimator quality control and calibrationPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 2005
- Dosimetric properties of an amorphous silicon electronic portal imaging device for verification of dynamic intensity modulated radiation therapyMedical Physics, 2003
- Fast and accurate leaf verification for dynamic multileaf collimation using an electronic portal imaging deviceMedical Physics, 2002
- Dosimetric investigation and portal dose image prediction using an amorphous silicon electronic portal imaging deviceMedical Physics, 2001
- Assessing radiation and light field congruence with a video based electronic portal imaging deviceMedical Physics, 1996
- Testing of dynamic multileaf collimationMedical Physics, 1996
- Daily dosimetric quality control of the MM50 Racetrack Microtron using an electronic portal imaging deviceRadiotherapy and Oncology, 1995
- Design of compensators for breast radiotherapy using electronic portal imagingRadiotherapy and Oncology, 1995
- The use of an electronic portal imaging device for exit dosimetry and quality control measurementsInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 1995
- The design and performance characteristics of a multileaf collimatorPhysics in Medicine & Biology, 1994