Purpose: Medical linear accelerators are the most costly standard equipment used in radiation oncology, however the service costs for these machines are not well understood. With an increasing demand for linear accelerators due to a global increase in cancer incidence, it is important to understand the expected maintenance costs of a larger global installed base so that these costs can be incorporated into budgeting. The purpose of this investigation is to analyze the costs for medical linear accelerator service and maintenance at our institution, in order to estimate the service cost ratio.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The recent trend toward 10 MV for volumetric radiotherapy treatment such as volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT), stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), and stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) introduces photoneutron production, with implications for non-therapeutic patient dose and additional shielding requirements for treatment room design. The sharply nonlinear drop-off in photoneutron production below 10 MV to negligible at 6 MV has scarcely been characterized quantitatively, yet can elucidate important practical insights.
Purpose: To measure photoneutron yields in a medical linac at 8 MV, which may strike a reasonable balance between usefully increased beam penetration and dose rate as compared to 6 MV while reducing photoneutron production which is present at 10 MV.
J Appl Clin Med Phys
January 2022
Purpose: Medical linear accelerators (linacs) can fail in a multitude of different manners due to complex structures. An unclear identification of failure modes occurring constantly is a major obstacle to maintenance arrangements, thereby may increasing downtime. This study aims to use natural language processing techniques to deal with the unformatted maintenance logs to identify the linac failure modes and trends over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInstitutions use a range of different detector systems for patient-specific quality assurance (QA) measurements conducted to assure that the dose delivered by a patient's radiotherapy treatment plan matches the calculated dose distribution. However, the ability of different detectors to detect errors from different sources is often unreported. This study contains a systematic evaluation of Sun Nuclear's ArcCHECK in terms of the detectability of potential machine-related treatment errors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF