Paper
24 October 2017 Fiber-optic dosimeters for radiation therapy
Enbang Li, James Archer
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 10464, AOPC 2017: Fiber Optic Sensing and Optical Communications; 104641T (2017) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2285522
Event: Applied Optics and Photonics China (AOPC2017), 2017, Beijing, China
Abstract
According to the figures provided by the World Health Organization, cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for 8.8 million deaths in 2015. Radiation therapy, which uses x-rays to destroy or injure cancer cells, has become one of the most important modalities to treat the primary cancer or advanced cancer. The newly developed microbeam radiation therapy (MRT), which uses highly collimated, quasi-parallel arrays of x-ray microbeams (typically 50 μm wide and separated by 400 μm) produced by synchrotron sources, represents a new paradigm in radiotherapy and has shown great promise in pre-clinical studies on different animal models. Measurements of the absorbed dose distribution of microbeams are vitally important for clinical acceptance of MRT and for developing quality assurance systems for MRT, hence are a challenging and important task for radiation dosimetry. On the other hand, during the traditional LINAC based radiotherapy and breast cancer brachytherapy, skin dose measurements and treatment planning also require a high spatial resolution, tissue equivalent, on-line dosimeter that is both economical and highly reliable. Such a dosimeter currently does not exist and remains a challenge in the development of radiation dosimetry. High resolution, water equivalent, optical and passive x-ray dosimeters have been developed and constructed by using plastic scintillators and optical fibers. The dosimeters have peak edge-on spatial resolutions ranging from 50 to 500 microns in one dimension, with a 10 micron resolution dosimeter under development. The developed fiber-optic dosimeters have been test with both LINAC and synchrotron x-ray beams. This work demonstrates that water-equivalent and high spatial resolution radiation detection can be achieved with scintillators and optical fiber systems. Among other advantages, the developed fiber-optic probes are also passive, energy independent, and radiation hard.
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Enbang Li and James Archer "Fiber-optic dosimeters for radiation therapy", Proc. SPIE 10464, AOPC 2017: Fiber Optic Sensing and Optical Communications, 104641T (24 October 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2285522
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Fiber optics

Cancer

Radiation dosimetry

Radiotherapy

Scintillators

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