TU‐E‐BRB‐06: Results from Multiple Radiations of an Anthropomorphic Spine Phantom

A. Molineu, N. Hernandez, P. Alvarez, D. Followill, G. Ibbott

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: To credential institutions to participate in an IMRT‐dose painting spine metastasis protocol. Method and Materials: A mailable anthropomorphic spine phantom was developed and shipped to 21 institutions interested in participating in protocols sponsored by the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The phantom was a modification of the Radiological Physics Center's lung‐thorax phantom. An insert was designed to simulate a solid water spinal cord surrounded by a high impact polystyrene bone structure. An acrylic planning target volume is adjacent to the bone structure. The insert houses radiochromic film and TLD. The phantom also contains an esophagus, a heart and two lungs. Institutions were asked to image the phantom, create an IMRT plan to deliver 6 Gy to at least 90% of the PTV, perform their normal IMRT QA, and deliver the treatment plan to the phantom. The spinal cord dose was limited to 3.75 Gy to a volume of less than 0.35 cc and 2.63 Gy to a volume of less than 1.2 cc. The following criteria were applied: PTV TLD ±7%, ≥85% of the pixels in regions of interest in the axial and sagittal planes must pass a gamma criteria of 5%, 3 mm, and the plan must comply with the protocol. Results: 21 institutions irradiated the phantom 24 times. 8 of the irradiations failed the criteria. 4 of the failing irradiations passed the TLD criterion, but did not pass the gamma criterion. 4 irradiations failed both the TLD and gamma criteria. One of these also failed the plan criteria. The 3 institutions that irradiated the phantom twice all passed on the second irradiation. Conclusion: The phantom is a useful tool in credentialing institutions to participate in protocols. The investigation was supported by PHS grants CA10953 and CA81647 awarded by the NCI, DHHS.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)3400
Number of pages1
JournalMedical physics
Volume37
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2010

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biophysics
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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