Out-of-field dosimetry
measurements for a
helical tomotherapy systema
Chester R. Ramsey,1,2,b Rebecca Seibert,2 Stephen L. Mahan,1 Dharmin Desai,3 and Daniel Chase1
Thompson Cancer Survival Center,1 Department of Radiation Oncology, Knoxville, Tennessee; The University of Tennessee,2 Department of Nuclear Engineering, Knoxville, Tennessee; The University of Kentucky,3 Department of Radiation Oncology, Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.A.
cramsey@utk.eduReceived 11 November 2005; accepted 27 March 2006
Helical tomotherapy is a rotational delivery technique that uses intensity-modulated fan beams to deliver highly conformal intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). The beam-on time needed to deliver a given prescribed dose can be up to 15 times longer than that needed using conventional treatment delivery. As such, there is concern that this delivery technique has the potential to increase the whole body dose due to increased leakage. The purpose of this work is to directly measure out-of-field doses for a clinical tomotherapy system. Peripheral doses were measured in-phantom using static fields and rotational intensity-modulated delivery. In-air scatter and leakage doses were also measured at multiple locations around the treatment room. At 20 cm, the tomotherapy peripheral dose dropped to 0.4% of the prescribed dose. Leakage accounted for 94% of the in-air dose at distances greater than 60 cm from the machine's isocenter. The largest measured dose equivalent rate was 1 × 10-4 Sv/s in the plane of gantry rotation due to head leakage and primary beam transmission through the system's beam stopper. The dose equivalent rate dropped to 1 × 10-6 Sv/s at the end of the treatment couch. Even though helical tomotherapy treatment delivery requires beam-on times that are 5 to 15 times longer than those used by conventional accelerators, the delivery system was designed to maximize shielding for radiation leakage. As such, the peripheral doses are equal to or less than the published peripheral doses for IMRT delivery on other linear accelerators. In addition, the shielding requirements are also similar to conventional linear accelerators.
PACS number: 87.53.Dq
Key words: tomotherapy, intensity-modulated radiation therapy, peripheral dose
a This work was presented at the 47th annual meeting of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
b Corresponding author: Chester R. Ramsey, Thompson Cancer Survival Center, Department of Radiation Oncology, 1915 White Ave., Knoxville, TN 37916 U.S.A.; phone: 865-541-3161; fax: 865-541-1801; email: cramsey@utk.edu.
I. INTRODUCTION
Over the past 10 years, the technology of radiation
therapy has advanced considerably with the advent of
intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) and CT based
image-guided radiation therapy.(1-8)
While these technologies have the potential to deliver more
conformal doses with a greater degree of accuracy, these techniques
often require a larger number of monitor units (MUs) to deliver the
prescribed dose. As the number of MUs required for treatment
delivery increases, so does the primary beam leakage dose.(7,8)
Many
studies have been published that investigated out-of-field doses for
a multitude of linear accelerators.(9-12) These studies all involved the
measurement of peripheral doses from static beams at fixed gantry
angles. More recently, out-of-field photon and neutron dose
equivalent measurements were reported for IMRT delivery.(13-15) Kry et al.(14,15) reported dose equivalents measured
in an anthropomorphic phantom that was irradiated for multiple
conventional and intensity-modulated treatment deliveries. They
found that the photon and neutron doses varied depending on the
manufacture of the linear accelerator, presumably due to differences
in the manufacture of the accelerator head.
Helical tomotherapy is a
rotational delivery technique that uses intensity-modulated fan
beams to deliver highly conformal IMRT.(16-20) The treatment is delivered by a 6-MV
slipring- mounted linear accelerator that continuously rotates about
the patient. Like helical CT imaging, helical tomotherapy is
delivered with the gantry and the couch in simultaneous motion. IMRT
delivery is achieved by moving 64 individual collimators into and
out of a narrow fan beam. The multileaf collimator (MLC) is binary,
which means that each individual MLC leaf is either open or closed.
The length of time that a leaf is open is proportional to the
intensity of radiation allowed through that particular portion of
the beam.
