Characterization of a novel time-resolved, real-time scintillation dosimetry system for ultra-high dose rate radiation therapy applications

Scintillation dosimetry has promising qualities for ultra-high dose rate (UHDR) radiotherapy (RT), but no system has shown compatibility with mean dose rates ( above 100 Gy/s and doses per pulse ( ) exceeding 1.5 Gy typical of UHDR (FLASH)-RT. The aim of this study was to characterize a novel scinti...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inArXiv.org
Main Authors Baikalov, Alexander, Tho, Daline, Liu, Kevin, Bartzsch, Stefan, Beddar, Sam, Schüler, Emil
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 05.03.2024
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Summary:Scintillation dosimetry has promising qualities for ultra-high dose rate (UHDR) radiotherapy (RT), but no system has shown compatibility with mean dose rates ( above 100 Gy/s and doses per pulse ( ) exceeding 1.5 Gy typical of UHDR (FLASH)-RT. The aim of this study was to characterize a novel scintillator dosimetry system with the potential of accommodating UHDRs. A thorough dosimetric characterization of the system was performed on an UHDR electron beamline. The system's response as a function of dose, , and the pulse dose rate was investigated, together with the system's dose sensitivity (signal per unit dose) as a function of dose history. The capabilities of the system for time-resolved dosimetric readout were also evaluated. Within a tolerance of ±3%, the system exhibited dose linearity and was independent of and within the tested ranges of 1.8-1341 Gy/s and 0.005-7.68 Gy, respectively. A 6% reduction in the signal per unit dose was observed as was increased from 8.9e4-1.8e6 Gy/s. Additionally, the dose delivered per integration window of the continuously sampling photodetector had to remain between 0.028 and 11.64 Gy to preserve a stable signal response per unit dose. The system accurately measured of individual pulses delivered at up to 120 Hz. The day-to-day variation of the signal per unit dose at a reference setup varied by up to ±13% but remained consistent (<±2%) within each day of measurements and showed no signal loss as a function of dose history. With daily calibrations and specific correction factors, the system reliably provides real-time, millisecond-resolved dosimetric measurements of pulsed conventional and UHDR beams from typical electron linacs, marking an important advancement in UHDR dosimetry and offering diverse applications to FLASH-RT and related fields.
ISSN:2331-8422