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Volume 30 Issue S1 September 2014 ISSN 1120-1797 Physica Medica European Journal of Medical Physics The official journal of the Associazione Italiana di Fisica Medica, European Federation of Organizations for Medical Physics, Irish Association of Physicists in Medicine and Société Française de Physique Médicale Abstracts from the 8th European Conference on Medical Physics September 11th–13th, 2014 Athens, Greece 1.849 1.267 EJMP_v30_i6_SUPPLEMENT COVER - Copy.indd 1 Editor-in-Chief: Paolo Russo Past Editor-in-Chief: Fridtjof Nüsslin 30-08-2014 17:14:06 Abstracts from the 8th European Conference on Medical Physics September 11th–13th, 2014 Athens, Greece Under the Auspices and Support of the Greek National Tourism Organisation Author enquiries For enquiries relating to the submission of articles (including electronic submission) please visit this journal’s homepage at http://www.elsevier.com/locate/ejmp. 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Physica Medica: European Journal of Medical Physics Volume 30, Supplement 1, 2014 The official journal of the European Federation of Organizations for Medical Physics, Associazione Italiana di Fisica Medica, Société Française de Physique Médicale and Irish Association of Physicists in Medicine Physica Medica is recognised by the European Physical Society CONTENTS Invited Lectures 8 Oral Presentations 23 E-Posters with presentation 52 E-Posters 82 Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Physica Medica journal homepage: http://www.physicamedica.com Invited Lectures PATIENT DOSE AND IMAGE QUALITY: ROLE OF MEDICAL PHYSICISTS Francis R. Verdun. Institute of Radiation Physics (IRA), CHUV, Lausanne, Switzerland Introduction: Radiation protection in medicine is becoming a real challenge when dealing with the use of technologies such as CT, fluoroscopy and PET/CT. In Switzerland, since January 2012, medical physicists have to be involved with the medical team dealing with “high dose procedures” such as the ones mentioned above to strengthen the optimization process. This new role for medical physicists has a strong potential in the framework of medical radiation protection. The aim of this presentation is to show, using a few examples, how the introduction of this new legal requirement can improve radiation protection not only of the patient but also of the staff. Material and Method: Our Institute is in charge of consulting more than twenty-five centers (50 CT units; 10 fluoroscopy units used for interventional radiology and cardiology and 5 PET/CT units). These units have been monitored using common protocols that, while integrating some standard quality assurance measurements, mainly focus on the way the unit is used in practice. Results: A wide variation of protocols is applied for comparable indications. For example, patient doses for a standard abdominal CT examination can vary by a factor of 23. Cumulative doses over 5 Gy can be very common in some centers without taking any special measures to inform the patient of the possibility to develop tissue reactions. To improve the present situation, several measures should be introduced: standardization of the CT protocols nomenclature, standardization of the interventional procedures’ names, and definition of clinically relevant image quality levels. Conclusion: The implication of medical physicists in radiology and nuclear medicine has the potential to improve the optimization of radiological procedures. As opposed to radiation therapy, precision in dose measurements should not be the main role of medical physicists. She/he should part of the medical team to improve the standardization of the examinations’ or procedures’ nomenclature and to develop a strategy to provide the physician with clinically relevant measures of image quality. Then one could work on the balance between diagnostic information and risk. DOSE REDUCTION IN INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY & CARDIOLOGY Renato Padovani. ICTP Abdus Salam Int. Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy Optimisation of patient and staff exposure in interventional radiology (IR) and cardiology (IC) practice is the objective of more than 20 years of national and international studies, recommendations and actions. But, the large and increasing number of procedures and the large involvement of professionals outside the radiology department have partially impaired these efforts with the results, as demonstrated by recent studies, that the practice in general has not yet reached acceptable optimisation levels. For patient exposures, national and international surveys are showing large variations in the practice, n the performance of radiological equipment, in the technical protocols and, finally, in the patient doses. The optimization instrument of the DRLs, assessed only for few procedures and mainly for IC, is rarely implemented and used. The ICRP is putting new efforts in redefining the methods to assess and use DRLs as a tool to limit non acceptable dose levels and helping in the optimization process. For staff exposure, ISEMIR project has highlighted a poor monitoring practice in IC bringing to important underestimation of doses and, new challenges for eye lens dosimetry are coming from the 2011 ICRP statement recommending a new and lower eye lens dose limit. Staff monitoring, aiming to assure the compliance with the dose limits, is in general affected by large uncertainties for staff exposed near the radiation source and partially protected. These uncertainties are larger for lens eye dosimetry for the use of protective glasses and for the laterality and the from-below direction of the irradiation. These large uncertainties, when the doses are of the same order of magnitude of the limit as happen for eyes, are not assuring the compliance with the new dose limit. As an example of advanced dosimetry, the active dosimetry technology can improve staff monitoring providing instant information on exposures, allowing the integration of staff and patient exposure data and, finally, supporting staff education. To progress in the staff optimization it will be necessary to advance in dosimetry methods, harmonise dosimetry practice, to develop international databases to support benchmarking, promote optimized procedure protocols, and require harmonized and certified education and training. QA IN DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY: LOCAL ACTIVITIES AND REMOTE CONTROL Hilde Bosmans. KU Leuven, Department of Imaging and pathology, Belgium Quality assurance in mammography should ensure the optimal balance between X-ray dose and image quality. The European Guidelines on QA in mammography include a protocol for digital mammography equipment that allows to evaluate the X-ray tube, detector, settings of the automatic exposure control, the monitor and overall image quality. There are no indications as to how assure the quality of the clinical image quality. The protocol recommends that daily or weekly quality control tests should be centrally supervised. Our regional government has required to perform breast cancer screening in line with the chapter on physico-technical tests. To do so, we implemented yearly and half yearly tests for digital mammography and daily tests of the X-ray system and the monitors. AQ new X-ray modality has to pass a type test procedure first. Seen the large number of mammography systems in our region, the daily and weekly procedures have been largely automated. We have contracts for QA activities on 103 mammography units, including CR and DR systems of all major vendors and 3 more film-screen systems. During the lecture we will show the software networking platform for daily QC supervision and the link between these daily data and the results of half yearly tests.Every day, the centres make 2 acquisitions of a homogenous test object that is rotated over 180 between the 2 exposures. Raw data are sent to a DICOM receiver program, analysed and sent to the QC platform of our centre (product of qaelum NV, Belgium). The centres test also the monitors with a variable test pattern, that shows every day different low contrast characters to allow the testing of the characteristics of monitor and reading room. The same platform (qaelum NV, Belgium) is used for quality supervision. 2 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Recently, 2 scientific papers have confirmed good performance of our screening program. These studies are also a confirmation for the group of physicists who have worked at a strict physic-technical quality assurance system. The networking approach could be copied in other countries of course. Session number of session in which the abstract is presented: Scientific session: QA in radiology; Thursday afternoon, 14.30 e 15.30 Session title of session in which the abstract is presented FULLY AUTOMATED TREATMENT PLAN GENERATION IN DAILY ROUTINE B. Heijmen, P. Voet, M. Dirkx, A. Sharfo, L. Rossi, D. Fransen, J. Penninkhof, ndez Romero, A. Al-Mamgani, L. M. Hoogeman, S. Petit, J.-W. Mens, A. Me Incrocci, S. Breedveld. Erasmus MC Cancer Institute, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Background: Currently, treatment plans are generated by dosimetrists using a trial-and-error procedure. The process may take several hours and plan quality is dependent on the skills and experience of the dosimetrist, and on allotted time. We have developed and clinically introduced a system for fully automatic plan generation, using lexicographic multi-criterial optimization to replace the labour-intensive and operator-dependent trialand-error approach. Materials and Methods: For each patient, the treatment plan is fully automatically generated by the clinical treatment planning system (Monaco, Elekta AB), based on a patient-specific template that is automatically pre-generated with our in-house lexicographic multi-criterial optimizer (“Erasmus-iCycle”, Med Phys. 2012; 39(2): 951). Automatic plan generation in Erasmus-iCycle is based on a ‘wishlist’ with hard constraints and treatment objectives with assigned priorities. For each treatment site (e.g. H&N cancer), a single fixed wish-list is used for all patients. In case of IMRT, Erasmus-iCycle can be used for integrated beam profile optimization and (non-coplanar) beam angle selection. Results: In a prospective clinical H&N cancer study, radiation oncologists selected the AUTO-plan in 97% of cases rather than the MANUAL-plan generated by trial-and-error (IJROBP 2013; 85(3): 866-72). For a group of 44 cervical cancer patients, dual-arc VMAT AUTO-plans were superior to MANUAL-plans generated by an expert cervical cancer planner, spending many hours; reduced small bowel V15Gy, V45Gy, and Dmean, bladder Dmean, and rectum Dmean, p<0.001. For 30 prostate cancer patients, differences between VMAT AUTO- and MANUAL-plans, the latter generated by an expert planner with up to 4 hours planning hands-on time, were statistically insignificant (IJROBP 2014; 88(5): 1175-9). Discussion: Automatic plan generation with consistent high plan quality and vast reductions in planning workload is feasible and has been clinically introduced for major treatment sites. imaging systems, as well as the ability to adopt technical advances more easily in combined imaging hardware, SPECT/CT, PET/CT and PET/MRI will likely be explored to their full potential. This includes a trend towards acquiring listmode data routinely and employing different type of models (kinetic, motion, etc) for subsequent corrections. With PET/MRI, in particular, we will likely see a trend towards assessing tumor heterogeneity through the adoption of dedicated MR sequences applied locoregionally. This information can be used further for improved imageguided interventions. We will likely see a revival of ideas on anatomyguided corrections (e.g., PVC) and reconstructions with the wider adoption of combined imaging. Image fusion in 2020, and beyond, will strongly depend on our ability to accept combined imaging as a collaborative affair and our intent and endurance to cooperate with neighbouring disciplines. This pertains to primarily to medical doctors, but also to technologists and medical physicists. THE ANTIKYTHERA MECHANISM: DECODING ANCIENT GREEK ASTRONOMICAL COMPUTER AN ASTONISHING John H. Seiradakis. Aristotle University, Department of Physics, Section of Astrophysics, Astronomy & Mechanics, GR-541 24 Thessaloniki, Greece The Antikythera Mechanism was found by chance, in a shipwreck, close to the small Greek island of Antikythera, in April 1900, by sponge divers. The shipwreck was dated between 86 and 67 B.C. (coins from Pergamon). Later the Mechanism was stylistically dated, around the second half of the 2nd century B.C. (100 e 150 B.C.). About this time the great Greek astronomer Hipparchos (190 e 120 B.C.) lived in Rhodes. It was a portable (laptop-size), geared mechanism which calculated and displayed, with high precision, the movement of the Sun and the Moon on the sky and the phase of the Moon for a given epoch. It could also calculate the dates of the four-year cycle of the Olympic Games. It had one dial on the front and two on the back. Its 30, precisely cut, gears were driven by a manifold, with which the user could select, with the help of a pointer, any particular epoch (at the front dial). While doing so, several pointers were synchronously driven by the gears, to show the above mentioned celestial phenomena on several accurately marked annuli. It contained an extensive user’s manual. The exact function of the gears has finally been decoded and a large portion of the manual has been read after 2000 years by a major new investigation, using state of the art equipment. Based on new surface photography and high resolution tomography data, a new model has been built at the Aristotle University, revealing the technological abilities of ancient greeks. No complicated geared instruments are known before the Antikythera Mechanism and for several centuries after. Therefore, this astronomical device stands out as an extraordinary proof of high tech in ancient times. IMAGE FUSION IN 2020 Thomas Beyer. Medical University of Vienna, Austria CURRENT APPROACH IN CLINICAL ELECTRON BEAM DOSIMETRY Image fusion describes the process of spatial-temporal alignment of complementary image information. Images can be acquired retrospectively or prospectively. Most commonly image sets originate from different image modalities. However, image sets from the same modality can be aligned and fused also for the purpose of longitudinal assessments. Image fusion is commonly motivated by the need to gain additional information from the aligned image sets, such as by localizing small lesions on functional, low-resolution images through matched, high-resolution anatomical images. This presentation reviews briefly the origin of clinical image fusion, which traces back to the 1960’s when the outline of the neck of patients was transposed manually on scintigrams for better localization of thyroid uptake and nodular disease. Image fusion advanced quickly by means of adopting computer-based automated processing. With the introduction of prototype PET/CT and SPECT/CT systems by the late 1990’s image fusion became hardware based, thus, offering a number of advantages over retrospective image fusion. Since 2006 combined PET/MR has become available for use in humans. This sets the stage for rapid advances in image fusion in the years to come. Given the availability of high-end imaging components in the combined Dimitris Mihailidis PhD. Charleston Radiation Therapy and West Virginia University, USA The absolute dosimetry calibration of clinical electron beams is increasingly based on the AAPM Task Group #51 (TG-51) protocol. In addition, recently published dosimetry data on electrons beams bring up the question of: how would one need to modify the widely used TG-25 that originally was based on the older AAPM Task Group #21 (TG-21) calibration protocol? The 2009 Task Group #70 (TG-70) by the AAPM, is trying to address the issue above. TG-70 operates as supplement and update to TG-25 on issues that needed to be modified because of TG-51 approach to electron dosimetry and because of the more recent data on clinical electron beams. It describes in detail the method of converting measured depth-ionization curves with ion chambers into depth-dose curves, making use of recently published stopping-power ratios and other conversion factors. It also describes the use of water equivalent phantoms to perform relative electron dosimetry based on recently published conversions factors. The report discusses small and irregularly shaped electron field dosimetry using the Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) concept of lateral buildup ratio (LBR) as an avenue to evaluate electron later scatter equilibrium and compute dose per MU for those fields. Finally, it gives some common clinical examples where electron beam dosimetry are applied. This presentation will try to provide guidance to the audience for better understanding the methods and recommendations in TG-70. In addition, will describe how to link the absolute dose calibration recommendations of TG-51 to the relative dose measurements of TG-71. TOWARDS DAILY ADAPTED PROTON THERAPY Tony Lomax. Centre for Proton Therapy, Paul Scherrer Institute, Switzerland Proton therapy using Pencil Beam Scanning (PBS) is a highly conformal and flexible form of radiotherapy. However, anatomic changes of the patient during the course of therapy are a major challenge due to the potentially major changes in proton ranges that can result. The challenge is even greater given that such changes can occur on a daily basis and current software systems and workflows in radiotherapy are too slow to react to such changes. In order to fully exploit the highly conformal characteristics of PBS proton therapy therefore, methods for the daily adaption of proton therapy need to be developed, a concept we call ‘Daily Adaptive Proton Therapy’ (DAPT). The concept of DAPT is to work towards a flexible and fully automated workflow for PBS proton therapy, with the aim of imaging, planning and delivering a ‘plan-of-the-day’ for patients on a daily basis. In order to achieve this, the time between the imaging of the patient and delivery of the plan has to be reduced to a maximum of 1-2 minutes. With the in-room imaging capabilities of the PSI Gantry 2, and the inherent flexibility of PBS proton therapy, we believe we already have the ideal treatment machine for the implementation of DAPT. However, the challenges are more computational and workflow oriented than technological. In order to move towards a DAPT approach for instance, image registration, planning and optimisation procedures must be made computationally efficient and fully automated. In addition, efficient and informative tools need to be developed that will allow clinical staff to review these ‘plans-ofthe-day’, as well as to allow for fast, but nevertheless safe, quality assurance checks of the plans. For instance, with the introduction of DAPT type approaches, it will be impossible to perform patient or field specific dosimetric verifications, and other, automated methods for checking the fidelity of treatments and treatment control files will need to be developed. Thus, there are many challenges to be met before DAPT will become a reality. However, we firmly believe that moving in this direction is the next major advance in clinical proton therapy, and its introduction could have at least as large an impact on current clinical practice with protons as the introduction of Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy. Indeed, one could argue that PBS proton therapy, with its flexible and automated workflow, is pre-destined for the DAPT concept. FLUORESCENT NUCLEAR TRACK DETECTORS AS A TOOL FOR ION-BEAM THERAPY RESEARCH €kel a,b, c. aGerman Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Division S. Greilich a, O. Ja of Medical Physics in Radiation Oncology, Im Neuenheimer Feld 280, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany; bHeidelberg University Hospital, Department of Radiation Oncology, Im Neuenheimer Feld 400, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany; cHeidelberg Ion-Beam Therapy Center (HIT), Im Neuenheimer Feld 450, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany Originally designed for optical storage, fluorescent nuclear track detectors (FNTD) based on Al2O3:C,Mg single crystals contain aggregate F2+ 2 (2 Mg) color centers that show permanent radiochromic transformation when bombarded with ionizing radiation. Transformed centers produce high yield fluorescence at 750 nm when stimulated at 620 nm and a short (75±5 ns) lifetime. This enables non-destructive readout using confocal laserscanning microscopes (CLSMs, Akselrod and Sykora, 2011). Since the intensity signal depends on the local energy deposition, 3D particle trajectories through the crystal can be assessed. Together with the excellent sensitivity Al2O3:C,Mg this enables the derivation of information on track location, direction, energy loss, etc. over the entire particle and energy 3 range found in ion beam therapy. Effects such as projectile fragmentation and secondary electron trajectories can be studied in detail with diffraction-limited resolution (Greilich et al., 2013). Due to their biocompatibility, autoclavability and since post-irradiation chemical processing is not needed, FNTDs can show significant superiority to existing technologies such as plastic nuclear track detectors (PNTDs, e.g. CR-39). Our group studies the FNTD technology for application on three main fields: Fundamental dosimetry quantities (w-value, I-value) in ion beams: FNTDs allow determining particle fluence and range with very high accuracy (Osinga et al., 2013, Klimpki et al., 2013). In-vivo track-based assessment of dose to organs at risk during therapy: FNTDs represent one of a few systems that enable biological dose estimation which is the essential predictor for clinical outcome in ion beam therapy. In addition, FNTD are small, resilient, wireless and biocompatible and can be therefore used within phantoms, animal models or even patients. Radiobiology: our group was the first to use FNTDs as substrate for cell (“Cell-Fit-HD”, Niklas et al., 2013). This enables to correlate microscopic physical parameters and subcellular/cell response both in fixed and living cell and study cellular processes fundamental to ion beam radiotherapy that are hitherto little understood. The talk will present the basic principle of FNTD technology, our group’s technical implementation as well as the latest methodological developments and application results. References 1. Akselrod MS, Sykora GJ: Fluorescent nuclear track detector technology e A new way to do passive solid state dosimetry. Radiat Meas 2011, 46:1671e1679. 2. Greilich S, Osinga J-M, Niklas M, Lauer FM, Klimpki G, Bestvater F, Bartz €kel O: Fluorescent Nuclear Track Detectors as a Tool for JA, Akselrod MS, Ja Ion-Beam Therapy Research. Radiat Meas 2013, 56:267e272. €kel O, Greilich S: Ion 3. Klimpki G, Osinga J-M, Herrmann R, Akselrod MS, Ja Range Measurements using Fluorescent Nuclear Track Detectors. Radiat Meas 2013, 56:342e346. 