Depending on slice
thickness (i.e., field size) and the number of rotations involved,
the beam-on time needed to deliver a prescribed dose can be up to 15
times longer than that needed for conventional treatment delivery.
For example, the beam-on time for a helical tomotherapy lung
treatment delivered at 2 Gy per fraction typically ranges from 200 s
to 300 s. The same treatment delivered with conventional
(nonmodulated) parallel-opposed fields typically requires 20 s to 60
s. Similarly, fixed-gantry-based IMRT for prostate cases typically
requires 50 s to 150 s of beam-on time, while helical tomotherapy
typical requires 300 s to 500 s.
Because of the increased beam-on
time, there is concern that this delivery technique has the
potential to increase the whole body dose due to increased scatter
and leakage.(13-15) Low dose outside
the treatment field can increase the risk of developing secondary
cancers. This is of particular concern for patients with a life
expectancy greater than 20 years. Furthermore, increased beam-on
time can lead to additional shielding requirements. According to the
American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) IMRT
Subcommittee, IMRT treatment delivery techniques that require a
factor of 2 to 10 more MUs than conventional treatments should have
the shielding evaluated.(21)
The purpose of this work is to
directly measure out-of-field doses for a clinical tomotherapy
system (HI-ART, TomoTherapy, Inc., Madison, WI). The specific aims
for this work are the following: (1) to measure tomotherapy
peripheral doses for static fields and compare them with other
published studies; and (2) to measure tomotherapy out-of-field doses
for rotation treatment delivery and compare them with other
published studies.
II. MATERIALS AND METHODS
The HI-ART tomotherapy system operates at a constant dose rate during treatment delivery (8.5-10 Gy/min at the isocenter).(22) The dose delivered to the target volume in the patient depends on the X-ray dose rate, primary collimator positions (i.e., slice thickness), the MLC delivery sequence (i.e., the delivery sinogram), pitch (i.e., amount of beam overlap per rotation), gantry rotation velocity, and number of total rotations.(23) Unlike conventional linear accelerators, the tomotherapy system's output is not tied to the number of MUs. The number of "monitor units" displayed on the tomotherapy operator station is an arbitrary conversion of signal from the monitor chambers in the head of the accelerator. The treatment time is the primary measure of treatment duration, which is rigidly defined by the treatment-planning system. The output of the accelerator is defined for planning purposes by a calibration file located in the treatment-planning system. The tomotherapy inverse-planning system uses this calibration file to calculate the treatment time.
A. Static field peripheral dose
A
miniature scanning water tank (Standard Imaging, Madison, WI) was
used to measure profiles outside the treatment field. The scanning
tank was designed to fit inside a helical tomotherapy treatment
bore, and can measure profiles up to 50 cm in width and depth doses
up to 20 cm deep with full backscatter. A 0.056 cm3 ionization chamber (A1SL, Standard
Imaging, Middleton, WI) was used to measure longitudinal profiles
(in and out of the bore), and a 1.91 cm3 ionization chamber (A17, Standard Imaging,
Middleton, WI) was used as a reference probe. The scanning tank was
leveled and positioned on the treatment couch with the tomotherapy
isocenter placed at the surface of the water (85 cm
source-to-surface distance). The electrometer bias was set to +300
V, and profiles were measured in 0.7-mm intervals with a dwell time
of 172 ms.
Measurements were taken
for 6-MV photon beams on a TomoTherapy HI-ART (SN-3) and a Varian
21EX (SN-2838) for field sizes of 1.0 × 40.0 cm2, 2.5 × 40.0 cm2, and 5.0 × 40.0 cm2 at depths of 1.5 cm, 5.0 cm, and 10.0 cm.
These field sizes correspond to the slice thicknesses that are
typically commissioned on the HI-ART delivery system. The field
sizes were defined using the primary jaw(s), and all MLC leaves were
placed in the parked position during the measurements. Both Varian
and TomoTherapy treatment couches were carefully inspected for sag
before, during, and after data acquisition. The measured profiles
were centered and normalized to the central axis dose. All reported
distances are from the X-ray field edge.
