Publication | Open Access
Feasibility of a 3D-printed anthropomorphic patient-specific head phantom for patient-specific quality assurance of intensity-modulated radiotherapy
43
Citations
12
References
2017
Year
Biomedical EngineeringTreatment VerificationRadiotherapy ProceduresRadiation TestingRadiation MedicinePatient-specific Quality AssuranceGamma Failure RateRadiation Therapy PlanningPediatric DosimetryClinical Radiation OncologyRadiation ImagingRadiation OncologyNuclear MedicineRadiation Medicine ImagingRadiologyHealth SciencesAdaptive RadiotherapyRight Head PhantomsRadiation TherapyMedical ImagingRadiologic ImagingDosimetryBiomedical ImagingRadiation DoseIntensity-modulated RadiotherapyMedicine3D Imaging
This study evaluated the feasibility of utilizing a 3D-printed anthropomorphic patient-specific head phantom for patient-specific quality assurance (QA) in intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). Contoured left and right head phantoms were converted from DICOM to STL format. Fused deposition modeling (FDM) was used to construct an anthropomorphic patient-specific head phantom with a 3D printer. An established QA technique and the patient-specific head phantom were used to compare the calculated and measured doses. When the established technique was used to compare the calculated and measured doses, the gamma passing rate for γ ≤ 1 was 97.28%, while the gamma failure rate for γ > 1 was 2.72%. When the 3D-printed patient-specific head phantom was used, the gamma passing rate for γ ≤ 1 was 95.97%, and the gamma failure rate for γ > 1 was 4.03%. The 3D printed patient-specific head phantom was concluded to be highly feasible for patient-specific QA prior to complicated radiotherapy procedures such as IMRT.
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