4. Niklas M, Abdollahi A, Akselrod MS, Debus J, J€ akel O, Greilich S: Subcellular spatial correlation of particle traversal and biological response in clinical ion beams. Int J Radiat Oncol 2013, 87:1141e1147. €kel O, Greilich S: Absorbed 5. Osinga J-M, Brons S, Bartz J a, Akselrod MS, Ja Dose in Ion Beams: Comparison of Ionisation- and Fluence-Based Measurements. Radiat Prot Dosimetry 2014. INCREASING PRECISION IN PARTICLE THERAPY: IN VIVO DOSIMETRY AND BEYOND C. Richter a, b, c, d, G. Pausch a, b, d, J. Seco e, T. Bortfeld e, W. Enghardt a, b, c, d. a OncoRay e National Center for Radiation Research in Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital C.G. Carus, €t Dresden, Germany; b Department of Radiation Technische Universita Oncology, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital C.G. Carus, €t Dresden, Germany; c German Cancer Consortium Technische Universita (DKTK), Dresden, & German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, d Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, Germany; Germany; e Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Department of Radiation Oncology, Boston, MA, USA The proton dose distribution including the steep dose gradient at the end of range not only allows a better sparing of normal tissue. It also enforces the need of a precise control of the dose deposition to ensure the correct position of the dose gradient to take full advantage of the superior capabilities of proton therapy. Otherwise, factors like tissue heterogeneities, patient positioning errors and intra-fractional motion can cause high uncertainties in proton distal range resulting in a failing tumor coverage or/ and an unnecessary high dose deposition in healthy tissue due to the use of extended margins. Therefore, an in vivo verification or any other control of proton range and delivered dose distribution is highly desirable. Several in vivo dosimetry approaches will be presented and compared. They rely on either nuclear interactions of the beam with the irradiated matter (In beam-PET and prompt g-ray imaging) or on the visualization of 4 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) biological processes induced by radiation, e.g. with MRI. The most experience exists for in beam-PET. In Dresden, the current research focuses on time-resolved acquisition (4D-PET) and on automated detection of range deviations. In contrast, prompt gamma ray imaging is a relatively new and dynamic field of research. Several prompt g-ray imaging detector systems are under development in various research centers around the world based on active- as well as passively collimated systems. A complementary approach, based on the time spectrum of the g-ray emission, is investigated in Dresden. First promising results will be presented in the talk. However, so far there is no clinical application of prompt g-ray based in vivo dosimetry. In contrast, radiation-induced biological changes have been used in clinical trials at the Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston (MGH) for range verification in both, spine and liver. A recent study, also carried out at MGH, aims at a better understanding of when those treatment related changes in the liver begin to appear. Instead of assuring a safe and precise treatment by measuring the in vivo dose deposition, another approach is to decrease dose deposition uncertainties before beam delivery. This can be done in several ways: One approach tries to increase the robustness of the treatment plan against different types of uncertainties. This can be realized by including the robustness in the optimization and penalizing treatment plans with a dose deposition very prone to expected deviations. A completely different method for increasing dose deposition precision is based on online imaging during treatment: If the exact patient geometry would be known for every time point, the delivered dose deposition could be calculated and even adapted online if necessary. Online imaging could be performed with MRI scanners integrated in the treatment room in analogy to the combined MRI-linac approaches. At the moment this is a field of intense research with quite impressing progress. At this point it is not clear which of the different methods to increase precision in particle therapy will find their way in routine clinical application. Nevertheless, the demand and the potential of these methods are unquestionable. MONTE CARLO MODELING AND IMAGE-GUIDANCE IN PARTICLE THERAPY G. Dedes, K. Parodi. Department of Medical Physics, Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich, Germany The use of protons and heavier ions in external beam therapy offers distinctive advantages with respect to conventional radiotherapy using electromagnetic radiation. The physical selectivity of ions with the characteristic Bragg curve can enable high tumor-dose conformity, resulting in lower irradiation of healthy tissues and critical organs in close vicinity to the target volume. Moreover, the higher relative-biological-effectiveness (RBE), especially in the case of heavier ions, can offer improved control probability for radioresistant tumors. In this context, Monte Carlo (MC) particle transport and interaction methods are increasingly employed in clinical and research institutions as vital tools to support several aspects of beam modeling, treatment planning and quality assurance of high precision ion beam therapy. This talk will review the role of MC methods in selected applications in particle therapy. Drawing on own experience at different European particle therapy facilities, the fine tuning of MC parameters for beam modeling will be presented. In addition, based on ongoing studies and collaborations, we will give an overview on the wide range of MC applications aiming at novel tools for image guidance and treatment planning. These include the support to the development of heavy ion and proton computed tomography, as well as the direct usage of MC-data in the inverse planning process, featuring calculations of both absorbed and biologically weighted dose. Development and validation of new solutions based on clinically established imaging modalities for adaptive strategies in particle therapy will be also addressed, together with research efforts to support unconventional imaging-based techniques detecting secondary radiation for in-vivo confirmation of the actual treatment delivery. Finally, the application of Monte Carlo tools in the emerging research area of laser driven ion acceleration for medical application will be briefly exposed. Parts of this work have been supported by the DFG Cluster of Excellence MAP (Munich-Centre for Advanced Photonics), the DFG Project on Ion Radiography and Tomography, the FP7 Project ENVISION, and the BMBF Project SPARTA. IMAGE GUIDANCE FOR ADAPTIVE RADIOTHERAPY: IS THERE STILL A NEED FOR SURROGATE SYSTEMS? Torsten Moser. Im Neuenheimer Feld 280, 69120, Heidelberg, Germany In conformal radiation therapy, accurate and reproducible patient setup is required. In this regard, initial setup errors, as well as day-to-day setup variation, still poses a clinically relevant problem. The available anatomic („internal“) information of the patient, however, relies on the images of the planning CT, acquired up to weeks prior to treatment and does not reflect changes during the actual treatment. To correct in the actual situation, the most reliable information is obtained by 3D-imaging techniques like cone beam CT. Adaptive treatment techniques, moreover, adds a further component to the treatment chain, the feed-back. Again by daily image guidance, changes that occur during the treatment can be detected and handled. Meanwhile, most linear accelerators are able to acquire images (eg, kilovoltage/megavoltage setup images or cone beam computed tomography [CT] scans) that allow correlation of the actual patient position with that during treatment planning CT. By the use of such image guided radiation therapy techniques, the potential benefit for the patient has to be weighed against the additional risk associated with the imaging dose. For this reason, non-radiologic techniques to verify the setup position of the patient are of great interest. As such developments, there are various systems available that provide also information of motion and/or position. There are devices available where electromagnetic markers have to be implanted into the patient or technologies where other information’s are used to generate signals that can be used for position or motion correction. One of the latter are optical surface imaging systems. Optical surface imaging systems are able to reconstruct a 3-dimensional (3D) surface model relative to the isocenter position. A setup correction is calculated by registering actual images with reference images stored in the system beforehand. Although the technical accuracy of such systems has been shown to be quite high, their suitability for clinical application depends on additional aspects, in particular on a fixed spatial relation between the surface and target region. To analyze this, setup corrections from a surface imaging system were evaluated in 120 patients. As a measure of reliability, the corrections derived by the optical system were compared with those from 3D radiologic imaging, which is the current gold standard in image guided radiation therapy. We found a dependence on the target region and the used reference image modality. Therefore, additional radiologic imaging may still be necessary on a regular basis (e.g., weekly) or if the corrections of the optical system appear implausibly large. Nevertheless, such a combined application may help to reduce the imaging dose for the patient. SMALL PHOTON FIELD DOSIMETRY: PRESENT STATUS Maria M. Aspradakis. Cantonal Hospital of Lucerne, 6000 Lucerne 16, Switzerland Background: IPEM report 1031 summarised existing knowledge on the physics and challenges in the dosimetry of small MV photon fields, reviewed available detectors for dose measurement, gave recommendations based on existing knowledge and experience, explained the need of commissioning treatment planning systems for small field applications and pointed out directions for future work. This presentation reports on recent developments. Materials and Methods: A megavoltage (MV) photon field is defined as ‘small’ when either the field size is not large enough to provide lateral charged particle equilibrium at the point of dose measurement or the collimating device obstructs part of the focal spot as viewed from that point. The overlapping penubras from opposing jaws result that the full width half maximum of the dose profile (FWHM) no longer matches the collimator setting. Thus, the conventional defintion of field size in terms of FWHM breaks down. The measurement of dosimetric paraments in such non-flat narrow fields becomes a challenge because most detectors are too large to resolve the non flat dose profile or that they perturb fluence in a Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) way that using available perturbation factors is not appropriate. Furthermore, changes in energy spectrum with field size, the fact that on some modern radiotherapy equipment conventional reference conditions cannot be realised or that the flattening filter is not present, means that current dosimetry codes of practice do not provide recommendations for dosimetry in such fields. Results & Discussion: The new formalism for dose determination in small and non-standard photon fields developed by the IAEA/AAPM is explained2. Some results on detector-specific beam quality corrections factors are presented. References 1. Aspradakis, M.M., Byrne, J. P., Palmans, H., Conway, J., Rosser, K., Warrington, A. P., Duane, S. IPEM report 103: 'Small Field MV Photon Dosimetry'. 2010, York, UK: Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine (IPEM). ISBN 978 1 903613 45 0 2. Palmans, H, Dosimetry of small fields: Present status and future guidelines by IAEA, Radiotherapy & Oncology, Vol 111, Supp 1, April 2014, ISSN 01678140 MEDICAL PHYSICS CHALLENGES WITHIN THE MICROBEAM RADIATION THERAPY (MRT) PROJECT €uer-Krisch a, f, C. Nemoz a, f, T. Brochard a, f, M. Renier a, f, H. E. Bra Requardt a, f, R. Serduc b,f, G. LeDuc a, f, A. Bravin a, f, S. Bartzsch c, f, P. Fournier d, a, f, I. Cornelius d, f, P. Berkvens a, f, J.C. Crosbie d, f, M.L.F. Lerch d, f, A.B. Rosenfeld d, f, M. Donzelli a, c, f, U.Oelfke c, f, A. Bouchet e, f, H. Blattmann g, f, B. Kaser-Hotz h, f, J.A. Laissue i, f. aEuropean Synchrotron Radiation Facility, B.P.220, F-38043 Grenoble Cedex, France; bINSERM unit 836, CHU Grenoble, Grenoble, France; cIm Neuenheimer Feld 280,69120 Heidelberg,Germany; dCMRP, Northfields Ave., Wollongong, 2500, NSW, €t Bern Institut für Anatomie Baltzerstrasse 2CH-3000 Australia; eUniversita Bern 9, Switzerland; f CHU Grenoble, Grenoble, France; gNiederwiesstr. 13c 5417 Untersiggenthal, Switzerland; hAnimal Oncology and Imaging Center, Rothusstr. 2, CH-6331 Huenenberg/CH,.Switzerland; iUniversity of Bern ,Faculty of Medicine, Murtenstrasse 11, CH-3010 Bern, Switzerland Background: Microbeam Radiation Therapy (MRT) uses a spatially fractionated filtered white X-ray beam from a high energy wiggler Synchrotron Source (energies 50-350keV) with extremely high dose rates (up to about 20kGy/s). The typical planar beam width in an array is 25-100mm with 100-400mm wide spaces between beams. Such beams are very well tolerated by the tissue, even the high “peak” doses delivered in the path of the microbeams, when respecting a dose prescription in the “valley’ that corresponds to a dose used of conventional Radiation Therapy (RT) converted to a single exposure . The superior tumor control when compared to that realized by conventional RT is achieved by differential effects of MRT on the normal tissue vasculature versus the tumor vasculature. Materials and Methods: The MRT technique has been technically set up, tested and successfully applied during the last 20 years on various tumor models. Presently, the project is mature enough to be used for the treatment of spontaneous tumors in pets. Unified efforts from several teams with very different expertise now permit Microbeam Radiation Therapy in animal patients with a high degree of safety, in pursuit of the ultimate goal of clinical applications in humans. Results: The MRT trials for animal pets as tumor patients required substantial work for developing, upgrading and progressively implementing instrumentation, dosimetry protocol, as well as the crucial patient safety systems. Progress on the homogenous dose measurements using ionisation chambers and Alanine dosimetry as well as the comparison of high resolution dosimeters with the dose calculations based on a novel tumor planning system will be summarized. A general overview on the different achievements will be presented as well as a vision for possible human trials. TEXTURE AS IMAGING BIOMARKER Costaridou Lena. Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion Patras 26504, Greece Quantitative image analysis involves derivation of quantitative measures (extraction of image features), aiming to capture image manifestations of 5 underlying pathophysiological processes, with the ultimate goal to identify image-based biomarkers and improve patient-specific disease management. While features capturing lesion contrast and shape, also mimicking radiologists’ used image attributes, have been extensively studied in the framework of image-based computer aided diagnosis texture analysis, not directly intuitive to radiologists, is an emerging approach. In addition, the tissue appearance modeling and classification task has been recently enriched, encompassing tasks, such as prognosis, monitoring disease progression and response to therapy, as well as cancer risk assessment. Prognosis imaging biomarkers assess neoplasm aggressiveness, in terms of their relationship to pathology and molecular classification, while treatment response imaging biomarkers could help early identification of responders/non responders to neo-adjuvant chemotherapy schemes prior to surgical decisions. In this review, texture analysis methodologies exploited towards the identification of potential imaging biomarkers will be considered. Representative texture analysis approaches will be reviewed across imaging modalities, with reference to methodological and technological aspects and challenges. The advent of multimodality imaging with near isotropic 3-dimensional spatial resolution modalities, including anatomical and functional modalities, is expected to enhance characterization and quantification of naturally occurring textures, as well as their scale and orientation properties, while casting insight to texture dynamics, provided by imaging tissue volume times series (spatiotemporal data). TECHNICAL CHALLENGES AND CLINICAL RESEARCH APPLICATIONS OF ULTRAHIGH FIELD MRI Andrew Webb. Leiden University Medical Center, Radiology Department, The Netherlands With the rapid spread of 7 Tesla whole body MRI systems throughout the world there has been significant recent progress in both clinical and clinical research applications. Although predominantly in the neurological area, there have also been many developments in the areas of musculoskeletal, cardiac and ocular imaging. Increased magnetic susceptibility contrast, enhanced magnetic resonance angiography, and much higher signal-to-noise in spectroscopy and heteronuclear imaging/spectroscopy have been the driving forces for much of this progress. The major challenges have been, and continue to be, increased image inhomogeneity, power deposition, and motion-induced artifacts. Many hardware advances have already been necessary to deal with these problems, and many future advances are required to keep the field moving forward. Examples which will be presented include: (i) the use of navigator echoes and phase imaging for high resolution MRI in Alzheimers patients, (ii) the use of high dielectric materials to improve neuroimaging and spectroscopy at high field, (iii) diffusion weighted metabolite spectroscopy in the brain, (iv) high field cardiac and musculoskeletal imaging, and (v) the design of new types of RF coil specifically for high field. DOSIMETRY IN SUPPORT OF PATIENT PROTECTION IN DIAGNOSTIC RADIOLOGY - A VALEDICTORY VIEW FROM THE UK Dr Paul C. Shrimpton. Formerly Leader of Medical Dosimetry Group, Public Health England, Chilton, OX11 0RQ, UK Invited lecture in relation to EFOMP Medal Award Ceremony The increasingly widespread use of x-rays in diagnostic radiology provides not only enormous benefits to patients, but also significant radiation exposure for populations. The protection of patients against potential radiation harm requires the elimination of all unnecessary x-ray exposure in relation to effective clinical diagnosis. Dosimetry is an essential management tool for patient safety by allowing the assessment of typical radiation risks in support of the justification of procedures, and the routine monitoring and comparison of typical doses in pursuit of the optimisation of patient protection. Periodic assessment of patient doses should form an integral part of quality assurance in x-ray departments and is best based on practical measurements that provide useful characterisation of patient exposure, such as entrance surface dose, dose-area product and, for CT, volume-weighted CT dose index and dose-length product. Mean values determined in a department for these practical dose monitoring quantities, from patient samples for each type of examination and patient group, 6 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) can form the basis not only for estimates of typical organ and effective doses to reference patients utilising appropriate coefficients, but also local diagnostic reference levels (DRLs). DRLs represent a pragmatic mechanism for promoting continuing improvement in performance by facilitating comparison with national values and practice elsewhere. The development and application of DRLs in the UK over the last 30 years, within a coherent framework for patient protection that has included periodic national surveys for conventional x-rays and CT, has successfully helped reduce unnecessary exposures, with national DRLs for many examinations having fallen by a factor 2. HOW TO OPTIMIZE EXPOSURES USING RADIOBIOLOGY AS A GUIDE Klaus Trott, Vere Smyth, Andrea Ottolenghi. Department of Physics, University of Pavia, Via Bassi 6, 27100, Pavia, Italy Medical radiation exposures associated with the diagnosis and treatment of diseases are, besides natural background irradiation, the main source of radiation burden to mankind and may lead to an increased risk of various diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular diseases, developmental disorders and heritable health injury. Concepts for radiation risk estimation and reduction were developed by ICRP, yet they do not apply to individual patients but to the population at large. They are designed to be used as guidelines for planning “safe” procedures e.g. in industry and public health. Population risk estimates are based on mean doses to a list of “critical” organs and on tissue weighting factors. The estimation of radiation risks for individual patients, however, has to be based on the determination of anatomical dose distribution within the exposed organs e mean doses may be meaningless. Even within the same organ, pathology, pathophysiology and pathogenesis differ between different potential health complications from medical radiation exposures of the different organs. They depend on dose to critical structures and subvolumes, on age and sex of the exposed patient and most likely also on genetic predisposition and life style factors. Both, for diagnostic exposures and therapeutic exposures of the individual patient, estimations of health risks need to be based on radiobiological mechanisms of pathogenic pathways. Models of risk estimation in particular those from therapeutic exposures are not specific for particular organs but for particular clinical manifestation of radiation-induced disorders and diseases. Moreover, dose volume histograms are of little value in these estimates since anatomy is more important than volume. Several exposure scenarios in diagnostic and therapeutic radiology will be discussed to explain the problems and suggest possibilities to solve the problems. Acknowledgments. This work was partially funded by EU (EC Contract FP7 605298, ‘EUTEMPE-RX’). Badly written papers, not complying with requirements and including mistakes, eg in references, immediately give the impression that the work may also be poor. Work with experienced authors initially (eg supervisor). Look critically at papers you read and note what you think works well. New writers can learn good practice by example. Good luck! REASONS FOR REJECTION di Napoli Federico II, Naples, Italy Paolo Russo. Universita Rejection of a paper refers to the decision of the Editor of a scientific Journal not to accept the submitted manuscript for publication in that Journal. This condition may occur in any phase of the paper evaluation process, but mostly occurs at the end of the first round of the peer-review process, i.e. when one of two experts, asked for their independent opinion, suggest reasons for acceptance, revision or rejection of the manuscript. Typically, in the case of a negative peer-review, the Associate Editor expresses a recommendation (e.g., reject) for the Editor-in-Chief, who takes the final decision. The rejection rate of a Journal, i.e. the ratio of the number of rejected to the number of evaluated manuscripts, has been seen to increase over the last years in many well-reputed scientific Journals, also in the case of medical physics Journals, and this has caused concern both in the Journal's Editorial Boards, and in the authors' community. For example, for the Journal Physica Medica (European Journal of Medical Physics, EJMP) the rejection rate is such that only about one manuscript out of three is accepted for publication. This has then prompted various actions from scientific Publishers and Journal Editors, in order to increase the awareness of the authors toward the scientific writing best practice, the peer-review process and the Journals' whole paper evaluation process. This presentation, by the Editor-in-Chief of EJMP, indicates possible reasons for paper rejection, based on the presenter's experience as an author, as a reviewer, as Associate Editor and as Editor of a scientific Journal in medical physics. These reasons may include lack of proper English writing, lack of motivations or originality, weaknesses in the methodological aspects or in the significance of the findings and other specific reasons, which overall may indicate a general lack of convincing strength of the manuscript. Since publishing in a wellreputed scientific Journal is a competition for the acquisition of the consensus in the Journal's audience, and hence in the corresponding scientific community, toward the work carried out in the specific study, lack of strength of a manuscript for one or more of the above reasons invariably leads to paper rejection. Ultimately, the efforts by the scientific community