Miniaturized scintillator dosimeter for small field radiation therapy

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TitreMiniaturized scintillator dosimeter for small field radiation therapy
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursGonod M, Avila CChacon, Suarez MAngel, Crouzilles J, Laskri S, Vinchant J-F, Aubignac L, Grosjean T
JournalPHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume66
Pagination115016
Date PublishedJUN 7
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0031-9155
Mots-clésbeam profiling, inorganic fiber dosimeter, miniaturized fiber dosimeter, small field dosimetry, small field radiotherapy, small photon fields, stereotactic radiation therapy
Résumé

The concept of a miniaturized inorganic scintillator detector is demonstrated in the analysis of the small static photon fields used in external radiation therapy. Such a detector is constituted by a 0.25 mm diameter and 0.48 mm long inorganic scintillating cell (1.6 x 10(-5) cm(3) detection volume) efficiently coupled to a narrow 125 mu m diameter silica optical fiber using a tiny photonic interface (an optical antenna). The response of our miniaturized scintillator detector (MSD) under 6 MV bremsstrahlung beam of various sizes (from 1 x 1 cm(2) to 4 x 4 cm(2)) is compared to that of two high resolution reference probes, namely, a micro-diamond detector and a dedicated silicon diode. The spurious Cerenkov signal transmitted through our bare detector is rejected with a basic spectral filtering. The MSD shows a linear response regarding the dose, a repeatability within 0.1% and a radial directional dependence of 0.36% (standard deviations). Beam profiling at 5 cm depth with the MSD and the micro-diamond detector shows a mismatch in the measurement of the full widths at 80% and 50% of the maximum which does not exceed 0.25 mm. The same difference range is found between the micro-diamond detector and a silicon diode. The deviation of the percentage depth dose between the MSD and micro-diamond detector remains below 2.3% within the first fifteen centimeters of the decay region for field sizes of 1 x 1 cm(2), 2 x 2 cm(2) and 3 x 3 cm(2) (0.76% between the silicon diode and the micro-diamond in the same field range). The 2D dose mapping of a 0.6 x 0.6 cm(2) photon field evidences the strong 3D character of the radiation-matter interaction in small photon field regime. From a beam-probe convolution theory, we predict that our probe overestimates the beam width by 0.06%, making our detector a right compromise between high resolution, compactness, flexibility and ease of use. The MSD overcomes problem of volume averaging, stem effects, and despite its water non-equivalence it is expected to minimize electron fluence perturbation due to its extreme compactness. Such a detector thus has the potential to become a valuable dose verification tool in small field radiation therapy, and by extension in Brachytherapy, FLASH-radiotherapy and microbeam radiation therapy.

DOI10.1088/1361-6560/abffbb