Published in

IOP Publishing, Physics in Medicine & Biology, 11(55), p. 2997-3009, 2010

DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/55/11/001

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Development and performance evaluation of a dynamic phantom for biological dosimetry of moving targets

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

A dynamic phantom has been developed to allow for measurement of 3D cell survival distributions and the corresponding distributions of the RBE-weighted dose (RBED) in the presence of motion. The phantom consists of two 96-microwell plates holding Chinese hamster ovary cells inside a container filled with culture medium and is placed on a movable stage. Basic biological properties of the phantom were investigated without irradiation and after irradiation with a carbon ion beam, using both a stationary (reference) exposure and exposure during motion of the phantom perpendicular to the beam with beam tracking. There was no statistically significant difference between plating efficiency measured in the microwells with and without motion (0.75) and values reported in the literature. Mean differences between measured and calculated cell survival for these two irradiation modes were within +/-5% of the target dose of 6 Gy (RBE).