toward reaching the best practice in scientific writing and evaluation, will hopefully produce a reduced Journals' rejection rate, and most importantly, an improved efficacy of the research work, for the benefit of the scientific and social progess. HOW TO PUBLISH A PAPER IN A PEER-REVIEWED JOURNAL THE CURRENT STATUS OF MEDICAL PHYSICS RECOGNITION IN EUROPE David Thwaites. Institute of Medical Physics, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW2006, Australia Publication of work is necessary to move the field forward. Using experience as an author, reviewer, editorial board member and editor, some observations are summarized on writing a paper, submitting it and getting it published, focussing on what makes a good paper and hence likely to be acceptable. First, consider your main message and hence material selection and writing flow so that this is clear. Make the introduction relevant to where the work fits into current related research, going quickly from generalities to specifics. Even good well-presented work will not get into high-impact-factor journals unless it is clearly novel and/or significant. Methods should allow the work to be repeated; ask yourself if they are clear and complete. Explain acronyms. Results should clearly tie figures and tables to text. Conclusions should relate back to the key message and be verifiably supported by results. Discussion and conclusions should not just be re-stated results! Ask a colleague, unconnected with the work, to read the ‘final’ draft paper and give comments on clarity. If they can't understand it, neither will the referees! Re-read it yourself after a time gap. Check journal requirements and comply! Hastily prepared submissions are usually poorly prepared! Stelios Christofides. Medical Physics Department, Nicosia General Hospital, Nicosia, Cyprus The European Union recognises professions automatically if they meet the requirements of Directive 2005/36/EC [1], as this was amended by Directive 2013/55/EU [2]. Automatic profession recognition gives the right of professionals to move and work without any restrictions in any Member State of the European Union. European recognition of the Medical Physics profession will allow Clinically Qualified Medical Physicists (CQMP) the same privileges as other recognised professions, such as Medical Doctors, Architects, Nurses, etc. Furthermore, Medical Physics Experts (MPE), as defined by Directive 2013/ 59/Euratom [3, 4], can have the same privileges, if are recognised by all the Competent Authorities of all the Member States of the European Union. Currently, neither the CQMPs nor the MPs are recognised automatically as a profession by all the Member States of the European Union. The European Federation of Organisations for Medical Physics (EFOMP) is working for many years in developing the education, training and competence of Medical Physicists, both at the CQMP and MPE levels so as the Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 7 requirements of the above Directives are met for automatic professional recognition. The purpose of this presentation is to give a brief account of the efforts made by EFOMP and the requirements that need to be met, at the national level, in order for both the CQMPs and MPEs can be automatically recognised by the European Union. References [1] Directive 2005/36/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 September 2005 on the recognition of professional qualifications, OJ L255, 30.9.2005, pp 22-142. [2] Directive 2013/55/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 November 2013 amending Directive 2005/36/EC on the recognition of professional qualifications and Regulation (EU) No 1024/2012 on administrative cooperation through the Internal Market Information System (‘the IMI Regulation’), OJ L354, 28.12.2013, pp 132-170. [3] Council Directive 2013/59/Euratom of 5 December 2013 laying down basic safety standards for protection against the dangers arising from exposure to ionising radiation, and repealing Directives 89/618/Euratom, 90/641/Euratom, 96/29/Euratom, 97/43/Euratom and 2003/122/Euratom, OJ L13, 17.1.2014, pp. 1-73. [4] European Commission, Radiation Protection Report 174, “Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert”, Directorate-General Energy, Luxembourg, 2014, available from: http://ec.europa.eu/energy/nuclear/radiation_protection/ doc/publication/174.pdf (last accessed on the 11th of May 2014). continuous and fast, increasing the demand for high level scientists and experts in the field. To ensure that ionizing radiation is safely used, the presence of the medical physicist is essential. The medical physicist has therefore become part of an indispensable “core team” within the hospital to ensure safe and proficient use of medical equipment. His presence is growing also within the industry and/or regulatory authority environment. In order to meet all these demands, sufficient education and training is indispensable. Collaboration and innovation in this field is imperative for the appropriate professional response to all these challenges. The European Commission has for a number of years recognized the need for adequate theoretical and practical training of medical physicists for the purpose of radiological practices. This is clearly stated in a number of European directives as well as in the latest European Basic Safety Standards. A number of questions arise based on all these facts. Do we have sufficient number of adequately trained medical physicists or medical physics experts to address the needs of the increasing number of medical procedures in Europe? Is the education and training of such scientists harmonized across Europe, that will facilitate in easier and mutual recognition as well as improved cross-border mobility of medical physicists? The present paper will attempt to answer these questions using the most recent information within Europe. THE CURRENT STATUS OF MEDICAL PHYSICS RECOGNITION IN THE MIDDLE EAST Lama Sakhnini. Department of Physics, College of Science, University of Bahrain, Sakhir, PO. Box 32038, Kingdom of Bahrain Ibrahim Duhaini. Chief Medical Physicist & RSO, Rafik Hariri University Hospital, Beirut - Lebanon & President of the Middle East Federation of Organizations of Medical Physicists (MEFOMP), Lebanon Education: The Department of Physics at University of Bahrain offers a B.Sc. in medical physics program. The program produces B.Sc. degree graduates with a broad knowledge of fundamental and applied physics. With a specialization in medical physics, the graduates will be eligible for employment in hospitals, clinics, environmental establishments or industrial health care centers. Students should also be suitably prepared to carry out research in medical physics leading to a higher degree. The B.Sc. in Medical Physics degrees gives the opportunity to study the many medical applications of advanced physics. Medical physics courses, taught by staff of the department of Physics, are supplemented by specialist lectures given by senior practicing medical physicists and doctors from Salmaniya medical complex and Bahrain Defense force hospital. The B.Sc. programs in Medical Physics shares many common courses with the B.Sc. program in Physics, but nearly 48 credit hours include courses which are specific to Medical Physics program. A total of 42 female students graduated from the program so far, only 3 students managed to get jobs in the medical sector. Training: The B.Sc. in Medical Physics program ensures that the students go through clinical training at hospitals in the Kingdom of Bahrain or in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. In an ideal situation; the student spends a minimum of 2 months of hospital training to complete a clinical rotation in radiation therapy, diagnostic imaging and nuclear medicine. The student observes and practices clinical procedures under the direct supervision of a senior clinical medical physicist. The student is required to write a progress report on the clinical procedures. However there is no well designed training program in the hospitals. Hence there is a disparate need for a “Residency Program” which is aimed at both educating and providing practical experience so that the medical physicist would be ready to practice in a hospital setting and obtain board certification. Training for our students faced many challenges, as most hospitals do not have medical physicists, most hospital administrators do not know the rule of medical physicists, many hospitals have no quality management program and rely on the medical supplier of their equipment to do yearly maintenance. Medical physics is the branch of physics concerned with the application of physics to medicine, particularly in the diagnosis and treatment of human diseases. From the time when Wilhelm Roentgen and other physicists made the discoveries which led to the development of Diagnostic Radiology, Radiotherapy, Brachytherapy and Nuclear Medicine, Medical Physicists have played a pivotal role in the development of new technologies that have revolutionized the way medicine is practiced. In today's health care scene, the medical physicist is essential to the safe and cost effective operation of any creditable medical institution. Medical Physics in the Middle East Region has passed in different stages. In particular the ISEP Conference held in Bahrain in November 2007 and the 16 th ICMP Conference held in Dubai in 2008. During these conferences, there were several meetings for all the medical physics societies in the Middle East. The result was the establishment in September 2009 of the Middle East Federation of Organizations in Medical Physics (MEFOMP) which is part of the International Organization of Medical Physics IOMP. The following countries have signed up for this chapter: Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, KSA, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Syria, UAE and Yemen. Ever since then, the medical physics profession has gone the first mile in the road of recognition in most of the ME countries. Governmental entities and University bodies started looking deeply into the need of promoting MP activities across the region. Now, Medical physicists in the ME region are considered scientists who through science are able to identify problems and unveil deficiencies. It is also through science that they solve the problems and correct the deficiencies encountered in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases. There will be exciting and difficult challenges not only in the field of health care but also in the race for nuclear power in the ME region. Countries will be counting on the science of Medical Physics to help meet these challenges. Keywords: IOMP, MEFOMP, Middle East, Medical Physics, Recognition. EDUCATION AND TRAINING OF MEDICAL PHYSICISTS IN EUROPE V. Tsapaki. Konstantopoulio General Hospital, Athens, Greece Background: Medical exposure represents the utmost and fastest growing contribution to manmade radiation exposure not only in Europe but also across the world. Furthermore, the evolution of medical equipment is EDUCATION AND TRAINING OF MEDICAL PHYSICISTS IN MIDDLE EAST KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN AS AN EXAMPLE EDUCATIONAL IMPORTANT? ACCREDITATION IN MEDICAL PHYSICS: IS IT John Damilakis. Professor of Medical Physics, Greece An increasing number of higher education institutions have in recent years started to offer courses on Medical Physics. Moreover, Continuing Professional Development (CPD) for medical physicists is of great professional interest. CPD courses is an excellent way to ensure that Medical Physicists 8 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) become knowledgeable about all current issues in their field and to provide the necessary knowledge, skills and competences for certified Medical Physicists to become Medical Physics Experts. However, external assessment of the quality of education or training provision is needed. Accreditation is the formal recognition that education and training on medical physics provided by an institution meets acceptable levels of quality. Accreditation should be based upon standards and guidelines. Requirements for accreditation of a training programme should take into account several aspects including facilities, staff, educational material and teaching methods. In Europe, ENQA (European Network for Quality Assurance) promotes European co-operation in the field of Quality Assurance in higher education. ENQA members are national agencies and organizations, which play a major role in the accreditation process. A European organization is needed to offer accreditation of medical physics CPD and training programs. Certification is the recognition of knowledge of a professional who has completed his/her education or training. The EC has developed tools and frameworks to promote training and facilitate mobility. ECVET is a European system of accumulation and transfer of credits designed for vocational education and training in Europe. IMAGE-GUIDED RADIATION THERAPY IN THE PRECLINICAL SETTING Ross Berbeco PhD. Department of Radiation Oncology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, USA Current clinical radiation therapy is delivered with multiple collimated beams and accurate radiation dose calculation based on CT imaging. Additional advances in image-guided delivery techniques have saturated a majority of modern clinics. Therefore, modern translational research of radiation biology and radiation physics using in vivo models of cancer requires a preclinical therapy platform that has the same capabilities as modern clinical linear accelerators. In 2010, we established a preclinical radiation biophysics laboratory at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA USA). The cornerstone of this facility is a Small Animal Radiation Research Platform (SARRP) which was developed by researchers at Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, MD USA) and commercialized by Xtrahl, Inc. (Surrey, UK). The SARRP combines a conventional x-ray tube with brass collimators to enable delivery of photon beams as narrow as 0.5 mm at 220 kVp. Precise (sub-mm) image-guided setup is performed using cone-beam CT imaging combined with a robotic motion stage. Absolute dose output is measured with an ADCL-traceable ion chamber. Percentage depth-dose and beam profiles are measured for each collimator with EBT3 film. Monte Carlo modeling of the SARRP is performed using EGSnrc. The phase space files are used in a GPU-driven 3D dose calculation engine with the 3D Slicer platform for visualization (Brigham and Women’s Hospital Surgical Planning Laboratory, Boston, MA USA). Collimator size, gantry and collimator angles, and target prescription are given and a 3D isodose distribution is calculated. Measurements in heterogeneous media have validated the dose calculation accuracy. Routine quality assurance procedures have been developed, based on those employed for clinical radiation devices. The laboratory has facilities for animal surgery, housing, anesthesia and injection. Our SARRP has been outfitted with a tube for continuous isoflurane delivery during imaging and therapy procedures. To date, more than 1,000 preclinical procedures on live animals have been performed in the laboratory. Examples of current translational research applications include genetic dependence of radiation resistance, chemical radiation sensitizers, metabolic modifiers of radiation therapy efficacy, metallic nanoparticles for enhanced radiation therapy and imaging contrast, and dermatologic studies. We anticipate that by utilizing a research instrument that provides accurate and precise radiation delivery, the results will have high translational relevance. Funding for these projects has come from the United States Department of Defense, the National Institutes of Health, philanthropic foundations and internal sources. THE GEANT4-DNA PROJECT: OVERVIEW AND STATUS bastien Incerti. CNRS, Bordeaux University, France Se On behalf of the Geant4-DNA collaboration Understanding and prediction of adverse effects of ionizing radiation at the cellular and sub-cellular scale remains a challenge of today’s radiobiology research. In this context, a large experimental and modeling activity is currently taking place, aimed at better understanding the biological effects of ionizing radiation at the sub-cellular scale. The “Geant4-DNA” project was initiated by the European Space Agency [1]. It aims to develop an experimentally validated simulation platform for the modeling of early DNA damage induced by ionizing radiation, using modern computing tools and techniques. The platform is based on the general-purpose and opensource “Geant4” Monte Carlo simulation toolkit, and benefits from the toolkit’s full transparency and free availability [2]. This project proposes to develop specific functionalities in Geant4 allowing: 1) The modeling of elementary physical interactions between ionizing particles and biological media, during the so-called “physical” stage. 2) The modeling of the “physico-chemical and chemical” stages corresponding to the production, the diffusion and the chemical reactions occurring between chemical species. During the “physico-chemical” stage, the water molecules that have been excited and ionized during the physics stage may de-excite and dissociate into initial water radiolysis products. In the “chemical stage”, these chemical species diffuse in the medium surrounding the DNA. They may eventually react among themselves or with the DNA molecule. 3) The introduction of detailed biological target geometry models, where the two above stages are combined with a geometrical description of biological targets (such as chromatin segments, cell nuclei…). The Geant4DNA physics processes and models are fully integrated into the Geant4 toolkit and can be combined with Geant4 geometry modeling capabilities. In particular, it becomes possible to implement the geometry of biological targets with a high resolution at the sub-micrometer scale and fully track particles within these geometries using the Geant4-DNA physics processes. These geometries represent a significant improvement of the geometrical models used so far for dosimetry studies with the Geant4 toolkit at the biological cell scale. The current status of the project will be presented, as well as on-going developments. [1] S. Incerti et al., “Comparison of Geant4 very low energy cross section models with experimental data in water“ , Med. Phys. 37, 4692-4708 (2010) [2] S. Agostinelli et al., “Geant4-a simulation toolkit”, Nucl. Instrum. Methods. Phys. Res. A. 506, 250-303 (2003) FIELD-CYCLING MRI: A NEW IMAGING MODALITY? David J. Lurie, Lionel M. Broche, Gareth R. Davies, Nicholas Payne, Kerrin J. Pine, P. James Ross, Vasileios Zampetoulas. Aberdeen Biomedical Imaging Centre, University of Aberdeen, AB25 2ZD, Scotland, UK Much of the contrast in conventional MRI arises from differences in the NMR relaxation times, especially the spin-lattice relaxation time, T-1. It is also well known, from in vitro measurements on small tissue samples, that the variation of T1 with the strength of the applied magnetic field B0 (known as T-1-dispersion) is tissue-dependent, and that the shape of a tissue’s T-1-dispersion curve is altered in disease. However, T-1-dispersion is invisible to conventional MRI scanners, because each scanner can only operate at its own native magnetic field (e.g. 1.5 T, 3.0 T). The aim of our work is to exploit T-1-dispersion as a new MRI contrast mechanism, by building new types of MRI scanner which make use of Fast Field-Cycling (FFC) [1]. In FFC, the applied magnetic field is switched rapidly, while the sample (or patient) is inside the scanner. Thus, the nuclear magnetisation can be made to evolve at a range of magnetic field strengths, allowing the measurement of T-1-dispersion. The magnetic field is always switched to the same value prior to measurement of the NMR signals, so that the instrument’s radiofrequency system does not require retuning during the procedure. In our laboratory we have built two whole-body human sized FFC-MRI scanners, one of which makes use of a dual magnet in order to achieve field switching [1,2]. The detection field of 59 mT is provided by a vertical-field, permanent magnet. Inside its bore is located a resistive magnet which generates an opposing magnetic field; field-cycling is achieved by switching the current in the resistive magnet coil. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) We have begun to explore bio-medical applications of FFC-MRI, and early results have shown promise in the areas of thrombosis [3] and in osteoarthritis [4], where the technique seems to be an indicator of early diseaserelated changes. FFC-MRI is showing significant potential as a new variant of MRI. Please consult our web site (www.ffc-mri.org) for further information. [1] Lurie D.J., Aime S., et al., Comptes Rendus Physique 11, 136-148 (2010). [2] Lurie D.J., Foster M.A., et al., Phys.Med.Biol. 43, 1877-1886 (1998). [3] Broche L.M., Ismail S. et al., Magn.Reson.Med., 67, 1453e1457 (2012). [4] Broche L.M., Ashcroft G.P and Lurie D.J., Magn.Reson.Med. 68, 358-362 (2012). STANDARDS FOR MRT DOSIMETRY: THE METROMRT PROJECT Christophe Bobin b, Lena Johansson a, Leila Vere Smyth a, Marco D’Arienzo d, e, Marco Capogni d, Hans Joulaeizadeh c, g a . National Physical Laboratory NPL, Rabus f, Maurice Cox a, Jaroslav Solc Hampton Road, Teddington, Middlesex, TW11 0LW, UK; bCommissariat a l’Energie Atomique (CEA) Bt 476, Pt Courrier 142, CEA-Saclay, FR-91191 Gifsur-Yvette Cedex, France; cVSL, Dutch Metrology Institute, Thijsseweg 11, P.O. Box 654, NL-2629, JA Delft, Netherlands; dNational Institute of Ionizing Radiation Metrology, ENEA-INMRI, C.R. Casaccia, 00123 Rome, Italy; e Department of Human Anatomy, Histology, Forensic Medicine and Orthopedics, Sapienza University of Rome, Via Borelli 50, 00161 Rome, Italy; fPhysikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Bundesallee 100, D38116 Braunschweig, Germany; gCzech Metrology Institute (CMI), Inspectorate for Ionising Radiation, Radiova 1, CZ-102 00 Prague 10, Czech Republic The outcome for the patient of a molecular radiotherapy (MRT) procedure is determined by the radiation doses to the target tissue, and to critical normal tissue. It is well known that there is a wide variation between individual patients in these doses for the same administered radiopharmaceutical activity. Generally a patient is given the maximum activity that will be tolerated by the normal tissue, on the basis of average population statistics obtained during clinical trials, in the hope that an effective treatment dose will be received. This practice could clearly be optimised if the respective doses could be determined for each patient, and the prescription based on this knowledge. Many clinical research centres are developing dosimetry methods of increasing sophistication and accuracy, but to date these developments have very rarely had any effect on individual patient management. There are many reasons why this is so, but the obvious difference between MRT and other radiotherapy modalities is the absence of a standard, internationally endorsed dosimetry protocol. Development of a dosimetry protocol analogous to the IAEA TRS398 protocol (Absorbed dose determination in external beam radiotherapy, IAEA, Vienna, 2000) is difficult because of the complex nature of the steps in the MRT dosimetry process and dependence on the radiopharmaceutical being used. However, difficult does not imply impossible. An international project funded under the European Metrology Research Programme, MetroMRT (http://projects.npl.co.uk/metromrt/), is currently making progress in addressing this problem. The dosimetry process is analysed into its component parts: activity measurement, quantitative imaging (QI), activity-time integration, and dose calculation, from which a measurement chain is constructed, traceable to primary radiation standards of radioactivity and absorbed dose, with an evaluated uncertainty. The greatest difficulties are relating a standard QI calibration to a measurement on a patient, and accounting for the uncertainty resulting from the combination of different biokinetics, measurement time points, and integration methods in determining the uncertainty in the activity-time integration step. The MetroMRT project is in the final year of its 3-year duration. Details of the individual tasks and success achieved so far will be presented. RADIOPHARMACEUTICAL DOSIMETRY: FROM THE ANIMALS TO THE CLINICS s. UMR 1037 INSERM/UPS, Centre de Recherche en Manuel Bardie Canc erologie de Toulouse, Toulouse, France Nuclear Medicine dosimetry is not limited to the clinical scale (i.e. organ or tumor). 