B. Treatment delivery peripheral dose
The
total out-of-field dose is dependent on the total beam-on time
required to deliver the prescribed dose. The peripheral doses to the
patient are dependent on the treatment planning and delivery
technique. As such, measurements must be taken using actual
treatment delivery sequences.
A
test phantom was created out of three sets of water-equivalent
material (Fig. 1). The head of the phantom was a cylindrical piece
of solid water 30 cm in diameter and 18 cm thick. The shoulders
consisted of 15 × 55 cm2 rectangular
solid water stacked to an anterior-posterior depth of 15 cm. The
thorax of the phantom was two sets of 30 × 30 cm2 solid water, with one set stacked to a
height of 15 cm, and the second set stacked to a height of 17
cm.
Fig. 1. Water-equivalent phantom used to measure peripheral doses. An ionization chamber was placed at depths of 1.5 cm, 5.0 cm, and 10.0 cm inside the phantom. |
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In general, IMRT
treatment delivery sequences with a high degree of modulation
typically require a longer beam-on time. For helical tomotherapy,
head and neck treatments typically have one of the largest beam-on
times per gray of prescribed dose. A typical parotid-sparing head
and neck treatment plan was selected for measuring the out-of-field
doses in the test phantom. This test plan extended 22 cm from the
base of the skull to the bottom of the supraclavicular region. The
planning target volume (PTV) included the gross tumor volume and the
at-risk lymph node chains with margin. The prescribed dose was 2 Gy
per fraction to 95% of the PTV. The maximum cord dose was 70% of the
prescribed dose, and 50% of both parotids was below 40% of the
prescribed dose. The treatment required 336 s of beam-on time with a
slice thickness of 2.5 cm, a pitch of 1/3, and a modulation factor
of 2.5, which are the standard planning parameters used at our
institution.
A 0.6 cm3 cylindrical chamber (NEL-2571) was placed
in a custom-milled piece of solid water and connected to an
electrometer (35617EBS, Keithley, Cleveland, OH). Measurements were
taken with the ion chamber placed at 10 cm, 15 cm, 20 cm, 25 cm, and
30 cm from the tomotherapy field edge. Measurements were taken at
depths of 1.5 cm, 5.0 cm, and 10.0 cm. All readings are relative to
the prescribed dose in the center of the tomotherapy field.
C. In-air scatter and leakage
measurements
In-air scatter and leakage doses were also
measured to determine the required amount of shielding for radiation
protection. The radiation dose equivalent was measured at various
positions surrounding a tomotherapy system using a calibrated
InoVision Model 451P ionization chamber (Cardinal Health, Inc.,
Dublin, OH), and absorbed dose was measured with a Standard Imaging
A17 slice therapy ionization chamber. The 451P has a 300 cm3 collecting volume air ionization chamber
that is pressurized to 8 atm (862 kPa). The A17 has a collecting
volume of 1.91 cm3, a collecting volume
length of 8.0 cm, a collector diameter of 2.4 mm, and a wall
thickness is 3.3 mm and is specified to have a uniform response to
within ±1.5% of average. Prior to use in this study, both chambers
were calibrated by an accredited dosimetry calibration laboratory
and are directly traceable to the National Institute of Standards
and Technology standard.
Measurements with the A17 were
taken with a build-up cap that had a wall thickness of 1.5 cm placed
over the body of the chamber. The chamber was connected to an
electrometer (TomoTrometer, Standard Imaging, Middleton, WI), and
measurements were acquired with a 300-V bias. The American
Association of Physicists in Medicine Task Group 51 dosimetry
protocol was used to approximate the scatter and leakage absorbed
dose.(24) Since the beam quality
(kQ) is not defined for in-air
scatter and leakage measurements, kQ was assumed to be equal to the beam quality
for similar chambers in the calibration geometry (0.99). This
kQ value is an approximation and
should not be taken as having a strong basis in either theory or
experiment. Leakage dose was measured using the A17 ion chamber
placed at 30-cm intervals from the front face of the TomoTherapy
gantry.
The primary tungsten jaws
and the tungsten MLC leaves together provide 23 cm of attenuation in
the beam direction. Measurements that were taken with the primary
jaws and all MLC leaves closed were considered to be leakage only.
The combined scatter and leakage contribution was measured using the
A17 and InoVision ion chambers placed at the same distance from the
isocenter as the leakage measurements. A head and neck test plan was
delivered with the solid water phantom (shown in Fig. 1) placed in
the path of the beam to provide scatter.
D. Patient measurements
Depending on the
treatment-planning parameters (slice thickness, pitch, degree of
intensity modulation, etc.), the beam-on time required to deliver 2
Gy can vary from 90 s to over 600 s. In addition to phantom
measurements, scatter and leakage measurements were also taken
during actual patient treatment deliveries. The dose levels were
acquired for multiple patients to measure the level of radiation
dose equivalent during typical helical tomotherapy treatment
deliveries. The dose equivalent values were acquired with the 451P
in integrated mode. Multiple measurements were taken for the same
position, and measurements taken at equal distances laterally from
the isocenter were averaged. Dose equivalent readings were scaled to
the treatment time to determine the dose rate during treatment
delivery. The dose equivalent rate in sieverts per second was
calculated by dividing the dose by the beam-on time for each
measurement point.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
A. Static field peripheral dose
A
miniature scanning water tank was used to measure the peripheral
dose for static 6-MV fields on a Varian 21EX and a TomoTherapy
delivery system. The measurements showed that the peripheral doses
were independent of the measurement depth beyond 20 cm from the
field edge (Fig. 2). The variation in peripheral closer to the field
edge is due to changes in scattered dose at increasing depths.
Figure 3 shows the peripheral dose variation at dmax for field sizes of 1.0 × 40.0 cm2, 2.5 × 40.0 cm2, and 5.0 × 40.0 cm2. As the field size increases, so does the
scatter dose contribution from the open field (Sc). The peripheral dose variations with depth
and field size measured in this study are consistent with previous
studies.(9-12)
Fig. 2. TomoTherapy peripheral dose distributions for a 2.5 × 40.0 cm2 static beam at depths of 1.3 cm, 5.0 cm, and 10 cm |
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Fig. 3. TomoTherapy peripheral dose distributions at a depth of 1.3 cm for 1.0 × 40.0 cm2, 2.5 × 40.0 cm2, 5.0 × 20.0 cm2 static beams |
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Figure 4 shows the peripheral dose measurements acquired in this study along with similar 6-MV data from previously published studies. The 6-MV measurements acquired on a Varian 21EX in this study agree well with previous studies.(9-12,15) The discrepancy in the 21EX measurements at distances less than 10 cm from the field edge is due to the smaller field sizes that were used in this study. Mutic et al. measured peripheral doses at dmax with the MLC set to 15 × 15 cm2.(9) Stern measured peripheral dose at a depth of 5 cm with the MLC set to 10 × 10 cm2.(10) Giessen performed measurements for 4- to 25-MV linear accelerators with a 5 × 5 cm2 field size.(11) The referenced TG-36 values were measured at dmax for a 15 × 15 cm2 field size.(12) In this study, the 21EX measurements were made for comparative purposes with the TomoTherapy field sizes of 1.0 × 40.0 cm2, 2.5 × 40.0 cm2, and 5.0 × 40.0 cm2. Fig. 4. Comparison of peripheral dose distributions measured on a helical tomotherapy system and various conventional 6-MV beams. The tomotherapy and 21-EX measurements were taken with a 1 × 40 cm2 field size. Mutic et al.(9) data measured at dmax with the MLC set to 15 × 15 cm2. Stern(10) data measured at a depth of 5 cm with the MLC set to 10 × 10 cm2. Giessen(11) averaged measurements for 4- to 25-MV linear accelerators with a 5 × 5 cm2 field size. TG-36 values were measured at dmax for a field size of 15 × 15 cm2.
