On the sensitivity of TG-119 and IROC credentialing to TPS commissioning errors.

dc.contributor.author

McVicker, Drew

dc.contributor.author

Yin, Fang-Fang

dc.contributor.author

Adamson, Justus D

dc.date.accessioned

2019-10-04T16:00:17Z

dc.date.available

2019-10-04T16:00:17Z

dc.date.issued

2016-01-08

dc.date.updated

2019-10-04T16:00:09Z

dc.description.abstract

We investigate the sensitivity of IMRT commissioning using the TG-119 C-shape phantom and credentialing with the IROC head and neck phantom to treatment planning system commissioning errors. We introduced errors into the various aspects of the commissioning process for a 6X photon energy modeled using the analytical anisotropic algorithm within a commercial treatment planning system. Errors were implemented into the various components of the dose calculation algorithm including primary photons, secondary photons, electron contamination, and MLC parameters. For each error we evaluated the probability that it could be committed unknowingly during the dose algorithm commissioning stage, and the probability of it being identified during the verification stage. The clinical impact of each commissioning error was evaluated using representative IMRT plans including low and intermediate risk prostate, head and neck, mesothelioma, and scalp; the sensitivity of the TG-119 and IROC phantoms was evaluated by comparing dosimetric changes to the dose planes where film measurements occur and change in point doses where dosimeter measurements occur. No commissioning errors were found to have both a low probability of detection and high clinical severity. When errors do occur, the IROC credentialing and TG 119 commissioning criteria are generally effective at detecting them; however, for the IROC phantom, OAR point-dose measurements are the most sensitive despite being currently excluded from IROC analysis. Point-dose measurements with an absolute dose constraint were the most effective at detecting errors, while film analysis using a gamma comparison and the IROC film distance to agreement criteria were less effective at detecting the specific commissioning errors implemented here.

dc.identifier.issn

1526-9914

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1526-9914

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19399

dc.language

eng

dc.relation.ispartof

Journal of applied clinical medical physics

dc.relation.isversionof

10.1120/jacmp.v17i1.5452

dc.subject

Humans

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Head and Neck Neoplasms

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Radiotherapy Dosage

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Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted

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Radiometry

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Phantoms, Imaging

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Algorithms

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Credentialing

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Radiotherapy Setup Errors

dc.title

On the sensitivity of TG-119 and IROC credentialing to TPS commissioning errors.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Yin, Fang-Fang|0000-0002-2025-4740|0000-0003-1064-2149

duke.contributor.orcid

Adamson, Justus D|0000-0002-7868-5631

pubs.begin-page

34

pubs.end-page

48

pubs.issue

1

pubs.organisational-group

School of Medicine

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Duke

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Duke Kunshan University Faculty

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Duke Kunshan University

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Institutes and Centers

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Radiation Oncology

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

17

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