9 Preclinical studies, involving animal (or cell experiments) also can benefit from sound dosimetric studies. Small animal studies are required during the development of new radiopharmaceuticals (diagnostics or therapy). The general relevance of radiopharmaceutical dosimetry applies equally to preclinical and clinical studies. The MIRD scheme can most often be applied, even at the cellular level, as long as macrodosimetric parameters (mean absorbed doses) remain relevant. However, there are differences in the goals and in the methodology required to perform studies: For diagnostic tracers, during the development phase, small-animal radiopharmaceutical biodistribution and pharmacokinetics are frequently extrapolated to humans. However, absorbed dose delivered are usually not considered. For therapeutic nuclear medicine, absorbed doses are computed to document the biological effect observed (efficacy/therapy), and that can be performed in a preclinical context. As for clinical dosimetry, the issue of “model” versus “specific” dosimetry must be addressed. Cumulated activity is most often determined from organ/tissues activity measurements at different time points, from ex vivo counting. Absorbed dose calculation can be carried out with more or less sophisticated radiation transport codes.The table below presents the various possibilities offered to perform nuclear medicine dosimetry at the clinical scale. How that table can be extrapolated in a context of preclinical dosimetry will be discussed. Context Cumulated activity (Bq.s) S values (Gy.Bq-1.s-1) Absorbed dose (Gy) Diagnostics Therapy Therapy Model Specific Specific Model Model ± adjusted Specific Model-based Model-based ± realistic Specific Within multidisciplinary teams involved in radiopharmaceutical research, physicists should not only focus on the clinical aspects but also participate to preclinical studies. ACQUISITION PROTOCOLS FOR 18F-FDG WHOLE BODY OPTIMIZING SCAN DURATION VERSUS ADMINISTERED DOSE PET/CT: Marco Brambilla. Medical Physics Department, University Hospital Of Novara, Novara, Italy Aim: The aim of this presentation is to describe the way in which contrastto-noise ratio (CNR)) behave when varying acquisition parameters (such as emission scan duration (ESD) or activity at the start of acquisition (Aacq)) that in clinical practice can be selected by the user, or object properties (such as target dimensions, target-to-background (T/B) ratio and activity outside the field of view) which depends uniquely on the intrinsic characteristics of the object being imaged. Methods and Results: In the first experiment CNR was studied as a function of ESD and Aacq for different target sizes and T/B ratios using a multivariate approach in a wide range of conditions approaching the ones that can be encountered in clinical practice. Sequential imaging was performed to acquire PET images with varying background activity concentrations of about 12, 9, 6.4, 5.3 and 3.1 kBq/mL. The ESD was set to 1, 2, 3, and 4 min/bed. The ESD resulted as the most significant predictor of CNR variance, followed by T/B ratio and the cross sectional area of the given sphere. Only last comes Aacq with a weight halved with respect to ESD. Thus, raising ESD seems to be much more effective than raising Aacq in order to obtain higher CNR. In the second experiment a scatter phantom was positioned at the end of the modified IEC phantom to simulate an activity that extends beyond the scanner. The modified IEC phantom was filled with 18F (11 kBq/mL) and the spherical targets had a target-to-background ratio of 10. PET images were acquired with background activity concentrations into the FOV (Ac,bkg) about 11, 9.2, 6.6, 5.2 and 3.5 kBq/mL. ESD was set to 1, 2, 3, and 4 min. The tube inside the scatter phantom was filled with activities to provide an Ac,out in the whole scatter phantom of zero, half, unity, twofold and fourfold the one of the modified IEC phantom. CNR diminishes significantly with increasing outside FOV activity, in the range explored. ESD and Ac,out have a similar weight in accounting for CNR variance. A recovery of CNR loss due to an elevated Ac,out activity seems feasible by modulating the ESD in individual bed positions according to the Ac,out. 10 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Conclusions: The European Association of Nuclear Medicine procedure guidelines for whole-body FDG-PET scanning still prescribe a dose proportional to the patient’s body mass. However, clinical practice and experimental evidences show that using an FDG dose proportional to body mass does not overcome size-related degradation of the image quality and different algorithms should be devised instead. NEW ANALYTICAL ALGORITHMS FOR PET AND SPECT George Kastis. Academy of Athens, Medical & Biological Research Foundation (IIBEAA), Athens, Greece Positron emission tomography (PET) and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) are the most important nuclear medicine imaging modalities that measure the in vivo distribution of imaging agents labeled with emitting radionuclides. Image reconstruction is an essential component of both modalities, allowing tomographic images to be obtained from a set of two-dimensional of three-dimensional projection data. The existing image reconstruction methods can be classified into two main categories: analytical methods and iterative (or statistical) methods. Filtered backprojection (FBP) is the predominant analytic reconstruction method. Its mathematical formulation is based on the inversion of the Radon transform through the central slice theorem. The main advantages of FBP are speed and simplicity. However, in FBP it is difficult to incorporate complex physical phenomena such as attenuation and scatter. The predominant iterative algorithms are the maximum-likelihood expectationmaximization (MLEM) algorithm and its accelerated successor the ordered-subsets expectation-maximization (OSEM) algorithm. The main advantage of the iterative algorithms is the ability to model several aspects of the imaging system, including elements of the noise characteristics, sinogram blurring due to detector crystal penetration, depth of interaction, photon scatter, and attenuation in the body. As a consequence, iterative methods can improve image quality and achieve considerable resolution recovery. However, iterative algorithms require more computing time and power. Furthermore, there is the challenge of choosing the right number of subsets and iterations which leads to a tradeoff between noise and bias. Although iterative methods are now in widespread use in clinical and preclinical systems, recent studies have concluded that analytical methods could still have advantages over analytic methods in specific applications. For example, a recent dynamic brain PET study by Reilhac et al. concluded that analytical methods are more robust to low count data than iterative methods. In another study by Conti et al., it was demonstrated that TOF FBP has improved performance over TOF OSEM. In this presentation we will present recent results from the spline reconstruction technique (SRT), a new analytic, two-dimensional reconstruction algorithm based on cubic splines. We will present the mathematical formulation of the algorithm and comparisons with FBP and OSEM, using simulated data from a clinical PET system, as well as real data obtained from clinical and preclinical PET scanners. Furthermore, we will present preliminary results from IART (inverse attenuated Radon transform), an analytic reconstruction technique based on cubic splines that inverts the attenuated Radon transform and is better suited for SPECT where attenuation correction is needed. AN OVERVIEW OF THE CONCERT PROJECT John Damilakis. Professor of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Greece The overall aim of the CONCERT (Conceptus Radiation Doses and Risks from Imaging with Ionizing Radiation) project is to perform original research from which new findings, innovations and practical guidelines for optimal clinical management of pregnant patients needing radiologic procedures will result. An additional objective is to generate dose data that may be used for the implementation of a radiation protection program designed for pregnant employees working in imaging departments, interventional laboratories and electrophysiological suites. The activities of the project focus on the following main tasks: a) Conduction of a nation-wide study (survey) on current practice patterns in imaging of pregnant patients and on policies for screening women of childbearing age for pregnancy before imaging with ionizing radiation b) Development of methods for estimation of conceptus dose from imaging examinations performed on the mother c) Development of a method for (a) anticipation of conceptus dose from occupational exposure of pregnant staff during fluoroscopicallyguided procedures and (b) estimation of maximum workload allowed for each month of gestation period following pregnancy declaration d) Development of a software expert system that will allow a) calculation of conceptus radiation dose and risk associated with imaging examinations performed on the expectant mother and (b) anticipation of conceptus dose and determination of the maximum workload for the pregnant employee who participates in fluoroscopically-guided interventional procedures e) Organization of a workshop on pregnancy and radiation protection to discuss the findings of the survey and disseminate the research results. f) Development of guidance document on a) the management of pregnant patients who need radiologic examinations, b) the management of pregnant employees exposed to considerable levels of occupational radiation and c) policies for screening women of childbearing age for pregnancy before imaging procedures The project started in September 2012 and ends in September 2015. CONCERT is supported by the Greek Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs, General Secretariat for Research and Technology, Operational Program 'Education and Lifelong Learning', ARISTIA. HOW TO ESTIMATE CONCEPTUS RADIATION DOSE FROM RADIOGRAPHIC, FLUOROSCOPIC AND FLUOROSCOPICALLY GUIDED INTERVENTIONAL PROCEDURES? (REVIEW COURSE TALK FOR THE CONCERT PROJECT) G. Solomou, J. Stratakis, J. Damilakis. Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, PO Box 2208, University of Crete, Iraklion 71003, Crete, Greece Radiologic evaluation may be needed during pregnancy to assess common causes of acute abdominal or thoracic pain. Accidental irradiation of pregnant women from radiologic examinations may occur during the early postconception weeks. In each case, there has been a growing concern about radiation exposure which invokes a great anxiety for the pregnant patient as well as the treating doctor and may probably lead to the unnecessary termination of pregnancy. However, conceptus doses below 100 mGy should not be considered a reason for termination. While such a high-level exposure rarely occurs during a single medical diagnostic procedure, the estimation of conceptus radiation dose is essential to determine radiogenic risks to the unborn child and inform the oncoming mother. Several methods have been developed to estimate conceptus radiation dose in pregnant woman who undergo radiographic, fluoroscopic and fluoroscopically guided interventional procedures. These methods use thermoluminescence dosimeters along with anthropomorphic phantoms, which represent pregnant patients at various gestational stages. Computational methods, which are based on the Monte Carlo transportation code as well as mathematical phantoms have also been applied to estimate conceptus radiation dose in radiologic procedures. An advantage of the latter methods is that they may take into account the somatometric characteristic of the pregnant patients, such as body size, perimeter of the abdomen and conceptus location. A literature review on the methodologies applied to estimate conceptus radiation dose in pregnant patient who undergo diagnostic radiological procedures is presented. HOW TO ESTIMATE CONCEPTUS DOSE FROM CT EXAMINATIONS Kostas Perisinakis. Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, PO Box 2208, University of Crete, Iraklion 71003, Crete, Greece The utilization of computed tomography (CT) in pregnant patients has increased in recent years, following the same trend observed for nonpregnant patients. In case of a pregnant patient subjected to CT exposure, apart from the risk for carcinogenesis to the expecting mother, there is also concern about the teratogenic and carcinogenic effects of ionizing Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) radiation to the developing conceptus. To estimate the radiogenic risks for an exposed conceptus to be used in risk benefit analysis for a certain CT examination, the accurate determination of absorbed dose to the conceptus is prerequisite. CT exposures of pregnant patients may be categorized in three types corresponding to conceptus a) entirely excluded, b) partially included and c) entirely included in the primarily exposed body region. This categorization is associated with the size of conceptus at the time of exposure. As gestation progresses, conceptus size is increased and therefore, partial conceptus exposures may occur with increased possibility. Several methods have been proposed in literature for the determination of conceptus dose from CT exposures such as a) the use of the computed tomography CT dose index (CTDI), b) the IMPACT CT Patient Dosimetry Calculator, c) formulas and relevant data provided in the literature, d) Monte Carlo simulation with standard anthropomorphic mathematical phantoms simulating pregnant patients at different gestational stages and e) the IMPACT MC dosimetry tool. Some methods are limited to the 1st trimester of pregnancy while others may be used in all gestational stages. Some methods may be used only in case of entire or partial direct exposure of conceptus while others may be also used in case conceptus is not primarily exposed. Applicability of the above methods in association with z-overscanning effect and the use of adaptive section collimation, the use of automatic exposure control and the use of iterative reconstruction algorithms will also be discussed. The pros and cons of the above methods regarding accuracy, applicability, required equipment and cost will be discussed and guidelines will be provided regarding the appropriate use of available methods to estimate conceptus dose in case of intentional or inadvertent CT exposure of a pregnant patient. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE OF PREGNANT PERSONNEL (REVIEW COURSE TALK FOR THE CONCERT PROJECT) John Stratakis PhD, Kostas Perisinakis PhD, Georgia Solomou MSc, John Damilakis PhD *. Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, PO Box 2208, University of Crete, Iraklion 71003, Crete, Greece Development of interventional radiology (IR) has been accompanied by a significant concern for the safety of the staff involved in interventional procedures, since patient and staff doses in the IR laboratory may be increased because of case difficulty, patient condition, and operator’s experience. Many researchers have pointed out issues of interest within the optimization of radiation protection that included assessment of dose and risks of interventional laboratory personnel focused mainly on radiation protection on cardiological, orthopedic and angiographic procedures. Information about conceptus occupational exposure during IR procedures still remains limited. An anthropomorphic phantom was exposed at projections commonly used in IR procedures. An extended range of combinations of tube voltage and beam filtration were used. For the measurement of scattered air-kerma, the area relative to the sides of the fluoroscopy table occupied by IR personnel during a procedure was divided into a 0.25 m grid. Dose-areaproduct (DAP) rate normalized air-kerma values were calculated at all points of the grid. Occupational abdominal surface doses and gestationage specific conceptus doses were derived using the projection specific air kerma values for the senior inter, resident, and other present medical/ nursing staff. The effect of radio-protective gear to dosimetric data was examined. Normalized to DAP rate dosimetric iso-curves produced will assist operators to visualize the spatial distribution of abdominal doses and lower their abdominal exposure, taking shielding and positioning precautions. Normalized data are technique- and instrumentation-independent. Normalized abdominal exposure and conceptus dose data may help evaluated working conditions in IR laboratory and will enable estimation of work restrictions such as permissible workloads and radiogenic risks delivered to medical personnel. Additionally, anticipation of conceptus dose can be derived for any gestational stage for pregnant staff carrying ouy IR procedures. This method may assist the evaluation of the working 11 conditions following the declaration of pregnancy of medical staff involved in diagnostic and therapeutic IR procedures. FINAL RESULTS OF THE EUROPEAN 'GUIDELINES ON MPE' PROJECT Carmel J. Caruana. Medical Physics Department, University of Malta; EFOMP representative on the 'Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert' project; Past Chair, EFOMP Education and Training Committee The aim of the European Commission project 'Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert' (TREN/09/NUCL/SI2.549828) has been to provide for improved implementation of the provisions relating to the Medical Physics Expert (MPE) of Council Directive 97/43/EURATOM (Medical Exposures Directive, MED) and the more recent 2013/59/EURATOM of 5 December 2013 laying down basic safety standards for protection against the dangers arising from exposure to ionising radiation (BSS). In this way, the results of the project support the European Commission in its actions relating to the justification and optimisation of medical exposures. The final results of the project have been an elaboration of the role of the MPE including an agreed mission statement and detailed list of key activities, agreed qualification and curriculum frameworks for the MPE in Europe, recommendations for recognition of the MPE and minimum MPE staffing Levels. It is expected that the project will lead to improved harmonisation of the profession in Europe. This presentation will summarise the final results. EUTEMPE-RX: A NEW EC SUPPORTED COURSE FOR MEDICAL PHYSICS EXPERTS IN RADIOLOGY H. Bosmans a, K. Bliznakova b, R. Padovani c, S. Christofides d, N. Van Peteghem a, Virginia Tsapaki e, C.J. Caruana f. aDepartment of imaging and pathology, University of Leuven, Belgium; bTechnical University of Varna, Bulgaria; cUniversity Hospital S. Maria della Misericordia of Udine, Italy; d Medical Physics Department, Nicosia General Hospital, Cyprus; e Konstantopoulio General Hospital, Greece; fMedical Physics Department, University of Malta, Malta The main responsibility of the medical physics expert (MPE) is to ensure the optimal use of ionizing radiation in healthcare. To fulfill this responsibility it is essential that these healthcare professionals are trained to the highest level, defined as European Qualifications Framework for Lifelong Learning (EQF) level 8 by the European Commission’s ‘Guidelines for the MPE’ [1]. The main objective of the EUTEMPE-RX project is to provide a model training scheme that allows the medical physicist in diagnostic and interventional radiology (D&IR) to reach this high level. A European network of partners was brought together in an FP7 EC project to ensure sufficient expertise in all aspects of the subject and to create a harmonized course programme. Targeted participants are medical physicists in D&IR in hospitals, engineers and scientists in medical device industry and regulatory authorities. 12 course modules are being developed at EQF level 8, with radiation safety and diagnostic effectiveness being prevalent subjects. The course design will combine modern online teaching methods (an e-learning platform) with more classical face-toface teaching using a blended learning approach. This is done to limit the time away from home for course participants, allowing young parents and busy workers to follow the course modules. A business plan is under development to ensure the continued existence of the EUTEMPE-RX project. The course module topics are: (1) Development of the profession and the challenges of the MPE; (2) Radiation biophysics and radiobiology; (3) Introduction to Monte Carlo simulation; (4) Fundamental physics of Xrays; (5) Anthropomorphic phantoms; (6) The development of advanced QA protocols; (7) Optimization of X-ray imaging; (8) Role of the medical physicist in CT; (9) Achieving quality in mammography; (10) High dose Xray procedures in interventional radiology and cardiology; (11) Radiation dose management of pregnant patients; (12) Personnel dosimetry. References: [1] Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert. European Commission. Radiation Protection 174, (2014) 12 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) THE ‘EUROPEAN DIAGNOSTIC REFERENCE LEVELS FOR PAEDIATRIC IMAGING’ PROJECT John Damilakis. Professor of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Greece Despite a large number of studies available from European countries, the DRLs for paediatric patients are only available for some common radiological examinations. There is a need to consolidate what is available and to provide guidance on what actions are needed in using Diagnostic Reference Levels (DRLs) to further enhance radiation protection of children. The ‘European DRLs for Paediatric Imaging’ project is aimed to attend to this situation. The professional organisations involved include ESR as coordinator as well as EFOMP, EFRS, and ESPR, covering the key European stakeholders and professional groups with relevance to radiation protection of paediatric patients. The project is divided into 4 Work Packages (WPs); each work package covers specific tasks contributing to the common objective of enhancement of radiation protection of paediatric patients through the concept of DRLs. WP0, chaired by the coordinator of the project, is responsible for the management and general coordination of the project. WP1 is responsible for assessing and agreeing on a methodology for establishing and using DRLs for paediatric imaging, and for producing European guidelines including data provided by WP 2. WP2 is responsible for updating and extending the existing European DRLs to cover more procedures and a wider patient age/weight range. WP 3 chaired by the scientific coordinator will organize the European workshop in Lisbon, Portugal from October 15th to October 17th 2015 to discuss the findings of the studies conducted under the project and to subject the draft European Guidelines to critical review and discussion. SYNERGY BETWEEN NUCLEAR RESEARCH, INNOVATION AND EDUCATION IN EURATOM PROGRAMMES, WITH EMPHASIS ON SAFETY CULTURE Georges Van Goethem. European Commission, DG Research and Innovation, Dir Energy - G.4 / Fission Energy, B-1049 Brussels, Belgium In a rapidly changing multicultural world full of political and economic uncertainties, research, innovation and education (RIE), in particular, in nuclear fission and radiation protection are faced with a number of scientific-technological and socio-political challenges. In the European Union (EU), these challenges are, for example, breakthrough technological developments of interdisciplinary type and enhanced public engagement in nuclear matters. The aim is to continuously improve applications of nuclear fission energy and ionising radiation in the medical and industrial fields for the benefit of all people. In the EU, the recent “Council Directive 2013/59/Euratom laying down basic safety standards for protection against the dangers arising from exposure to ionising radiation” has a new Chapter IV “Requirements for Radiation Protection Education, Training and Information” requiring Member States to have systems in place for the education, training and recognition of specific experts (in particular, “Medical physics experts” Article 83). For power generation or for medical applications, experts with highly qualified nuclear and radiation safety culture competences will be needed over a long time period, in particular, to deal with radiation protection issues in modern diagnosis and treatment. Safety culture is usually defined as “an organisation’s values and behaviours - modelled by its leaders and internalised by its members - that serve to make nuclear safety the overriding priority.” In this context, the main stakeholders of Euratom RIE programmes have developed a common approach regarding needs, vision and implementation instruments. Focussing on knowledge creation and competence building, their common approach can be summarized as follows: 1 e Analysis of needs: e.g. what kind of knowledge, skills and competences (KSC) should be taught in order to continuously improve technical, human and organisational aspects ? 