Fig. 4. Comparison of peripheral dose distributions measured on a helical tomotherapy system and various conventional 6-MV beams. The tomotherapy and 21-EX measurements were taken with a 1 × 40 cm2 field size. Mutic et al.(9) data measured at dmax with the MLC set to 15 × 15 cm2. Stern(10) data measured at a depth of 5 cm with the MLC set to 10 × 10 cm2. Giessen(11) averaged measurements for 4- to 25-MV linear accelerators with a 5 × 5 cm2 field size. TG-36 values were measured at dmax for a field size of 15 × 15 cm2. |
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The helical tomotherapy system used in this work was designed with the foreknowledge that the delivery technique inherently requires beam-on times that are up to 15 times greater than those used in conventional treatment delivery. The primary tungsten jaws and the tungsten MLC leaves together provide 23 cm of attenuation in the beam direction. The MLC leaves were designed with an interlocking tongue-and-groove design to minimize leakage when the adjacent leaves are closed. In addition, the accelerator is shielded for leakage by a series of lead disks and a tungsten fixture. As such, the head shielding for the accelerating structure is greater than that in a conventional linear accelerator. This can be seen in the 3 to 11 times difference in peripheral dose between the conventional linear accelerator and the helical tomotherapy measurements in Fig. 4. In addition to head shielding, the system also has a beam stopper on the rotating gantry opposite the accelerator. The beam stopper consists of 13-cm-thick lead slabs that act as a counterweight and primary beam attenuator.
B. Treatment delivery peripheral
dose
During helical tomotherapy delivery, the treatment is
continuously delivered on a slice-byslice basis as the gantry
rotates around the patient and the MLC modulates the intensity. The
out-of-field peripheral doses from a tomotherapy treatment delivery
will be greater than the open fixed-field peripheral doses from the
static fields reported in the previous section. To accurately model
the peripheral doses delivered to patients during treatment,
measurements were taken in a phantom during a simulated
parotid-sparing head and neck treatment.
Out-of-field doses were measured
for 6-MV helical tomotherapy and parallel-opposed delivery
techniques with an ionization chamber placed at depths of 1.5 cm,
5.0 cm, and 10.0 cm inside a test phantom (Fig. 5). The measured
peripheral doses were independent of the measured depth. The dose at
5 cm from the tomotherapy field edge was 4.6% of the prescribed
dose, while the peripheral dose for parallel-opposed delivery was
only 1.5% of the prescribed dose. At 20 cm, the tomotherapy
peripheral dose dropped to 0.4% of the prescribed dose, while the
parallel-opposed field peripheral dose dropped to 0.1%.
Fig. 5. Out-of-field peripheral dose for a 336-s (3360 MU) helical tomotherapy delivery. Measurements were taken inphantom at depths of 1.5 cm, 5.0 cm, and 10.0 cm. All distances are from the field edge, and the peripheral dose is normalized to the prescribed dose. |
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The increased beam-on time required for tomotherapy increases the out-of-field leakage dose to the patient. The amount of leakage dose is dependent on the transmission through the MLC leaves, the primary jaws, and the shielding around the accelerator/target. Even though helical tomotherapy delivery requires beam-on times that are 5 to 15 times longer than those needed in conventional IMRT treatment delivery, the peripheral doses are equal to or less than the published peripheral doses for IMRT delivery on Varian and Siemens linear accelerators (Fig. 6).(14,15) The less-than-expected peripheral doses for helical tomotherapy delivery are due to the increased shielding in accelerator design, the lack of flattening filter, and the narrow beamlets used to deliver the treatment.
