The Stereotactic Alignment for Linear Accelerator (S. A. Linac) system is developed to conveniently improve the alignment accuracy of a conventional linac equipped with stereotactic cones. From the Winston‐Lutz test, the SAlinac system performs three‐dimensional (3D) reconstruction of the quality assurance (QA) ball coordinates with respect to the radiation isocenter, and combines this information with digital images of the laser target to determine the absolute position of the room lasers. A handheld device provides near‐real‐time repositioning advice to enable the user to align the QA ball and room lasers to within 0.25 mm of the centroid of the radiation isocenter. The results of 37 Winston‐Lutz tests over 68 days showed that the median 3D QA ball alignment error was 0.09 mm, and 97% of the time the 3D error was ≤0.25 mm. All 3D isocentric errors in the study were 0.3 mm or less. The median x and y laser alignment coordinate error was 0.09 mm, and 94% of the time the x and y laser error was ≤0.25 mm. A phantom test showed that the system can make submillimeter end‐to‐end accuracy achievable, making a conventional linac a “Submillimeter Knife”.PACS numbers: 87.53.Ly, 87.55.Qr
Small field dosimetry is particularly relevant to stereotactic radiation treatment. The accuracy of dose calculation for small static beams is critical to dose planning so would potentially affect the treatment outcomes in a heterogeneous medium. Our results have shown good agreement with plastic scintillation detector in both homogeneous and heterogeneous medium.
Purpose: Small field dosimetry is challenging in homogeneous medium and extremely difficult in an inhomogeneous medium. Monte Carlo dose calculation algorithms are considered as the most accurate for treatment planning. We present our validation of the Monte Carlo algorithm in the Accuray Multiplan system using measurements in a cork phantom. We also recalculated Ray Tracing treatment plans with the Monte Carlo algorithm and compared to SBRT dose tolerance limits. Methods: In our validation measurements with a cork phantom, an Exradin A16 ion chamber was used for collimators from 60mm to 20mm on a CyberKnife, and a PTW 60012 stereotactic diode for collimators from 60mm to 5mm. A literature review of more than 500 published SBRT dose tolerance limits was partitioned into high‐risk and low‐risk categories. Two hundred CyberKnife treatment plans were recalculated using Monte Carlo and compared to the dose limits. The DVH Evaluator software tool was used to generate DVH Risk Maps for 25 critical structures throughout the body, which superimpose a) published dose tolerance limits b) unified high‐risk and low‐risk trends and c) published adverse event doses, onto Monte Carlo patient doses to assess risk of adverse events. Results: The Monte Carlo calculations matched the Exradin A16 measurements to within 2.5% for field sizes down to 20mm, and matched the PTW 60012 measurements to within 2.5% for all field sizes down to 5mm. Recalculated treatment plan data is within the expected range of published SBRT dose tolerance limits, providing optimism for clinical use. Conclusions: The Accuray MultiPlan Monte Carlo algorithm is accurate even for small fields in heterogeneous media. The range of doses calculated by Monte Carlo for our patient data is compatible with published SBRT dose tolerance limits. SBRT dose tolerance limits should be fine‐tuned by Monte Carlo dose calculations in long‐term statistical followup studies. Disclosure: The first author has developed the DVH Evaluator software.
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