2 e Convergence towards a common vision: e.g. towards a new type of governance for RIE in the EU, integrating expert, policy and public knowledge to support decision making processes 3 e Development of instruments: e.g. synergy of national and Euratom RIE programmes aiming at preparing a new generation of experts in a global economy (EU and beyond). Making lifelong learning and cross-border mobility a reality is an important objective of the Education, Youth and Culture policy of the EU (e.g. “European Credit system for Vocational Education and Training” /ECVET/). Lessons will be drawn from the preliminary application of ECVET tools and methodology, such as the description of qualifications in terms of “units of learning outcomes” related to KSC, in Euratom projects. INVOLVEMENT OF AAPM IN EUROPE Gene Lief. White Plains Hospital, Radiation/Oncology Department, New York, USA With increased globalization of Medical Physics profession, American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) increases international activity. Collaboration with EFOMP is one of the main priorities. Memorandum of Understanding between two societies proposed in 2013 paves the way for future collaboration. The first step in the collaboration will establish free flow of information between EFOMP and AAPM. The websites of the two organisations will have links cross-referencing each other. Another aspect of the collaboration will be to organize joint sessions at each other’s society meetings. The two societies believe that it would be beneficial to arrange joint sessions at EFOMP and AAPM Annual meetings where practicable. Since both societies have different Working Groups operating in various fields of Medical Physics, a third important aspect of collaboration will include interaction between these Working Groups. Implementing those goals, we started building AAPM website with links to different international organizations. Joint EFOMP-AAPM sessions are being organized. International Educational Activities Committee of AAPM organizes courses in countries that would mostly benefit from such activities. The last 3 courses in Europe took place in Prague in 2008, Patras in 2011, and Tallinn in 2014. A group of AAPM specialists in brachytherapy are actively collaborating with European brachy GYN group EMBRACE from Vienna. In conclusion, future globalization of Medical Physics presents new opportunities of mutually beneficial transatlantic cooperation. DEVELOPING INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION VIA THE WEB George C. Kagadis PhD, FAAPM. Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, GR 26504, Greece Because of widespread availability of Information Technologies and Internet, a lot of scientists are nowadays using them for education and research purposes as well as collaboration in general. Accompanying this growth, the discipline of medical physics has evolved and advanced. The Internet provides us with the means of accessing electronic information and resources at a click of a mouse. However, caution should be exercised since the majority of the web resources are not peer-reviewed. Nonetheless, few organizations are developing web sites that provide adequately reviewed material that can help current and future medical physicists to advance communication in our science. Internet is not just a publishing board with announcements and articles in various websites, but it has furthermore established the appropriate infrastructure for society transformation in a digital community, where information is delivered anywhere from anyone. Social media and blogs are taking the place of the conventional fora for idea and knowledge exchange among scientists. The high availability of high bandwidth Internet connection worldwide has reformed the type of information delivered, since we can now share videos or large files and have a reliable video-based conversation with colleagues in the other side of the world. The ever-advancing technology of small and portable devices like tablets and smartphones has changed the way we access information and communicate. We can now easily read and answer our e-mails, watch a video or conduct a video-call from our mobile device in a fast and reliable manner. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 13 ICRP COMMITTEE 3 OVERVIEW (PROTECTION IN MEDICINE) Open Discussion References [1] European Commission Radiation Protection Report No. 174, “Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert”, in publication [2] Eudaldo, T., Olsen, K. “The present status of Medical Physics Education and Training in Europe: An EFOMP survey”, Physica Medica (2008) 24, 3 - 20 [3] EFOMP PS12, “The present status of Medical Physics Education and Training in Europe. New perspectives and EFOMP recommendations”, Physica Medica (2010) 26, 1 - 5 ~ o a, D.L. Miller b, M. Rehani c. aICRP Committee 3. Chairman; bICRP E. Van Committee 3. Vice-Chairman; cICRP Committee 3 IAEA QUALITY AUDITS IN RADIOTHERAPY The high penetration of cloud computing technology leads to a situation where all applications will abandon their traditional operation and move to the cloud, where they can be delivered as services. In medical physics science, as the technology continuously breaks the ethical and security barriers, sharing of medical imaging data between experts world-wide tends to become a routine task. Examples of current accomplishments of international communication via the web will be presented. Committee 3 of ICRP is concerned with protection of persons and unborn children when ionising radiation is used for medical diagnosis, therapy, or biomedical research. According to the 2011-2017 Strategic Plan, Committee 3 develops recommendations and guidance for protection of patients, staff, and the public against radiation exposure in medicine. This paper presents an overview of the work of the Committee in recent years and current work in progress. The ICRP reports dealing with radiological protection (RP) in medicine in the last 10 years cover topics on: education and training in RP; preventing accidental exposures in radiation therapy; doses to patients from radiopharmaceuticals; radiation safety aspects of brachytherapy; release of patients after therapy with unsealed radionuclides; and managing radiation dose in interventional radiology, digital radiology, computed tomography, paediatrics, cardiology and other medical specialties. Work in progress deals with RP in Ion Beam Therapy, Occupational Protection in Brachytherapy, Justification in Imaging, RP in Cone Beam CT, Doses to Patients and Staff from Radiopharmaceuticals (update), Occupational Protection in Interventional Radiology, and Diagnostic Reference Levels for Diagnostic and Interventional Imaging. The Committee is also involved in preparation of a document on effective dose (and its use medicine). SYMPOSIUM: EUROPEAN STANDARD ON MEDICAL PHYSICS SERVICES Stelios Christofides a, Derek Pearson b, Gerard Colenbrander c, Luca Moro d. aMedical Physics Department, Nicosia General Hospital, Nicosia, Cyprus; bProfessional Adviser to the Chief Scientific Officer, NHS England. U.K.; cDepartment of Medical Physics, Spaarnehospital, Hoofddorp, The Netherlands; dMedical Physics Department, Salvatore Maugeri Foundation, Pavia, Italy One of the initiatives of the EFOMP at the European Level is the recognition of Medical Physics as a profession by the European Union. As is evident from the surveys carried out under the EC sponsored project ‘Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert’ [1] and an earlier survey by EFOMP [2, 3] the education and training of Medical Physicists and Medical Physicists at Expert level is not harmonised across the European Union and therefore the services they provide. This hinders the recognition of Medical Physics as a profession by the European Union and restricts the free movement of Medical Physicists and Medical Physics Experts from one European Union Member State to another. For the above reasons EFOMP has decided to initiate the development of a Europe en de Normalisation) standard for “Medical Physics CEN (Comite Services” in an effort to assist in the harmonisation of the Medical Physics services provision across Europe. One aspect of this is the harmonisation of the education, training and competence of Medical Physicists, Medical Physics Experts and Technologists in the various fields of Medical Physics for which they provide a service. The EFOMP Council approved the establishment of a Working Group to pursue this project at its meeting in Brighton, UK in September 2013. The purpose of the Symposium is to present the work progress of this working group and seek feedback from the workshop participants. The symposium consists of the following short presentations that will be followed by open discussion: Introduction (Stelios Christofides) CEN Standardisation Procedure (Luca Moro) Survey results (Gerard Colenbrander) Proposed Structure of Standard (Derek Pearson) J. Izewska, P. Bera, G. Azangwe, P. Grochowska, A. Meghzifene. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria Quality audits in radiotherapy have proven to be a useful tool for quality assessment and practice improvement in radiotherapy centres. The IAEA/ WHO TLD postal dose audits have been in operation since 1969 and to-date it checked the calibration of 10500 radiotherapy beams in 2050 centres in 130 countries. Several discrepancies in radiotherapy dosimetry have been discovered and rectified. Throughout the time, radiotherapy centres improved their ability to deliver the dose accurately. The percentage of acceptable TLD results has increased from 50% in early years to 95% at present. However, there are still issues with basic clinical dosimetry that need to be addressed. Another dosimetry audit programme developed by the IAEA uses the endto-end approach, i.e. it assesses the entire workflow for conformal radiotherapy techniques, from patient data acquisition and computerized treatment planning to dose delivery. It is based on a semi-anthropomorphic phantom circulated among radiotherapy centres. This programme was implemented in Europe and it contributed to improvements in clinical dosimetry and treatment planning in some participating centres. The IAEA’s comprehensive clinical audits by the Quality Assurance Team for Radiation Oncology (QUATRO) assess overall practices in radiotherapy centres including the infrastructure, patient and equipment procedures, quality assurance programmes, radiation protection, staffing levels and professional training of the local radiotherapy staff. To-date QUATRO has conducted over 70 audits on request, in radiotherapy centres of Central and Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Some centres have been acknowledged for the adequate level of practices; in other centres auditors identified gaps and documented areas for improvement. Overall, QUATRO audits have contributed to improvements at centres, but also have identified common issues that have been addressed internationally. QUATRO procedures, in addition, have been prepared for the resolution of suspected or actual dose misadministrations in radiotherapy, including the follow-up of inconsistent results detected by the IAEA/WHO TLD postal dose audits. This way radiotherapy centres can receive help at an early stage in the problem-solving process, focusing on prevention of incidents or accidents in radiotherapy. IAEA SPONSORED TREATMENT PLANNING SYSTEM AUDITS IN EUROPE E. Gershkevitsh a, C. Pesznyak b, B. Petrovic c, J. Grezdo d, K. Chelminski e, M.C. Lopes f, J. Izewska g. a North Estonia Medical Centre, Tallinn, Estonia; b National Institute of Oncology, Budapest, Hungary; c Institute of Oncology Vojvodina, Sremska Kamenica, Serbia; d St. Elizabeth Institute of Oncology, Bratislava, Slovakia; e M. Skłodowska-Curie Memorial Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology, Warsaw, Poland; f Portuguese Institute of Oncology, Coimbra, Portugal; 7 International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria Background and purpose: One of the newer audit modalities operated by the IAEA involves audits of treatment planning systems (TPS) in radiotherapy. The main focus of the audit is the dosimetry verification of the delivery of a radiation treatment plan for 3D conformal radiotherapy using high energy photon beams. Material and methods: The TPS audit reviews the dosimetry, treatment planning and radiotherapy delivery processes using the ‘end-to-end’ approach, i.e. following the pathway similar to that of the patient, through imaging, treatment planning and dose delivery. The audit is implemented 14 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) at the national level with IAEA assistance. The national counterparts conduct the TPS audit at local radiotherapy centres through on-site visits. TPS calculated doses are compared with ion chamber measurements performed in an anthropomorphic phantom for eight test cases per algorithm/beam. The set of pre-defined agreement criteria is used to analyze the performance of TPSs. Results: TPS audit was carried out in sixty radiotherapy centers in eight European countries e Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Serbia, Slovakia, Poland and Portugal. In total, 190 data sets (combination of algorithm and beam quality) have been collected and reviewed. Dosimetry problems requiring interventions were discovered in about 10 % of datasets. In addition, suboptimal beam modelling in TPSs was discovered in a number of cases. Conclusions: The TPS audit project using the IAEA methodology has verified the treatment planning system calculations for 3D conformal radiotherapy in a group of radiotherapy centres in Europe. It contributed to achieving better understanding of the performance of TPSs and helped to resolve issues related to imaging, dosimetry and treatment planning. DOSIMETRY AUDITS IN RADIOTHERAPY IN THE CZECH REPUBLIC Irena Koniarova, Daniela Ekendahl, Ivana Horakova, Michaela Kapucianova, Vladimir Dufek. National Radiation Protection Institute, Prague, Czech Republic Background: The independent audits in radiotherapy are carried out by the National Radiation Protection Institute as a part of the regulatory authority activity since 1996. The system includes TLD postal audits (external radiotherapy) and on-site audits (external radiotherapy and brachytherapy). TLD audit can be performed in several versions differing in the scope and focus of dose measurements. Basic TLD audit consists in beam calibration check. Each clinically used beam must undergo it at least once per two years. During 1997 e 2013, a total of 1435 beams have been thus controlled. Advanced versions of TLD audit focused on more complex conditions of irradiation (non-reference geometries, MLC fields, small IMRT fields, inhomogeneities) have been performed in the case of a request or research studies. On-site audit is performed after the commissioning of each unit. The absorbed dose to water (or RAKR for brachytherapy), beam quality, output and wedge factors, PDD, MLC positioning, MLC transmission, and dosimetric leaf gap (where applicable) are controlled. Mechanical parameters (isocenter stability, radiation field size, table parameters, etc.) are evaluated as well. A number of 535 megavoltage photon and electron external beams, 103 kilovoltage external beams, and 32 brachytherapy sources have been controlled since 1996. 2 proton beams were checked in 2013. Checks of non-dosimetric parameters and imaging functions of TPS with QUASAR phantoms can be performed on request. In addition, 19 departments (23 treatment plans) have been checked using a special pelvic phantom in end-to-end audit for IMRT and IMAT prostate treatment in 2013. Delivered doses to PTV and rectum were measured with ionisation chambers in 3 planes. Planar dose distribution has been verified with EBT2 film. Retrospectively, it was possible to make DVHs analysis and compare all IMRT plans for the pelvic phantom showing common planning practice in the Czech Republic for photon IMRT and proton radiotherapy. Conclusion: The audits revealed several significant errors that might potentially lead to an accident. All results can be analysed retrospectively, showing trends related to chosen indicators. DOSIMETRY AUDITS IN RADIOTHERAPY IN GREECE C.J. Hourdakis, A. Boziari, V. Kamenopoulou. Greek Atomic Energy Commission Background: Greek Atomic Energy Commission (EEAE) has been running dosimetry audits by means of on-site visits in all Greek radiotherapy (RT) and brachytherapy (BT) centers, since 2002. Two rounds (2002-2006 and 2006-2011) have been completed, the 3rd being in progress. Materials and Methods: Dosimetry measurements and QC tests were performed at RT and BT systems (linacs, 60Co and 192Ir HDR) using EEAE’s phantoms and equipment. (a) The systems’ performance was evaluated through mechanical and radiation tests. (b) Relative (TPR20,10, R50 , PDD) and absolute dosimetry (absorbed dose to water) was performed at photon and electron beams according to IAEA-TRS-398 protocol. For BT beams, the reference air kerma rate was determined. The difference, dr, of the values measured by EEAE, DM, to the stated by RT center, DS , was calculated (dr¼DM/DS-1). (c) MU calculations (by TPS or manually) were assessed at various irradiation conditions (depth, fields, wedges, etc), by comparing DM (at same irradiation conditions and MU) to Ds for the same MU. (d) The overall RT procedure (CT, simulation, planning, verification, irradiation) was assessed qualitatively and quantitatively, using a solid water phantom, with inhomogeneities and tissue deficits, irradiated at multiple photon beams. The measured dose was compared to the TPS stated dose. Results: More than 90% of the linacs and less than 80% of 60Co showed satisfactory mechanical performance. Relative dosimetry for photons and electrons was accurate in most cases (>95%). Photons beam absolute dosimetry showed that in 95% of beams dr<3%. For electrons, 80% of the beams exhibited dr<3%. All BT beams showed dr<3%. In comparing TPS output data, 86% of the beams showed dr<3%, and 3% of the beams dr>5%. Dosimetry assessment of the overall RT procedure, showed that in 90% cases dr<5%, and in 5% cases dr>7%. Improvement of dosimetry accuracy between the rounds was observed. Discussion: Dosimetry audits contributed significantly to the dosimetry accuracy and homogeneity improvement, in the country. On site visits gave the opportunity to resolve all discrepancies and enhance knowledge dissemination. DOSIMETRY AUDITS IN RADIOTHERAPY IN POLAND ski, J. Rostkowska. Department of Medical Physics, W. Bulski, K. Chełmin Maria Sklodowska-Curie Memorial Cancer Centre and Institute of Oncology, Warsaw Purpose: The Secondary Standard Dosimetry Laboratory (SSDL) of the Medical Physics Department of the Centre of Oncology in Warsaw has become a member of the IAEA/WHO international network of such laboratories in 1988. The SSDL has been carrying-out the external postal TLD audits since 1991. In the presentation the scope of dosimetry audits in Poland is overviewed. Materials and methods: TLD runs for on axis measurements in nonreference conditions were performed in Co-60, X-ray and electron beams. In recent years the audits were extended to off-axis measurements (symmetric and asymmetric fields) and to MLC shaped irregular fields. A heterogeneous cubic-shaped phantom developed in the frame of IAEA Coordinated Research Project was used for the audits. The phantom consists of frame made of polystyrene and the bone or lung inhomogeneity slabs. Another phantom, an anthropomorphic CIRS 002LFC thorax phantom, was used for dosimetry checks according to the IAEA-TECDOC-1583 report. Results: The results of the TLD postal audit in non-reference conditions for on axis measurements are in the majority o cases within the ±3.5% tolerance limit which is usually used for reference conditions. Nine Polish radiotherapy centers (of total 30) were audited with the use of the IAEA cubic phantom. Generally most of the results from TLD and ionizing chamber were within ±5% tolerance. Seven radiotherapy centers in Poland have been audited with the CIRS phantom so far. Eight cases with different beam geometry and accessories representing different complexity of the plan were performed on six different TPS. All algorithm/beam datasets showed passing-rate higher than 50% of predefined agreement criteria. Conclusions: Over the last 20 years the postal TLD audits fulfilled their role and remain the primary and well established dosimetric audit method. The measurements allow to the detect limitations of TPS calculation algorithms. The audits performed with the use of the IAEA heterogeneous phantom and with the CIRS phantom seem to be an effective tool for detecting errors in radiotherapy procedures. EUROPEAN DIAGNOSTIC REFERENCE LEVELS IN PAEDIATRIC IMAGING Stephen Evans. Head of Medical Physics, Northampton General Hospital, UK Children are at a much higher risk compared to adults from developing cancer from exposure to the same quantity of ionising radiations. For many radiodiagnostic examinations, significant variations in the levels of Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) radiation doses received by children undergoing the same examinations are seen between radiology departments. A way of ensuring no child receives more dose than is necessary for their medical exposure to ionising radiation is to establish appropriate levels of diagnostic doses that should be achieved (or not exceeded) by all radiology departments for every radiodiagnostic examination. These are noted as diagnostic reference levels (DRLs). DRLs for adult patients are commonly based on the dose values for the average sized adult or phantom. The derivation of DRLs for paediatric patients is more complex due to the wide variation in patient size. In 1996, paediatric DRLs for plain radiography were provided (“European Guidelines on Quality Criteria for Diagnostic Radiographic Images in Paediatrics” EUR 16261, European Commission, 1996) using the entrance-surface-dose for standard five-year old children as the reference dose for all paediatric patients. In 1997 it became a requirement in European Member States that DRLs for radiodiagnostic examinations are promoted and appropriate practical techniques used - particularly for the medical exposure of children (Council Directive 97/43/EURATOM, Article 4.2.a and Article 9). It has long been recognised (“Guidance on diagnostic reference levels DRLs for medical exposure”, European Commission Radiation Protection 109 (RP 109), 1999) that the exposures requiring the most attention and are of the most importance for the establishment of DRLs are the high-dose medical examinations, especially computed tomography (CT) and interventional procedures (IR). The above publication also recognised the relative difficulty in defining these most important DRLs. Since the publication of the above documents, a huge growth has been observed in the use of CT and IR examinations with paediatric imaging being among the fastest growing. Much work has been done and many publications exist on paediatric doses, however, despite the emphasis placed on the need for establishing paediatric DRLs, difficulties have been encountered in producing DRLs for children, particularly for IR procedures. The talk will discuss the difficulties and challenges in providing paediatric DRLs, identify some key publications and studies, particularly in Europe, and consider what may follow. PERSONAL DOSIMETRY RESSSSOURCES 15 e REASONABLY USING THE EXISTING €ntgendiagnostik und Nuklearmedizin, Markus Borowski. Institut für Ro Klinikum Braunschweig, Poland Personal working in controlled areas is expected to be exposed to an increased level of ionizing radiation. Apart from whole body exposure in particular extremities or the eye lenses can be exposed to considerable up to critical levels. To monitor the possible radiation exposure all persons entering controlled areas are obliged to personal dosimetry. Within legal dosimetry persons normally are asked to wear film or TLD based dosimeters for whole body monitoring. Personal with an expected increased exposure of the extremities, e.g. within nuclear medicine departments, are asked to use finger dosimeters. Because of an ongoing discussion on the effect of ionizing radiation on the eye lens an upcoming requirement of dosimetry of the eye lens, at least for interventionalists, can be anticipated. Each year there are several million euro spend for personnel dosimetry within the EU. On the other hand more than 95% of all persons monitored with whole body dosemeters are exposed to dose levels below the detection threshold. Extremity dosimetry, as became obvious from the EC funded ORAMED project, suffers from large uncertainties. For the dosimetry of the eye lens not even the basic scientific research is done jet. Thus, actually most of the persons do not benefit from the large effort paid. There are, however, approaches to enhance the output of the personal dosimetry. These are e.g. an exchange rate of whole body dosemeters, which is adapted to the height of persons exposure within history or the two dosimeter approach, which provides a by far more realistic estimation of the persons effective dose. Another field is the use of active electronic dosemeters (EPD). These facilitate a direct feedback on individual actions and provide thereby input for teaching and optimization strategies. EPDs, however, suffer from the fact that they can get blinded from too high dose rates. The “more” on information, also, comes along with an increased effort to analyze them. Within the talk the usability and cost-effectiveness of different dosimetry approaches will be discussed. The audience shall leave the session with a well-founded basis for their own justified decisions. The talk shall open the view to question normally unquestioned personal dosimetry practices and show reasonable alternative approaches. Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Physica Medica journal homepage: http://www.physicamedica.com Oral Presentations VALIDATION OF A CALCULATION ALGORITHM FOR ORGAN DOSES IN THE EXISTING CT DOSIMETRY TOOLS USING PAEDIATRIC ANTHROPOMORPHIC PHANTOM MEASUREMENTS re mie Dabin a, Alessandra Mencarelli a, Lara Struelens a, Choonsik Je Lee b. a Department of Radiation Protection, Dosimetry and Calibration, Belgian Nuclear Research Centre, Mol 2400, Belgium; b Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, Rockville, MD 20850, USA Background: Rapid and user-friendly software tools for individual estimates of organ doses in CT are of the utmost importance to support the professionals in the choice of the appropriate imaging modalities. Most CT-dosimetry tools, like CT Expo [1], CT Dosimetry [2], as well as a new dosimetry tool [3], rely on the assumption that organ doses estimated for one CT scanner can be converted to other CT scanner using the ratio of the Computed Tomography Dose Index (CTDI) between two CT scanners. We tested this assumption for paediatric patients using physical phantom measurements for various protocols and CT scanners. Measurements were compared with dosimetry tools. Materials and methods: Dose to 22 radiosensitive organs were measured using thermoluminescence dosimeters inserted within an anthropomorphic 5-year old phantom. Dose measurements were performed for wholebody scans on 4 scanner models from the 4 major manufacturers (Siemens, GE, Philips and Toshiba); both axial and helical modes were tested with small collimations (below 12 mm). Measured doses were compared with the results of Monte-Carlo simulations [3]. Results: Whereas the measured organ doses showed important variability across the different scanner models, doses normalised to CTDI showed significantly less variation. Higher tube voltage also showed less variation. The simulated organ doses reasonably compared with the measurements. For example, at 120 kV in axial mode with 10 mm collimation, the mean coefficient of variation between the scanner models was below 10%; the relative difference between measured and simulated organ doses was within ±15% for most organs. Discussion: For the tested collimations (below 12 mm), both in axial and helical modes, the CTDI fairly accounts for the difference in CT design across different models. Further measurements are being carried out to test the algorithm against protocols more representative of the clinical practice. This study proved that, for small collimations and paediatric patients, organ doses simulated from one CT scanner can be converted to other CT scanners using CTDI-ratio. Those results are of interest for fast dose assessment and retrospective dosimetry studies. Acknowledgments: These measurements were performed within the framework of the EPI-CT study, supported by the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007e2013) under grant agreement number 269912-EPI-CT: Epidemiological study to quantify risks for paediatric computerized tomography and to optimise doses. [4]. References [1] Stamm G and Nagel H D 2002 CT-expo - A novel program for dose evaluation in CT G. Stamm and H. D. Nagel, “CT-expodA novel program for € Fo: Fortschritte auf dem Gebiete der dose evaluation in CT Ro € ntgenstrahlen und der Nuklearmedizin 174 1570e1576 Ro [2] Impact Scan: CTDosimetry Version 1.0.4. [(accessed on the 30th of May 2014 )]. Available online: www.impactscan.org/ctdosimetry.htm. [3] Lee C, Kim, K P, Long D J, Bolch W E 2012 Organ doses for reference pediatric and adolescent patients undergoing computed tomography estimated by Monte Carlo simulation Med. Phys. 39 2129e2146 [4] The Epi-CT study: http://epi-ct.iarc.fr/ STUDY OF DOSE PROFILES USING AUTOMATIC TUBE VOLTAGE SELECTION IN AN ANTHROPOMORPHIC PHANTOM M. Gabusi, L. Riccardi, M. Paiusco. Veneto Institute of Oncology IOV-IRCCS, Medical Physics Department,Via Gattamelata 64, 35128 Padova, Italy Background: Automated tube voltage selection (ATVS) has been recently introduced as an innovative tool (CarekV by Siemens HealthCare; Forchheim, Germany [1]) aiming to reduce dose to patients in CT scans and to preserve an acceptable contrast to noise ratio. Several studies (e.g. [2]) on contrast-enhanced CT angiographies confirm a reduction of the overall delivered dose to patients (up to 40% [3]). Fewer publications on chest CTs have been carried out, especially about the impact of CarekV in unenhanced CT (e.g. [4]), where a dose gain of lesser amount is expected. Materials and methods: In this work a study of the local dose profile for unenhanced thorax CT scan using ATVS (CarekV on Siemens Definition) was performed, using an Alderson Rando anthropomorphic phantom. CTDIvol, exposure profiles and Dose Length Products (DLP) were calculated from DICOM files along scan axis, as function of different voltage modulation parameters. Calculated and measured values were then compared to fixed-voltage CT scan profiles. Mean CTDIvol and DLP estimated before the scans were reported for comparison. Results: The average dose gain calculated from post-scanning profiles turns out to be lower (10%) than the estimated values. For high values of contrast gain (low voltage, 80 kV), CarekV allows a dose lowering of minimum 40% along the phantom chest. However, for low and intermediate contrast gain (sixth tick of the CarekV slider bar), a null CTDI gain or even local CTDI increase (about 20% for 4th tick) in the upper chest was found, due to the strong variations in current modulation. On the other hand, CarekV starts to be effective for soft tissues (abdomen) even at low contrast gain (2nd CarekV tick), and a substantial reduction (at least 10%) of abdominal dose can be achieved using the same settings. Discussion: In conclusion, ATVS may provide a reduction of the average dose for high contrast settings. Nevertheless, for low contrast settings, a reduction of the delivered dose along the whole patient's chest values might not be possible if the image quality is kept constant. A careful position of scan window might be required, in order to systematically reduce the dose along all the patient's body. References [1] Grant, K., and B. Schmidt. “CARE kVdAutomated Dose-Optimized Selection of X-ray Tube Voltage. White Paper. Siemens; 2011.” (2011). [2] Winklehner, Anna, et al. “Automated attenuation-based tube potential selection for thoracoabdominal computed tomography angiography: improved dose effectiveness.” Investigative radiology 46.12 (2011): 767-773. [3] Lee, Kyung Hee, et al. “Attenuation-based automatic tube voltage selection and tube current modulation for dose reduction at contrastenhanced liver CT.”Radiology 265.2 (2012): 437-447. 2 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) [4] Eller, Achim, et al. “Attenuation-based automatic kilovolt selection in abdominal computed tomography: effects on radiation exposure and image quality.”Investigative radiology 47.10 (2012): 559-565. OPTIMIZATION DEPARTMENTS OF CT PROCEDURES IN TWO RADIOLOGY I. Dyakov a, M. Alamin b, V. Groudeva c, J. Vassileva a, V. Stoinova c, V. Hadjidekov b. a National Centre of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection, Bulgaria; b “Aleksandrovska” University Hospital, Sofia, Bulgaria; c “St. Ekaterina” University Hospital, Sofia, Bulgaria Technical advances allowed utilization of computed tomography (CT) modality in different medical applications. With the increase in complexity of CT scanners staff education, proper CT adjustment and optimization of CT procedures are becoming of higher importance. The purpose of this study was to improve the practice in two radiology departments through implementation of optimized CT protocols. Image quality and patient dose in CT urography (CTU) and cardiac CT were compared when replacing the standard protocol with low-kV protocols. Our study was performed with a 64-row detector and a 320-row detector CT systems, both of Toshiba medical systems. Three groups of patients examined with different kV in urography phase standard 120; 100 and 80 kV protocols were included in the study. CTDIvol and DLP were recorded and effective dose was calculated using CT Expo 2.1 software. Image noise, signal to noise ratio (SNR), contrast to noise ratio (CNR) and figure of merit (FOM) were estimated based on measurements in clinical and phantom images. Image quality in phantom showed more than 50% reduction of SNR, CNR and FOM when using 80 kV CTU protocol. Clinical image quality of low-kV patient images was clinically acceptable. Higher than 47 % reduction of patient CTDIvol when using 100 kV and more than 60 % when using 80 kV CTU protocol was achieved. Effective dose was reduced by more than 60 % with introduction of 80 kV CTU protocol. Cardiac CT is routinely acquired with retrospective ECG-gating which leads to increased patient dose, since data is acquired at the entire cardiac cycle, and not all data is used for post-processing or reconstruction. For selected patients prospective ECG-gating was applied. Further implementation was made of low-kV cardiac protocol into practice. More than 56% reduction of DLP was achieved with the implementation of prospective cardiac protocol. The preliminary results indicated significant dose reduction when using low-kV cardiac protocol by keeping the adequate diagnostic quality of clinical images. EDGE-ENHANCING DIFFUSION NOISE REDUCTION IN DUAL-ENERGY CT Georgios Vlachopoulos, Spyros Skiadopoulos, Andreas Petropoulos, Anna Karahaliou, Lena Costaridou. Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras, Greece Background: Dual-Energy Computed Tomography (DECT) is an evolving field in radiology. DECT offers material decomposition by exploiting spectral information of low and high kV energies. Furthermore, DECT allows for increased identification of iodinated structures and improved differentiation from other high-density substances (e.g. calcium). This study investigates the effect of an Edge-Enhancing Diffusion (EED) noise reduction method on the quality of DECT images, derived by varying the weighting factor (w) of the two spectra (w¼0.1 up to 0.9, in 0.1 step). Materials and methods: A material equivalent head CT phantom (Mini CT QC phantom, Gammex) was scanned with a Dual-Source CT system (Somatom Definition, Siemens) in dual-energy mode. Dual-energy headangio analysis incorporated in the CT system was performed, using a clinical image acquisition protocol (80kV/213mAs and 140kV/50mAs). An EED parameter selection procedure was considered by means of quantitative image quality evaluation and qualitative assessment of edge preservation of the 80 kV images. The EED algorithm incorporating the selected parameters is then used to reduce noise to weighted images of the material equivalent CT phantom. The quality of EED-filtered weighted images was quantitatively assessed by means of Contrast, Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) and Contrast-to-Noise Ratio (CNR) measured on regions of interest of phantom images corresponding to 14 mg/ml iodine concentration and bone equivalent material. The quality of EED-filtered weighted images was also compared to the quality of median-filtered weighted images. Results: EED filtering improved significantly the quality of DECT weighted images, performing better as compared to median filtering. Using original DECT weighted images as a reference, the average image quality improvement of the filtered weighted images was: SNR¼60.1% and CNR¼82.4% for EED filtering and SNR¼15.3% and CNR¼18.7% for median filtering. Discussion: Results demonstrate that EED improved significantly the quality of DECT weighted images, suggesting the method potential in establishing low-dose image acquisition protocols. 5 YEARS CONTINUOUS PATIENT DOSE SURVEY IN INTERVENTIONAL CARDIOLOGY: LESSONS LEARNED AND FUTURE POTENTIAL O. Dragusin a, N. Oumohand b, P. Frambach b, D. Wagner b, J. ^pitaux Luxembourgeois, Luxembourg; b INCCI, ed eration des Ho Beissel b. a F Haerz Zenter, Luxembourg INCCI is the Luxembourgish national institute for cardiac surgery and interventional cardiology. It has 2 catheterization laboratories equipped with X-ray flat panel detectors. About 10 interventional cardiologists are performing diagnostic and therapeutic procedures (including electrophysiology interventions). The number of interventions is around 3000 per year. All patient doses are registered in the medical file. The purpose of the work is to present the evolution of patient doses in last five years. Yearly reports are generated and discussed with the medical staff in order to assess current practice in our center. The interventional cardiology procedures are performed in adults. We distinguish 3 categories of procedures: diagnostic (coronary angiography), therapeutic (percutaneous coronary interventions) and electrophysiology studies. Following information is available for each patient: radiation dose (total air kerma-area product KAP, fluoroscopy time, dose at interventional reference point, number of cine acquisitions); personal data (age, body mass index); procedural details (intervention, number of segments or stent dilated/implanted, type of access to the lesion, cardiologist that performed the intervention). Our analysis is focused on two directions. Firstly, determination of local reference dose levels for each group of procedures (considering the 75% percentile of dose and fluoroscopy time) and identification of potentially patients overexposed to radiation (cumulative dose for 3 months that exceed 20000 Gycm2). Secondly, analyze of patient doses per cardiologist and how they report to the local reference dose levels. In this way, we are able to identify eventually deviations and find the corrective solutions. For example, table 1 shows the yearly variation of local reference values for diagnostic procedures (CA) and therapeutic (PCI) in terms of KAP and fluoroscopy time. Procedure Reference values year 2009 year 2010 year 2011 year 2012 year 2013 diagnostic (CA) therapeutic (CA + PCI) diagnostic (CA) KAP (Gy*cm2) KAP (Gy*cm2) fluoroscopy time (minutes) fluoroscopy time (minutes) 23,0 44,0 5 24,7 36,6 6 18,2 50,5 5 18,1 49,5 5 17,7 45,5 6 16 11 16 17 17 therapeutic (CA + PCI) The record of patient doses is a routine in our center and gives us the possibility to have a better image of our practice and identify the ways to optimize the activity. ESTABLISHING NON CENTER-SPECIFIC EUROPEAN TRIGGER LEVELS IN INTERVENTIONAL PROCEDURES USING TLDS AND GAFCHROMIC FILMS J. Domienik a, E. Carinou b, O. Ciaj-Bjelac c, I. Clairand d, J. Dabin e, C. De c h, M. Majer c, F. Angelis f, J. Farah d, C. Huet d, H. Jarvinen g, R. Kope k k, T. Siiskonen g, A. Trianni l, F. Malchair i, A. Negri j, L. Nova Kne Vanhavere d, Z. zevic m. a Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine, dz, Poland; Radiation Protection Department, Sw Teresy 8, 91-348 Ło Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) b Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC), P.O.Box 60092, Ag. Paraskevi. 15310 Athens; Greece; c VINCA Institute of Nuclear Sciences (VINCA), P.O. e Box 522, 11001 Belgrade; Serbia; d Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûret Nucl eaire (IRSN), BP17, 92262 Fontenay-aux-Roses Cedex, France; e Belgian Nuclear Research Centre (SCK-CEN), Boeretang 200, BE-2400 Mol; Belgium; f (ISS), Viale Regina Elena 299, 00161 Rome; Istituto Superiore di Sanita Italy; g Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority (STUK), P.O. Box 14, 00881 Helsinki; Finland; h Institute of Nuclear Physics (IFJ - PAN), ul w; Poland; i Centre Hospitalier Radzikowskiego 152, PL-31-342 Krako ^pital, 4000 Li Universitaire de Li ege (CHUL), Avenue de l'Ho ege; Belgium; j Istituto Oncologico Veneto (IOV), Via Gattamelata 64, 35124 Padova; Italy; k National Radiation Protection Institute (NRPI), Bartoskova 28, 140 00 Prague 4; Czech Republic; l Udine University Hospital (AOUD), ple S. Maria della Misericordia, 15, 33100 Udine; Italy; m RuCer Boskovic Institute (RBI), Bijenicka c. 54, 10000 Zagreb; Croatia Background: EURADOS WG-12 is performing a feasibility study to establish European trigger levels which would inform physicians about potential risk of skin injuries during interventional procedures. Materials and methods: Six European centers participate in the measurement campaign focusing on three interventional procedures associated with high exposure levels: PTCA (coronary angioplasty), NE (neuroembolisations) and CE (hepatic chemo-embolisations). In order to measure MSD (maximum skin dose), different dosimetric systems were considered (TLD grids, XR-RV3 Gafchromic films and TL foils). The study investigates the performance and practicability of each dosimeter, compares the different systems and investigates simultaneous use of films and TL systems. To setup trigger levels, the correlations between MSD and online dose indicators are investigated by recording values of kerma-area product (KAP), fluoroscopy time (FT) and cumulative air kerma at reference point (CK). Results: The comparison of dosimetric methods showed that both films and TL systems are good tools for 2D mapping of skin dose. TLDs, however, are point like and may miss the MSD. The measurements are still on-going and up to 155 patients were already included. The highest measured MSD were 7.7 Gy (NE), 3.9 Gy (CE) and 3.2 Gy (PTCA). Good correlations were found between MSD and CK (for NE and PTCA) or DAP (for CE). The preliminary trigger levels for ICRP skin dose threshold (3 Gy) are 6 Gy and 3 Gy, respectively for NE and PTCA. For 10 NE procedures during which skin doses were measured simultaneously with films and TLDs, the quotient of MSD vary from 1.2 to 2.7. These discrepancies would result in significantly different values of trigger levels. Discussion: For the selected procedures, MSD exceeded the threshold of 3 Gy in 12% of the cases which justifies the need for trigger levels. Preliminary results show that MSD evaluation is strongly dependent on the dosimetry system. However, due to poor statistics in dual dosimetry, further attempts are necessary to select the most accurate way for MSD measurement. The promising method would be the joint use of the TL foils (which proved to have the best characteristic) and films. DOSE REDUCTION IN ITERATIVE RECONSTRUCTED CORONARY ARTERY CT: A MULTIVENDOR DYNAMIC PHANTOM STUDY Niels van der Werf a, Marcel Greuter a, Martin Willemink b, Bronislaw Abramiuc a, Tineke Willems a, Tim Leiner b. a University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, The Netherlands; b University of Utrecht, University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands Iterative reconstruction (IR) in computed tomography (CT) coronary calcium scoring (CCS) may allow dose reduction compared to filtered back projection (FBP). The purpose of the current study was to evaluate the influence of dose on CCS with moving calcifications in IR CT for high-end CT scanners of the four major vendors. Two calcifications (equal volume 198.4 mm3, different mass 157.1, 38.5 mg) were used in an anthropomorphic thorax phantom at 20 mm/s. A medium sized patient extension ring and vendor recommended clinical protocols 3 were used. The phantom was scanned five times at full dose and 80% dose reduction on Brilliance iCT (Philips), Aquilion One (Toshiba), Discovery CT750HD (GE) and Somatom Definition Flash (Siemens). CCS was quantified as Agatston scores with vendor software, with full dose FBP as reference. For the 157.1 mg calcification full dose FBP resulted in CCS of 500 ± 45, 442 ± 14, 529 ± 55 and 717 ± 31 for Philips, Siemens, GE and Toshiba respectively. At 80% reduced dose CCS was 625 ± 96, 552 ± 21, 665 ± 36 and 710 ± 30. Using IR CCS decreased with 7-15% to 527 ± 54, 476 ± 19, 614 ± 29 and 639 ± 27. For the 38.5 mg calcification full dose FBP resulted in CCS of 102 ± 12, 99 ± 15, 100 ± 7 and 112 ± 10. At 80% reduced dose CCS was 265±41, 157±11, 148±9 and 187±15. Using IR CCS decreased with 34-58% to 110±48, 90±5, 97±8 and 85±7. Given these results, dynamic coronary calcium scores can be overestimated up to 157% at 80% reduced dose, which can be compensated for up to 58% using iterative reconstruction, depending on calcification density and CT system. PATIENT RADIATION DOSES DURING CONVENTIONAL AND COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY Ioannis Pantos a, Sofia D. Kordolaimi b, Agapi Ploussi b, Demosthenes Katritsis a, Efstathios P. Efstathopoulos b. a Department of Cardiology, Athens Euroclinic; b 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens Background: Coronary CT angiography (CCTA) is a noninvasive imaging technique widely used for the assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) providing high diagnostic performance. However, CCTA remains an examination with high radiation exposure and its relevance to cancer induction remains a major concern. In response to this concern, various techniques like the implementation of iterative reconstruction (IR) to reduce radiation exposure in CCTA have been implemented. Purpose: We sought to assess patient radiation exposure in computed tomography coronary angiography (CTCA) in the new era of iterative reconstruction (IR) and compare findings with conventional coronary angiography (CCA). Materials and methods: We retrospectively assessed dose indices of 76 CTCAs performed at two multidetector CT scanners one of which was equipped with an IR algorithm (iDose4 by Philips) and 93 CCAs performed at a conventional monoplane coronary angiography unit equipped with a flat panel detector. CTCAs were performed with either prospective or retrospective acquisition and with either a full or reduced tube currenttime product (mAs) protocol. Full mAs CTCAs were reconstructed using conventional filter back projection (FBP) while reduced mAs CTCAs were reconstructed using iDose4. CCAs without ventriculograms were performed by a routine acquisition protocol by a single highly experienced operator. Patient exposure from CTCA and CCA was assessed by effective dose which was calculated using published dose length product (DLP) and dose area product (DAP) conversion factors. Results: All exam inations were considered acceptable regarding imaging quality and diagnostic accuracy. In CTCAs reconstructed with FBP and retrospective acquisition, effective dose was 15.0 ± 3.1 mSv (scanner 1) and 16.28 ± 7.70 mSv (scanner 2) while with prospective acquisition effective dose was 3.3 ± 1.1 mSv. Corresponding values for CCTAs reconstructed with iDose4 and retrospective or prospective acquisition were 8.5 ± 2.5 mSv and 2.4 ± 0.8 mSv accordingly. In CCA effective dose was 6.3 ± 2.8 mSv. Discussion: In CTCA prospective acquisition provides substantial dose reduction which can be further accentuated with the use of IR. The combined application of prospective acquisition and IR enables CTCA to be performed at a low dose while preserving good image quality and diagnostic accuracy. MODEL OBSERVERS LOW CONTRAST DETECTABILITY PERFORMANCE AT DIFFERENT KV LEVELS IN CT PHANTOM IMAGES I. Hernandez-Giron a, b, A. Calzado b, J. Geleijns c, R.M.S. Joemai c, W.J.H. edica. Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV), Veldkamp c. a Unitat de Física M Spain; b Departamento de Radiología. Universidad Complutense de Madrid 4 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) (UCM), Spain; c Radiology Department. Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), The Netherlands Purpose: To study low contrast detectability (LCD) performance of two model observers in CT phantom images acquired at different kV levels. To compare the results with humans in a 2-alternative forced choice experiment (2-AFC). Materials and methods: Images of the low contrast module of the Catphan 500 phantom were acquired at different kV levels (80-100-135kV) in a 320-row CT scanner (Aquilion ONE). The module contains three series of objects (contrast series: 0.3, 0.5, and 1.0%, diameters: 2-15mm each). Two model observers (non-prewhitening matched filter with an eye filter, NPWE, and channelized Hotelling observer with Gabor channels, CHO) were applied to automatically measure LCD. Two human observers evaluated the three contrast groups visibility in 2AFC experiments. The proportion correct (PC; measure of detection probability) was obtained for each object size, for all contrast series and kV values. Psychometric fits [1] were used to calculate the smallest object visible (l, related to a PC of 75%) for each condition. To match NPWE and CHO with human performance, efficiency factors (h) were determined. Bland-Altman analyses were performed to compare PC values obtained by models and humans after correcting the models performance using h values. Results: The model observers reproduced the human LCD performance trends, improving detectability with increasing object size, contrast and kV. The visibility thresholds for humans (and 80-100 and 135 kV) were (1% contrast: 2.72.11.6mm; 0.5% contrast: 4.63.42.8mm; 0.3% contrast: 6.44.84.5mm) (Fig. 1). Both models gave higher detectability values than the average human observer. The calculated efficiencies (h) calculated to match human results were 0.5 (NPWE) and 0.3 (CHO) respectively. Bland-Altman plots showed good agreement between models and humans after the efficiency correction. For CHO and all contrast results together, the average difference D and the range of the differences D±2s (s, standard deviation) with regard to human PC results were D¼1.2%, D±2s ¼[-3.1%, 5.4%]. For NPWE (Fig. 2), the results were: D¼0.3%, D±2s¼[-4.2%, 3.6%]. Conclusion: An automated method to investigate LCD in CT based on two different model observers was developed. The models can be useful tools to predict human performance in CT low contrast detection tasks in a standard phantom. References: [1] Hernandez-Giron I, Geleijns J, Calzado A, Veldkamp WJH. Automated assessment of low contrast sensitivity for CT systems using a model observer. Med Phys 2011;28:S25-S35. Fig.2. Bland-Altman plot of proportion correct (PC) difference between human and NPWE model observer after correcting by efficiency (h¼0.5) for all contrast groups and kV values. PERFORMANCE COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT DR DETECTORS USING SIMPLIFIED EDQE APPROACH Dogan Bor a, Ahmet Guven b, Turan Olgar a, Ozlem Birgul b. a Ankara University, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Physics Engineering, Turkey; b Ankara University, Institute of Nuclear Sciences, Department of Medical Physics, Turkey Background: Modulation transfer function (MTF), noise power spectrum (NPS) and detective quantum efficiency (DQE) which is calculated using MTF and NPS are frequently used for the evaluation of detector performance in digital radiological imaging system. In recent years, a new metric, effective detective quantum efficiency (eDQE), that includes scatter and focal spot effects which changes with different clinical applications has been introduced to evaluate the performance of the system as a whole. Materials and methods: One method for the calculation of eDQE, is to measure MTF, NPS, scatter factor (SF) and transmission factor (TF) and use the expression: eDQE ¼ MTFðu; vÞ2 :ð1 SFÞ2 NNPSðu; vÞ:TF:K:q where q is the number of photons on detector per unit dose per unit area and K is the detector entrance dose. In this method, SF and TF must be measured separately in addition to MTF and NPS measurements. We modified this method by eliminating the (1-SF)2 from the above equation since it causes the over estimation of the scatter effect. The long tails of the line spread function were taken into account in the MTF calculation without any truncation and smoothing so that only the frequencies related to the scatter were included. Consequently, the MTF measurements were simplified. Results: In order to see the performance of the detectors for the clinical studies PMMA blocks were placed close to detector and eDQEs were obtained for a variety of tube voltages and detector exposures. Detector DQEs were also find at similar beam qualities. Measurements were carried out on digital radiographic systems having flat panel detectors manufactured by different vendors. The effects of scatter, geometric magnification, beam quality and detector exposures were investigated separately and degradation of detector DQE to eDQE with these factors were compared for each system. Discussion: The use of all the scatter data in the MTF calculation better reflects the system performance in terms of eDQE approach. Elimination of the separate scatter measurements with beam stop technique also speeds up the test procedure. This work is partially supported by TUBITAK 112T965 Research Grant. DOSIMETRIC STUDY OF THE USE OF CBCT IN DIAGNOSTIC RADIOLOGY: SINUS AND MIDDLE EAR Fig.1. Psychometric fits of the average human as a function of object diameter for 0.5% contrast and all kV. The visibility thresholds (l, related to PC¼75%) were obtained after fitting to the psychometric function. C. Saldarriaga Vargas a, D. Dierckx b, F. Rogge b, S. Lichtherte b, L. Struelens a. a SCKCEN, Radiation Protection, Dosimetry and Calibration, Boeretang 200, 2400 Mol, Belgium; b Controlatom, Department of Medical Physics, Jan Olieslagerslaan 35, 1800 Vilvoorde, Belgium Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Background: The use of cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) in diagnostic radiology departments is increasing. Several discussions arise whether some Multi Slice CT (MSCT) examinations can be replaced with the CBCT application. High hopes are set regarding the dosimetric aspects of CBCT: are patient doses in between those of conventional X-Rays and MSCT? A dosimetric advantage of CBCT respect to MSCT has already been reported in dentomaxillofacial radiology [1-5]. Materials and methods: In this study [6] effective dose and organ doses were evaluated for two non-dental CBCT examinations: sinus and middle ear. The dose obtained with a NEWTOM™ 5G CBCT device (QR srl, Verona, Italy) was compared with the dose obtained with a MSCT Philips Brilliance CT 64-slice (Philips Healthcare, Eindhoven, the Netherlands). Moreover, for the sinus examination, a comparison with the dose obtained by projection radiography (RX) using the Siemens Ysio X-ray device (Siemens Medical Systems, Erlangen, Germany) was also performed. Effective doses were estimated from thermoluminescent detector (TLD) dose measurements in a Rando Alderson (RA) anthropomorphic phantom and were compared against Monte Carlo (MC) simulations using the MCNPX 2.7.0 code [7] and the PCXMC [8] and CTDosimetry [9] software tools. Results: Results show that the effective dose for the sinus examination is more than 3 times higher with MSCT than with CBCT and about 5 times lower with RX compared to CBCT (see Table 1.), while for the middle ear examination the effective dose obtained with MSCT is almost 6 times higher than that of CBCT (see Table 2.). Finally, a sensitivity study on the size and position of the CBCT field of view (FOV) showed the influence of these two factors on the dose received by the patient. Table 1 Effective dose, E (mSv), obtained from measurements with the RA phantom and from MC simulations using CT-Dosimetry, PCXMC, PCXMCrotation and MCNPX, for the sinus examination. CT E (mSv) CBCT RX RA CT-Dos RA PCXMCrot RA PCXMC MCNPX 0.333 0.208 0.102 0.088 0.020 0.017 0.020 Table 2 Effective dose, E (mSv), obtained from measurements with the RA phantom and from MC simulations using CT-Dosimetry and PCXMCrotation, for the middle ear examination. CT E (mSv) CBCT RA CT-Dos RA PCXMCrot 2.329 1.951 0.396 0.186 References [1] Loubele M., Bogaerts R., Van Dijck E., Pauwels R., Vanheusden S., Suetens P., Marchal G., Sanderink G., Jacobs R., Comparison between effective radiation dose of CBCT and MSCT scanners for dentomaxillofacial applications. Eur J. Radiol. 71, 461-468 (2009). €ser Y., Peltola J., Kortesniemi M. [2] Suomalainen A., Kiljunen T., Ka Dosimetry and image quality of four dental cone beam computed tomography scanners compared with multislice computed tomography scanners. Dentomaxillofac. Radiol. 38(6), 367e378 (2009). [3] Ludlow JB., Ivanovic M. Comparative dosimetry of dental CBCT devices and 64-slice CT for oral and maxillofacial radiology. Oral Surg. Oral Med. Oral Pathol. Oral Radiol. Endod. 106(1), 106e114 (2008). [4] Loubele M., Maes F., Jacobs R., van Steenberghe D., White SC., Suetens P., Comparative study of image quality for MSCT and CBCT scanners for dentomaxillofacial Radiology Application. Radiat. Prot. Dosim., 129, 222-226 (2008). [5] Ludlow JB., Davies-Ludlow LE., Brooks SL., Howerton WB., Dosimetry of 3 CBCT devices for oral and maxillofacial radiology: CB Mercuray, NewTom 3G and i-CAT. Dentomaxillofac. Radiol. 35, 219e226 (2006). 5 [6] Dierckx D., Saldarriaga Vargas C., Rogge F., Lichtherte S., Struelens L. Dosimetric analysis of the use of CBCT in diagnostic radiology: sinus and middle ear. Rad. Prot. Dos. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/rpd/ncu117 (2014). [7] Pelowitz DB., Durkee JW., Elson JS., Fensin ML., James MR., Johns RC., McKinney GW., Mashnik SG., Waters LS., Wilcox TA. MCNPX 2.7.0 Extensions, LA-UR-11-02295, (2011). [8] STUK, Helsinky, Finland, A Monte Carlo program for calculating patient doses in medical x-ray examinations. PCXMC version 2.0.1.4. Supplementary programs (2012). [9] IMPACT Group, London, United Kingdom, ImPACT CT Patient Dosimetry Calculator. Version 1.0.4 27/05 (2011). COMPARATIVE PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF CONTRAST-DETAIL IN FULL FIELD DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY (FFDM) SYSTEMS USING IDEAL (HOTELLING) OBSERVER VERSUS AUTOMATED CDMAM ANALYSIS Ioannis Delakis a, b, Robert Wise b, Lauren Morris b, Eugenia Kulama b. aSidra Medical and Research Centre, Doha, Qatar; bRadiological Sciences Unit, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, Charing Cross Hospital, Fulham Palace Road, London, United Kingdom Background and purpose: Image quality evaluation plays an important role in ensuring and enhancing the diagnostic value of mammography. Image quality is typically is assessed using images acquired with the Contrast Detail mammography (CDMAM) phantom (1, 2). However, reading CDMAM images can be time consuming and suffers from limited statistics. Recent work tried to link automated readings with humanobserver performance, but results can be dependent on structural differences between CDMAM phantoms (3-4). The purpose of this work was to evaluate detector performance for a range of full field digital mammography (FFDM) systems using both CDMAM and ideal (Hotelling) observer analysis and ascertain whether the ideal observer methodology can offer some advantages. Methodology: Five FFDM systems were included in this study, which differed with respect to generation, detector, tube technology, and Automatic Exposure Control (AEC) behavior, as shown in Tables 1 and 2. Detector performance was first analysed using CDMAM phantom methodology, as described by European and British guidelines (1, 2). Detector performance was then re-evaluated using ideal observer analysis, on the basis of previous work, generalising the definition of Hotelling observer to include the effects of focal spot unsharpness, magnification and scattering (5-9). Results and discussion: Both methodologies identified an improvement in the performance of new compared to old generation FFDM systems, but, as seen in Table 3, results showed the ideal observer methodology to be a more sensitive performance differentiator. In addition, as seen in Fugure 1, ideal observer results showed lower variability than CDMAM analysis results in intra-system evaluation. The CDMAM phantom used for inter-system comparison in our study appeared to overestimate threshold contrast detectability across all diameter details when compared to CDMAM phantoms from other groups. CDMAM results were also consistently higher than ideal observer results, reflecting a similar behavior. Conclusion: We have shown that the ideal observer methodology can provide a more reproducible and performance-representative alternative to CDMAM analysis, as it is shows lower variability and is not phantomspecific. The ideal observer methodology also requires fewer exposures than CDMAM methodology, which can be of practical benefit for regular quality control of FFDM systems. Keywords: Digital Mammography, Quality Assurance, CDMAM, Hotelling Observer, Ideal Observer, image quality References [1] Van Engen R, Young K, Bosmans H, Thijssen H. The European protocol for the quality control of the physical and technical aspects of mammography screening. Luxembourg: Euref; 2006. [2] Commissioning and routine testing of Full Field Digital Mammography Systems. NHSBSP Equipment Report 0604. Sheffield: NHS Cancer Screening Programmes; In press. Report No.: version 4. 6 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) [3] Young K, Alsager A, Oduko J, Bosmans H, Verbrugge B, Geerste T, et al. Evaluation of software for reading images of the CDMAM test object to assess digital mammography systems. In Proc. SPIE 6913; 2008. 69131C. [4] Young KC, Cook JJH, Oduko JM, Bosmans H. Comparison of software and human observers in reading images of the CDMAM test object to assess digital mammography systems. In Proc. SPIE 6142; 2006. 614206. [5] Kyprianou IS. A method for total x-ray imaging system evaluation. PhD Thesis. Buffalo, NY: University of New York. 2004 [6] Kyprianou IS, Rudin S, Bednarek D, Hoffman K. Generalizing the MTF and DQE to include x-ray scatter and focal spot unsharpness: application to a new microangiographic system. Med. Phys. 2005; 32(2): 613626. [7] Kyprianou I, Ganguly A, Rudin S, Bednarek D, Gallas B, Myers K. Efficiency of the Human Observer Compared to an Ideal Observer Based on a Generalized NEQ Which Incorporates Scatter and Geometric Unsharpness: Evaluation with a 2AFC Experiment. In Proc. Soc. Photo. Opt. Instrum. Eng.; 2005. (5749) 251-262. [8] Liu H, Kyprianou IS, Badano A, Myers KJ, Jennings RJ, Park S, et al. SKE/BKE Task-based methodology for calculating Hotelling observer SNR in mammography. In Proc. of the SPIE, Medical Imaging; 2009. 7258. [9] Liu H, Badano A, Chakrabarti K, Kaczmarek R, Kyprianou I. Task specific evaluation of clinical full field digital mammography systems using the Fourier definition of the Hotelling observer SNR. In Proc. of the SPIE, Medical Imaging; 2010. 7622. Table 1 List of FFDM systems included in the study. Manufacturer System Type Installation AEC setting GE Healthcare GE Healthcare Hologic Hologic Hologic Senographe DS Senograhe Essential Selenia (Mo target) Selenia (W target) Dimensions July 2007 August 2010 June 2007 March 2011 November 2010 Contrast Standard Autofilter Autofilter Autofilter Table 2 Detector properties of FFDM systems included in the study. Manufacturer System Type Detector Type Size(cm) Pixel size (mm) GE Healthcare GE Healthcare CsI (indirect) CsI (indirect) 19x23 24x29 100 100 Hologic Senographe DS Senographe Essential Selenia (Mo target) 24x29 70 Hologic Selenia (W target) 24x29 70 Hologic Dimensions Selenium (direct) Selenium (direct) Selenium (direct) 24x29 70 Table 3 Average ratio of threshold detectability results (New-to-Old FFDM system) is less than unity, indicating the superiority in perfor-mance of new compared to older generation FFDM systems. GE Sen. Essential/ GE Senog. DS CDMAM fit to predicted Hotelling observer Hologic Selenia (W)/ Hologic Selenia (Mo) Hologic Dimensions/ Hologic Selenia (Mo) 0.83 0.89 0.99 0.89 0.90 0.89 Fig. 1 Mean and standard deviation (error bars) of threshold detectability results using both methodologies on the same FFDM system for five consecutive days. SIMULATED ANNEALING APPLIED TO OPTIMIZATION: A COMPUTATIONAL STUDY IMRT BEAM ANGLE Joana Dias a, b, Humberto Rocha b, Brígida Ferreira c, d, Maria do Carmo Lopes c, d. a Faculdade de Economia, Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal; b Inesc-Coimbra, Portugal; c I3N, Departamento de Física, Universidade de edica, IPOC-FG, EPE, Coimbra, Portugal Aveiro, Portugal; d Serviço de Física M Background: Electing irradiation directions to use in IMRT treatments is one of the first and most important decisions to make in treatment planning. Beam angle optimization (BAO) is a difficult problem to tackle from the mathematical optimization point of view. It is highly non-convex, and optimization approaches based on gradient-descent methods will probably get trapped in one of the many local minima. Simulated Annealing (SA) is a local search probabilistic procedure, inspired from the process of annealing in metallurgy, where a material is heated and cooled in a controlled way in order to increase the size of its crystals, reducing possible defects. Beginning with any admissible solution, the SA algorithm searches the current solution's neighborhood looking for a better one. If a better solution is found, it becomes the current solution. If a worse solution is found, it can nevertheless become the current solution with a given probability that depends on the cooling schedule and will be higher in early iterations, decreasing with the number of iterations. The possibility of worsening the objective function value gives SA the possibility of escaping from local minima. Materials and methods: SA was applied to ten clinical examples of retrospective treated cases of head-and-neck tumors signalized as complex cases where proper target coverage and organ sparing proved difficult to obtain. The number of directions to use was considered fixed and equal to 5 and 7. Different algorithm's parameters and neighborhood structures were tested. Results: SA can lead to solutions that significantly improve organ sparing, even considering a reduced number of angles, without jeopardizing tumor coverage. Discussion: It has been proved that, under asymptotic conditions, SA will converge to the global optimum. However, in real applications and with computational time limits, SA converges to a high quality solution but with no optimality guaranties. The quality of the solution depends on the algorithm’s parameters and especially on the neighborhood structure chosen. Smaller neighborhoods seem to be preferable to larger ones, and dynamically dimensioned neighborhoods can present a good choice, allowing for a compromise between exploitation and exploration of the searchable surface. A VOXEL BASED NTCP MODEL FOR TREATMENT PLANNING Andreas Richter, Christoph Bert, Markus Hecht, Reinhold Müller. University Hospital of Erlangen, Department of Radiation Oncology, €tsstr. 