Nuclear Engineering and Technology (Sep 2021)

A feasibility study of using a 3D-printed tumor model scintillator to verify the energy absorbed to a tumor

  • Tae Hoon Kim,
  • Sangmin Lee,
  • Dong Geon Kim,
  • Jae Young Jeong,
  • Hye Jeong Yang,
  • Thomas Schaarschmidt,
  • Sang Hyoun Choi,
  • Gyu-Seok Cho,
  • Yong Kyun Kim,
  • Hyun-Tai Chung

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 9
pp. 3018 – 3025

Abstract

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The authors developed a volumetric dosimetry detector system using in-house 3D-printable plastic scintillator resins. Three tumor model scintillators (TMSs) were developed using magnetic resonance images of a tumor. The detector system consisted of a TMS, an optical fiber, a photomultiplier tube, and an electrometer. The background signal, including the Cherenkov lights generated in the optical fiber, was subtracted from the output signal. The system showed 2.1% instability when the TMS was reassembled. The system efficiencies in collecting lights for a given absorbed energy were determined by calibration at a secondary standard dosimetry laboratory (kSSDL) or by calibration using Monte Carlo simulations (ksim). The TMSs were irradiated in a Gamma Knife® Icon™ (Elekta AB, Stockholm, Sweden) following a treatment plan. The energies absorbed to the TMSs were measured and compared with a calculated value. While the measured energy determined with kSSDL was (5.84 ± 3.56) % lower than the calculated value, the energy with ksim was (2.00 ± 0.76) % higher. Although the TMS detector system worked reasonably well in measuring the absorbed energy to a tumor, further improvements in the calibration procedure and system stability are needed for the system to be accepted as a quality assurance tool.

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