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Characterization of a Modified Clinical Linear Accelerator for Ultra-High Dose Rate Beam Delivery

Authors :
Umberto Deut
Aurora Camperi
Cristiano Cavicchi
Roberto Cirio
Emanuele Maria Data
Elisabetta Alessandra Durisi
Veronica Ferrero
Arianna Ferro
Simona Giordanengo
Oscar Martì Villarreal
Felix Mas Milian
Elisabetta Medina
Diango M. Montalvan Olivares
Franco Mostardi
Valeria Monti
Roberto Sacchi
Edoardo Salmeri
Anna Vignati
Source :
Applied Sciences, Vol 14, Iss 17, p 7582 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2024.

Abstract

Irradiations at Ultra-High Dose Rate (UHDR) regimes, exceeding 40 Gy/s in single fractions lasting less than 200 ms, have shown an equivalent antitumor effect compared to conventional radiotherapy with reduced harm to normal tissues. This work details the hardware and software modifications implemented to deliver 10 MeV UHDR electron beams with a linear accelerator Elekta SL 18 MV and the beam characteristics obtained. GafChromic EBT XD films and an Advanced Markus chamber were used for dosimetry characterization, while a silicon sensor assessed the machine’s beam pulses stability and repeatability. The dose per pulse, average dose rate and instantaneous dose rate in the pulse were evaluated for four experimental settings, varying the source-to-surface distance and the beam collimation, i.e., with and without the use of a cylindrical applicator. The results showed a dose per pulse from 0.6 Gy to a few tens of Gy and an average dose rate up to 300 Gy/s. The obtained results demonstrate the possibility to perform in vitro radiobiology experiments and test new technologies for beam monitoring and dosimetry at the upgraded LINAC, thus contributing to the electron UHDR research field.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20763417
Volume :
14
Issue :
17
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Applied Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2267e99d252a4588b8674d38f2940227
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/app14177582