Affiliation:
1. Medical Physics Unit, Department of Oncology McGill University Montréal Québec Canada
2. Radiation Oncology Department Jewish General Hospital Montréal Québec Canada
3. Department of Physics McGill University Montréal Québec Canada
4. Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre Montréal Québec Canada
5. Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research Jewish General Hospital Montréal Québec Canada
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundHydrated electrons, which are short‐lived products of radiolysis in water, increase the optical absorption of water, providing a pathway toward near‐tissue‐equivalent clinical radiation dosimeters. This has been demonstrated in high‐dose‐per‐pulse radiochemistry research, but, owing to the weak absorption signal, its application in existing low‐dose‐per‐pulse radiotherapy provided by clinical linear accelerators (linacs) has yet to be investigated.PurposeThe aims of this study were to measure the optical absorption associated with hydrated electrons produced by clinical linacs and to assess the suitability of the technique for radiotherapy (⩽ 1 cGy per pulse) applications.Methods40 mW of 660‐nm laser light was sent five passes through deionized water contained in a 102 cm3 glass‐walled cavity by using four broadband dielectric mirrors, two on each side of the cavity. The light was collected with a biased silicon photodetector. The water cavity was then irradiated by a Varian TrueBeam linac with both photon (10 MV FFF, 6 MV FFF, 6 MV) and electron beams (6 MeV) while monitoring the transmitted laser power for absorption transients. Radiochromic EBT3 film measurements were also performed for comparison.ResultsExamination of the absorbance profiles showed clear absorption changes in the water when radiation pulses were delivered. Both the amplitude and the decay time of the signal appeared consistent with the absorbed dose and the characteristics of the hydrated electrons. By using literature value for the hydrated electron radiation chemical yield (3.0±0.3), we inferred doses of 2.1±0.2 mGy (10 MV FFF), 1.3±0.1 mGy (6 MV FFF), 0.45±0.06 mGy (6 MV) for photons, and 0.47±0.05 mGy (6 MeV) for electrons, which differed from EBT3 film measurements by 0.6%, 0.8%, 10%, and 15.7%, respectively. The half‐life of the hydrated electrons in the solution was ∼ 24 s.ConclusionsBy measuring 660‐nm laser light transmitted through a cm‐scale, multi‐pass water cavity, we observed absorption transients consistent with hydrated electrons generated by clinical linac radiation. The agreement between our inferred dose and EBT3 film measurements suggests this proof‐of‐concept system represents a viable pathway toward tissue‐equivalent dosimeters for clinical radiotherapy applications.
Funder
MEDTEQ+
Canada Research Chairs
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Cited by
1 articles.
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