The capabilities of electret ion chambers to measure non-target absorbed dose
for distances greater than 20 cm from the irradiated volume during
radiotherapy treatment was investigated for the first time. During
radiotherapy, nontarget doses can be classified as one of three approximate
dose levels: high doses, intermediate doses and low doses. Low doses (<5 %
of the prescription dose) are not generally considered during treatment
planning, due to the fact that is difficult to measure, characterize, or
model them in the planning system. In this work were performed measurements
with electret ion chambers of absorbed dose outside the treated volume (<5 %
of the prescription dose), during external photon radiation therapy in an
Elekta Infinity Linear Accelerator of ?Theagenio? Cancer Hospital of
Thessaloniki, Greece. The absorbed dose values for distances greater than 20
cm from the irradiated volume varied from 0.3 to 17 mGy which corresponds to
0.01% up to 0.6% of the prescription dose (2660 mGy). Near the irradiation
volume the absorbed dose values were greater than the upper detection limit
of the electret ion chambers (threshold 40 mGy). The results are compared
with the calculated ones by the Monaco Treatment Planning System (Elekta
Monaco 5.11.03). In the non-target radiation region where Monaco Treatment
Planning System calculates rather precisely (within uncertainties of less
than 10%) the absorbed dose, measured and calculated doses are the same
within experimental uncertainties. On the contrary, when leakage radiation
becomes the dominant source of out-of-field dose the differences are up to
31%.
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