Fig. 6. Comparison of measured dose equivalent for various treatment delivery techniques. All distances are from the field edge, and the peripheral doses are normalized to the prescribed dose. The out-of-field dose equivalents for the 18-MV 3D, Varian IMRT, and Siemens IMRT delivery techniques were derived from Kry et al.(14,15) |
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C. In-air scatter and leakage
measurements
The relative contribution of scatter and leakage
dose was measured in-air at various distances from the machine
isocenter using ionization chambers. A head and neck test plan was
delivered with the solid water phantom placed in the path of the
beam to provide scatter. The scatter and leakage contributions
ranged from 0.01% to 0.0005% of the central axis dose at distances
between 0.5 m and 4.0 m from the inferior border of the treatment
field. The measured out-offield dose contribution was predominately
leakage, with 86% to 96% of the total measured dose at a point
originating from head leakage. Scatter accounted for only 6% ± 4% of
the in-air dose at distances greater than 60 cm from the
machine's isocenter. The scatter dose contribution
decreases as the distance from the scatter (i.e., the patient)
increases. Figure 7 shows the scatter and leakage measurements from
this work compared with those of Balog et al., who also measured
scatter and leakage on a helical tomotherapy system.(25) The minor differences between the
current study and that by Balog et al. is that the scatter and
leakage measurements in this study were taken with a clinical
delivery sequence. Balog et al. measured the combined scatter and
leakage using an open 5 × 40 cm2 field
with all MLC leaves open. A clinical helical tomotherapy treatment
delivery is composed of many small beamlets that are modulated using
the binary MLC. As such, the scatter contribution for a clinical
delivery will be smaller than a 5 × 40 cm2 field for the same beam-on time.
Fig. 7. Out-of-field peripheral dose for a helical tomotherapy system. Water tank measurements taken for a 2.5 × 40.0 cm2 open field at dmax. Leakage and scatter measurements taken at dmax with an A17 Exradin Chamber. Leakage plus scatter measurements taken for a clinical delivery sequence with a slice thickness of 2.5 cm. Leakage-only measurements taken with primary jaws and all MLCs closed. All distances are from the field edge, and the peripheral dose is normalized to the prescribed dose. |
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D. Patient measurements
A total of 225
measurements additional were taken during helical treatment delivery
for 25 patients at various positions around the tomotherapy gantry.
The dose equivalent values in sieverts per second are shown in Fig.
8. The largest measured dose rate was 1 × 10-4 Sv/s in the plane of gantry rotation from
head leakage and primary beam transmission through the beam stopper.
The dose equivalent rate dropped to 1 × 10-6 Sv/s at the end of the treatment
couch.
| Fig. 8. Dose equivalent rates measured at various locations around a tomotherapy system. | ||
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Typical beam-on times
for the HI-ART system range from 120 s to 600 s, depending on the
slice thickness, helical pitch, modulation factor, and target size.
This is assuming an average beam-on time of approximately 300 s and
an average treatment slot of approximately 15 min. Given an 8-h
treatment day with four patients per hour, this yields 2.2 million
seconds of beam-on time annually. In addition to patient treatment,
quality assurance measurements could add an additional 250 000 s to
500 000 s annually to the shielding requirements. The product of the
dose equivalent values in Fig. 8 and the annual expected beam-on
time could be used to evaluate the shielding requirements for an
existing vault or in the design of a new vault.(25-31)
Because of the beam stopper, there
is a substantial decrease in the primary beam requirements for the
tomotherapy system as compared to conventional linear accelerators.
In most cases, the secondary barrier shielding for existing vaults
should provide adequate primary beam shielding for a tomotherapy
system. In general, the requirements for IMRT leakage shielding are
greater than those for conventional accelerators because leakage is
proportional to the beamon time. However, the leakage component in
the tomotherapy is greatly reduced due to the 22 cm of tungsten
shielding in primary jaws, the MLC, and head shielding.(25)
Based
on the measured scatter and leakage values, a total of 3 to 5
tenth-value layers of secondary beam shielding is required,
depending on the room geometry, patient load, occupancy factors, and
dose limits. In most cases, a HI-ART system can be installed in an
existing vault without the need for additional shielding.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
The HI-ART helical tomotherapy system requires beam-on times that are 5 to 15 times longer than those required in conventional treatment delivery due to the fan-beam delivery technique. However, the delivery system was designed to maximize the shielding for radiation leakage. As such, the peripheral doses are equal to or less than the published peripheral doses for IMRT delivery on other linear accelerators in most clinical radiotherapy applications. In addition, the shielding requirements are also similar to conventional linear accelerators.
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