27, 91054 Erlangen, Germany Universita Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Background: For a more precise prediction of side effects in organs at risks (OAR) during radiation therapy it is beneficial to include biological information in terms of the Normal Tissue Complication Probability (NTCP). For this purpose, a voxel based NTCP model was developed by our group [1]. The basic idea of this model is that every organ is assumed to be consisting of minimal damageable volumes (MDVs). The surviving probability of these MDVs is directly given by the linear-quadratic model. The NTCP is calculated from the number of the surviving MDVs by the Poisson’s statistics. Further information is needed about the structure of the organ (parallel or serial) and on its functional reserve representing the minimal surviving percentage of the MDVs required for proper physiology. Serial organs are modeled as a series of subunits each treated as a parallel organ. Materials and methods: The model was already fitted to the published data of Emami et al. [2] for lung, kidney, parotid glands and spinal cord [3]. In this work a comparison of the model outcome for the parotid glands with clinical xerostomia data of patients treated at the University Hospital of Erlangen will be presented. Results: The clinical xerostomia scores are only determined by interviewing the patients, so they show large fluctuations over time and depend also on the physician who did the examination. Nevertheless, at least a trend that low (high) clinical xerostomia scores result in low (high) model calculated NTCP values has been observed. In the most cases the calculated NTCP values are close to 0 for a mean clinical score of 1 (defined as ”no complication”) and values close to 1 for a mean score 2 (“complication”). In addition, a sensitivity analysis of the parameters of the voxel based model is ongoing. Discussion: The NTCP values obtained by the model are promising. More data for a further evaluation are still necessary. [1] R. G. Müller et al.: Voxel by voxel NTCP algorithm for inverse treatment planning in IMRT and particle therapy, IFMBE Proceedings 14:1770 (2007). [2] B. Emami et al.: Tolerance of normal tissue to therapeutic irradiation, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 21:109 (1991). [3] A. Richter et al.: Development of a voxel-based NTCP algorithm for treatment planning, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 87 (Suppl.):S687 (2013). SECONDARY DOSES TO HEALTHY TISSUES DURING PROTON THERAPY TREATMENTS: INFLUENCE OF IRRADIATION PARAMETERS A. Bonfrate a, J. Farah a, L. De Marzi b, S. Delacroix b, J. Fontaine b, J. rault c, R. Sayah a, F. Trompier a, C. Lee d, W.E. Bolch e, I. He e Nucl eaire, Clairand a. a IRSN e Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûret Service de Dosim etrie Externe BP17, 92262 Fontenay-aux-Roses Cedex, France; b Institut Curie e Centre de Protonth erapie d’Orsay (ICPO) ^timent 101, 91898 Orsay, France; c Centre Antoine Campus universitaire ba Lacassagne (CAL) - Cyclotron biom edical, 227 avenue de la Lanterne, 06200 Nice, France; d Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, MD 20852, USA; e Departments of Nuclear & Radiological and Biomedical Engineering - University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA Context: Owing to the Bragg peak dose deposition in depth, proton therapy allows accurate cancer treatments while sparing healthy surrounding tissues. However, secondary neutrons are produced during treatment and can deliver unwanted doses to surrounding normal organs thus increasing the risk of secondary cancer. This paper investigates the variation of secondary neutron doses with tumor size and location as well as patient age and morphology. Materials/methods: Beam parameters are specifically adjusted to conform the clinical beam to the tumor. As secondary neutrons are mainly generated in beam line elements, large variations in organ doses are expected depending on the treatment configuration. Monte Carlo calculations were thus used to determine secondary neutron doses to healthy organs while simulating realistic intracranial treatments and using the series of pediatric and adult hybrid computational phantoms developed at the University of Florida and the US National Cancer Institute. The facility and the beam line modeled are those from Institut Curie e Centre de 7 rapie d’Orsay. The considered beam line parameters include Prontonthe beam energy, modulation width, patient collimator aperture size, air gap and compensator thickness. Moreover, the distance between the target volume and healthy organs is also considered for each configuration. Results: For a 1-year-old patient and considering an anterior-superior beam projection simulating a craniopharyngioma treatment, calculations show that increasing the proton beam range from 8 to 10.5 cm (162 MeV to 178 MeV) leads to an increase in secondary neutron doses by up to a factor 2.1 for the salivary glands. Similarly, changing the collimator aperture from 3 to 10 cm in diameter results in a dose increase by a factor 3 for the salivary glands and by 1.4 to the bladder. Finally, neutron absorbed doses decrease with increasing distance to the target volume regardless of beam parameters. Namely, with a proton beam range of 8 cm, neutron dose per therapeutic dose received by the salivary glands is 103 mGy/Gy while the bladder received 22 mGy/Gy. Conclusion: Secondary neutron doses are strongly influenced by beam line parameters and patient morphology. For healthy organs, proton therapy remains nonetheless an interesting technique when compared against conformal or intensity modulated radiotherapy. DOSE VOLUME HISTOGRAMS DATABASE, REPORTING AND ANALYZING SOFTWARE FOR RADIATION THERAPY A. Perez-Rozos, M. Lobato, I. Jerez Sainz, C. Jodar, M. Pamos. UGC Oncologia, Hospital Virgen de la Victoria, Malaga, Spain Background: Dose volume histograms are a key and valuable tool when comparing treatment alternatives and as predictor of treatment outcomes in radiotherapy. The high number of region of interest and target volumens in actual radiotherapy makes necessary use specifics tools for reporting and analyze of DVH. In this work we show a tool to maintain a DVH database, to generate population based DVH and relevant statistics. Population based DVH will be used as reference in treatment planning process. Materials and methods: We have used our DVH database with more than 8000 treatments to generate population DVH for several treatment sites. DVHs for regions of interest and PTVs were analyzed calculating mean histogram and 10% and 90% percentile histograms. Probability distribution of relevant evaluation parameters were calculated using these data (i.e V20, mean dose, NTCP…). Mean and percentile histograms are established as reference histograms in our reporting tool, allowing the interactive comparison of actual treatment DVH versus database. It is possible to incorporate DVH from several treatment planning systems (Philips Pinnacle, Varian Eclipse and Brachyvision, Elekta Monaco and Oncentra). Results: Plotting database DVH allows to fast identify outliers, and observe variability in OARs and homogeneity in PTVs. Use of this tool warrants for high homogeneity clinical dosimetry, that is really important when participating in clinical trials. With these data it is possible to correlate treatment outcomes with planning data. Comparison of actual patient with reference DVH is straightforward using our application. Volume at a dose, dose at a volume, NTCP, EUD, mean dose are successfully calculated using DVH data. Comparison allows visual and numeric evaluation of DVH using per protocol standards. Treatment plans that deviate from population histograms will require specific and comprehensive quality assurance to identify reason of such differences. Discussion: Population DVH comparison allows for a higher level of quality assurance of clinical dosimetry process and has proven to be a useful research tool for radiation therapy. Outlier treatments are easily identified. Study of population based DVHs allows identification of better predictive parameters to correlate with clinical outcomes. EVALUATION OF THE ACCURACY OF MONITOR UNITS (MU) OBTAINED FROM A TREATMENT PLANNING SYSTEM USING THE ELECTRON MONTE CARLO ALGORITHM. Ingrid R. Marshall. Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA Purpose/ Objective: Electrons are used routinely in breast treatments, either for scar or cavity boosts. Monitor units (MU) derived from treatment planning systems (TPS) can be significantly different from so called “hand calcs” which are still widely used. The MUs determined by the Electron 8 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Monte Carlo (EMC) algorithm can differ by more than 10%. Hand calc MUs are derived from homogenous water tank measurements, while treatment planning MUs are based on heterogeneous calculations. The accuracy of dose and isodose distributions from the Eclipse's EMC calculation model is investigated. Materials and methods: A breast phantom routinely used for teaching selfexamination was placed on top of the Matrixx ion chamber array which included 1cm solid water build up. Measurements were made to test the accuracy of the system to account for both curvature and heterogeneity at 3 positions of the breast phantom, with and without 4cm Styrofoam inserted, at 100SSD, using 5 electron energies, a 6x6 cone and fixed MUs. The calculation model was also verified using a standard flat homogenous phantom. The IBA Matrixx measurements were compared with EMC calculations using the CT of the phantom and an IMRT analysis tool. international protocol is identified i.e. for new low energy X ray source for brachytherapy, for medium energy X rays, for small size high energy X-rays beams and for hadron especially for scanned beams. These new standards are based on calorimetric and ion chamber techniques for which new developments are made. For high energy X-rays in radiotherapy, the possibility to measure a new integral quantity similar to dose area product (DAP) is evaluated. The characteristics i.e. directional and energy responses, perturbation factors, linearity, homogeneity and spatial resolution of the transfer dosemeters and their calibration and reading protocols are studied to finally propose robust protocol for in vivo dosimetry and quality controls including the developments of new anthropo and semi anthropomorphic phantoms and to evaluate the possibility for assessing absorbed dose to water at a point in small beams; the following dosemeters, (ion chambers, silicon diode, CVD diamond, ESR/Alanine, radio-chromic and storage film, EPID and gel has been chosen in order to cover the need for point, 2D and 3D dose measurements. MetrExtRT gathers 10 partners as presented in the list of authors, two Researcher Excellence Grants (REG) for the development of passive Frike gel d’Auverge e France) dosimetry without diffusion after irradiation (Universite and the first diamond detectors commercially available (Tor Vergata University - Italy) and up to now 12 collaborators from industry, oncology centres and universities. The presentation lays emphasis on the gel dosimetry and the DAP concept applied to external beam radiotherapy. More information can be found on the website of the project: http://radiotherapy-emrp.eu Ă Results: The measured dose plane for fixed MUs at the 3 positions of the breast phantom compared well when using the EMC model, even when heterogeneity in the form of 4 cm Styrofoam was introduced. For the MU calculations all fields were normalized to dmax. The MUs from “hand calcs” were compared with the MUs derived from EMC calculations using the flat phantom and the 3 breast phantom positions. In the case of the flat phantom the calculated MUs were within 2% of the “hand calc”. However, variations of up to 20% were observed, when calculating the MUs using the breast model, with the eMC MUs being larger. Conclusion: The results show that both the isodose distribution and absolute dose are well predicted by the treatment planning system. Therefore, the MUs determined by the TPS system can be trusted and should be used. METROLOGY FOR RADIOTHERAPY USING COMPLEX RADIATION FIELDS e EMRP PROJECT Jean-Marc Bordy a, Claus Andersen b, Ulrike Ankerhold c, Veronique Dedieu d, Frank Delaunay a, Jacco De Pooter e, Jarolav Compell f, Simon Duane g, Ralf-Peter Kapsch c, Antti Kosunen h, Gabor Machula i, Marco Marinelli l, Hugo Palmans g, Maria Pimpinella j, Gianluca Verona Rinati l, Jaroslav Solc k. a CEA, LIST, DM2I, Laboratoire National Henri Becquerel LNE/LNHB, F-91191 Gif sur Yvette, France; b Danmarks Tekniske Universitet, DTU, Bygning 101, DK-2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark; c Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, PTB, Bundesallee 100, D-38116 Braunschweig, Germany; d Universt e d'Auvergne, UdA, France; e VSL B.V., Thijsseweg 11, NL-2629 JA Delft, Netherlands; f Slovak Institute of 63, SK-842 55 Bratislava, Slovakia,; g National Metrology, SMU, Karloveska Physical Laboratory, NPL, GB-TW11 0LW Teddington, Middlesex, United Kingdom,; h Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority, STUK, Laippatie 4, FI00880 Helsinki, Finland,; i Magyar Kereskedelmi Engedelyezesi Hivatal, g 1534 Budapest, P.f.: 919 Hungary; j Istituto Nazionale di sa MKEH, Hato Metrologia delle Radiazioni Ionizzanti, ENEA - CR Casaccia, Via Anguillarese, 301, 00123 Roma, Italy; k Cesky Metrologicky Institut Brno, degli Studi di CMI, Okruzni 30, 63800 Brno, Czech Republic; l Universita Roma Tor Vergata,Dipartimento di Ingegneria Industriale, Via del Politecnico 1, 00133 Roma, Italy Abstract: This presentation is intended to give an overview of the on-going work of the MetrExtRT research project. It is funded by the European Metrology Research Program (EMRP). It started the 1st of June 2012 for 36 months and covers radiotherapy based on medium- and high-energy X-rays, high-energy electrons, electronic brachytherapy and scanned proton and carbon ion beams. The project covers all the steps of the dose traceability from the primary standards to the tumour dose. The first step is to develop new primary standards where a lack of references complying with the CLINICAL IMPLEMENTATION OF 3D EPID-BASED IN VIVO DOSE VERIFICATION OF IMRT/VMAT TREATMENTS B. Mijnheer, A. Mans, I. Olaciregui-Ruiz, R. Rozendaal, H. Spreeuw, M. van Herk. Department of Radiation Oncology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands Purpose: To elucidate the clinical implementation of our 3D in vivo dosimetry method for daily patient-specific QA of IMRT/VMAT treatments. Methods: A back-projection algorithm has been further developed and implemented to enable automatic 3D in vivo dose verification of IMRT/ VMAT treatments using a-Si EPIDs. New software tools were clinically introduced to allow automated image acquisition, to periodically inspect the record-and-verify database, and to automatically run the EPID dosimetry software. The comparison of the EPID-reconstructed and planned dose distribution is done offline to raise automatically alerts and to schedule actions when deviations are detected. These tools are able to measure on the first day(s) of a treatment the 3D in vivo dose distribution thus tracing clinically relevant errors. It should replace pre-treatment verification, except for single fraction and large field treatments. Results: The implementation of fully automated 3D EPID-based in vivo dosimetry was able to replace pre-treatment verification for more than 90% of the patient treatments, which may safe resources for other purposes. The process has been fully automated and integrated in our clinical workflow where over 3,500 IMRT/VMAT treatments are verified each year. The results of the analysis are available a few minutes after delivery and alerts are immediately raised, without any human intervention, when deviations are outside clinical criteria. 3D in vivo dosimetry is able to detect a number of patient-related errors (e.g. anatomy variations, changes in treatment parameters between planning and delivery) that cannot be traced with pre-treatment verification. 10 to 20% of the verified plans needs inspection by a medical physicist, and about one out of 300 verifications requires consultation with the responsible radiation oncologist. Patient treatment is then resumed, or postponed until a new improved plan has been generated and verified. Conclusions: The automatic offline solution facilitated the large scale clinical implementation of 3D EPID-based in vivo dose verification of IMRT/ VMAT treatments. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE AAPM TASK GROUP 119 REPORT FOR IMRT COMMISSIONING ON A 3D DOSIMETRIC PHANTOM Raphaela Avgousti a, Ioannis Floros a, Maritina Rouchota a, Christina Armpilia a, Pantelis Karaiskos b, Maria Lyra a, Christos Antypas a. a 1st Department of Radiology, Medical Physics Unit, Aretaieion Hospital, Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) University of Athens, Greece; b Laboratory of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Athens, Greece Background: For IMRT commissioning in our department, the AAPM's TG119 Report was implemented on the Delta4 (Scandidos, Uppsala, Sweden) to evaluate step-and-shoot IMRT plans and verify the dose distribution using a 6MV linac photon beam. Materials and methods: TG-119 recommends a set of test cases to assess the overall accuracy of planning and delivery of IMRT treatments. Delta4 is used for quality assurance of patient specific treatment delivery. It is a cylindrical phantom consisting of two detector planes with p-type diodes that can measure point doses. Seven TG-119 plans, including the respective structure sets, were transferred on the Delta4 geometry. The respective dose distributions for a 6MV photon beam from a Siemens Oncor Impression linac with a multileaf collimator (82 leaves, 1cm thick) were calculated in the Oncentra v4.3 (Nucletron, Elekta) treatment planning system. Two preliminary tests were performed with simple parallelopposed fields irradiating the cylindrical phantom. Additionally, five more tests with mock structures were planned and irradiated with IMRT fields. Dose distribution for all test cases was calculated using a collapsed cone convolution algorithm for optimization and final dose calculation. TG119’s optimization goals were intended for all cases. For the acceptance of the verification process, gamma criteria of 3% dose and 3mm distance to agreement were used. Results: The gamma index passing rate for all tests was measured higher than 90%. Preliminary tests were measured 99.3% for anterior-posterior and 99.6% for the bands test. For the IMRT cases, it was measured 97.5% for multitarget, 99.6% for prostate, 98.5% for head and neck, 95.2 for the easy C-shape and 90.3% for the harder C-shape test. Discussion: TG119 structures and plans were easily transferred and implemented on the Delta4 dosimetric phantom. For all test cases the gamma index passing rate was measured higher than 90%. Delta4 phantom has proven to be fast applicable and reliable for the step-and-shoot IMRT commissioning following the TG119 recommended tests. ORGAN MOTION IN CHILDREN PRECISION RADIOTHERAPY DURING IMAGE-GUIDED HIGH- Arjan Bel, Rianne de Jong, Raquel Davilo Fajardo, Rasch Coen, Tanja Alderliesten. Academic Medical Center, Meibergdreef 9, 1105AZ, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Background: In image-guided radiotherapy accurate knowledge of organ motion is of the utmost importance. Especially for children, an inadequate margin definition can result in severe consequences: a decreased local control caused by a geographic miss of the tumor or an increased risk of late effects from unnecessary radiation to healthy tissues. Organ motion in adults has been widely analyzed, but quantitative data for children is extremely sparse. The aim of this study is to quantify kidney and diaphragm interfraction motion in children during radiotherapy. Materials and methods: Eight patients (age: 5-16 years) who underwent a cranio-spinal axis irradiation were included. Cone Beam CTs (CBCTs) were acquired during on the average 5 treatment sessions (out of 15) per patient. Per treatment session, three CBCTs were acquired, including the entire spinal cord and brain. CBCTs were analyzed using Elekta Synergy (version 4.5). Patients were first registered using bony anatomy. Subsequently, each kidney was registered separately with respect to the bony anatomy. Similarly, the diaphragm position was measured in the caudal-cranial (CC) direction. Interfraction motion was quantified in terms of overall mean and standard deviations (SDs) of the systematic (S) and random (s) translations in the three orthogonal directions (kidneys) and solely the CC-direction (diaphragm). Interpatient variation was analyzed by considering the range of mean translational deviations per patient. Results: Kidney motion could be measured on all CBCT datasets. The largest kidney motion was in the CC direction (Table 1). For the other directions, the SDs ranged from 1mm to 3mm; overall means were 1mm or less. The mean translational deviations per patient ranged from -11mm to 2mm for the right kidney and -4mm to 5mm for the left kidney in the CCdirection and were smaller for the other directions. 9 Diaphragm motion was measured for six patients, due to breathing artifacts in the reference CT. The magnitude was comparable to the kidney deviations (Table 1). Discussion: Most interfraction kidney motion during radiotherapy occurred in the CC-direction. The large interpatient variation calls for daily imaging and setup corrections where differences between left and right kidneys are taken into account. Table 1 Mean and standard deviations for both kidneys and the diaphragm. LR¼left-right, CC¼caudal-cranial and AP¼anterior-posterior. Right kidney Mean S s Left kidney Diaphragm LR (mm) CC (mm) AP (mm) LR (mm) CC (mm) AP (mm) CC (mm) 0.0 1.4 1.7 -3.4 5.4 3.6 0.0 2.5 2.8 0.0 2.2 2.2 0.1 3.4 3.1 0.0 2.7 2.5 -1.6 4.6 3.3 VIRTUAL DICOM-CT BASED PHANTOMS FOR THE ASSESSMENT OF RADIATION THERAPY TPS VOLUMETRIC ACCURACY L. Petrokokkinos a, A. Moutsatsos a, E. Pappas a, E. Pantelis a, P. Karaiskos a, b, P. Papagiannis a. a Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 11527 Athens, Greece; b Gamma Knife Department, Hygeia Hospital, Kifisias Avenue and 4 Erythrou Stavrou, Marousi, 15123 Athens, Greece Background: In modern radiotherapy, 3D imaging techniques are coupled with advanced irradiation techniques to deliver complex dose distributions intending to maximize the coverage of, usually complex, target shapes while sparing surrounding healthy tissues and thus to provide the highest therapeutic ratio. The decision on the optimal plan to be used for treatment is based on clinical indices (such as DVH), which in turn are based on the calculation of volumes of the target and surrounding organs at risk. The finally calculated index’s accuracy partially depends on the volumetric calculation accuracy. Materials and methods: DICOM-CT based virtual phantoms were developed to be used to quantify the volumetric calculation uncertainty in several TPSs used in modern 3D radiotherapy techniques (GammaPlan, MasterPlan, Eclipse). Several, simple geometrical shapes (spheres, cylinders, truncated cones, parallelepipeds and oval-shaped volumes), mathematically defined with predetermined dimensions, were used to roughly simulate typical organs at risk and targets (such as optic nerves, spinal cord, nodes, eyes, metastases, rectum, prostate, etc.). The phantoms were subsequently written in DICOM-CT files using specially developed MATLAB routines, resulting in two sets simulating the head and the pelvic region. Finally, each structure’s TPS calculated volume was compared with its actual volume. Results & Discussion: The accuracy of volume calculation heavily depends on the scanning parameters i.e. the way each shape is discretized, written in a DICOM file, delineated and finally defined in space. Thus the structures comprising each phantom were chosen to be of several different sizes and shapes, while the designed phantoms were written in DICOM-CT format using different discretization grids in terms of size and direction. Smaller voxel size, finer slice thickness and smaller slice spacing were found to increase the TPS volume calculation accuracy. Moreover the shape and size of each structure play a major role, as well as the discretization angle, the gray level differences of structures of interest relative to surrounding tissue and noise levels. Research implemented within framework of Action «Supporting Postdoctoral Researchers» of Operational Program “Education and Lifelong Learning” (Action's Beneficiary: General Secretariat for Research and Technology), co-financed by ESF and the Greek State. 4D CBCT IMAGE GUIDANCE IN SBRT FOR LUNG TUMORS A. Perez-Rozos, A. Roman Jobacho, I. Jerez Sainz, I. Garcia Rios, A. Otero, M. Lobato, J.C. Ramirez Ros, C. Jodar, J.A. Medina Carmona. 10 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Introduction and objective: To analyze 4D image guided accuracy and dose volume histograms in SBRT for lung tumors. Materials and methods: The treatment of forty patients with SBRT in lung cancer using 4D image guidance are analyzed in this work. Patients are inmovilized employing an arm support, knee fix and a dampening system. The respiration correlated 4D CT is used to delineate gross tumor volume (GTV) in 0% inspiration phase, this GTV is therefore propagated to eight other phases with autocontouring tools and combined to create an internal target volume (ITV). Comparing center of mass of GTV in every respiratory phase with respiratory curves a set of CT images are chosen as reference. In this reference CT organs at risk are contoured and it is selected to match in the daily image guided radiotherapy (IGRT). IGRT using anatomy fiducials respiration correlated 4DCBCT (symmetry xvi, Elekta) with automatic registration of the planning reference CT is used to setup patient in every treatment session. Results were compared for three registration techniques: 3D CBCT using mean ITV and soft tissue registration, 4dCBCT clipbox and bone anatomy registration (4D bCBCT), and 4D soft tissue registration using a 0.5 cm mask from ITV (4D mCBCT). Results: Significant differences in ITV localization were observed between 4D mCBCT and the other modalities, up to 3.1 mm ± 1.2 mm (3D vector). The differences between 4D bCBCT and 4D mCBCT are closer than 4DbCBCT and 3D CBCT. These differences are larger when respiratory amplitude increase. Mean respiratory amplitude was 6.8 mm ± 4.0 mm when measured in simulation CT, in agreement with 6.2 ± 3.8 mm when measured in 4D CBCT. Visual comparison of reference respiratory curve and treatment daily respiratory curve makes possible to asses reproducibility of patients and tumor position reproducibility. Interobserver variability was reduced using 4D mCBCT and soft tissue automatic registration. With this protocol we can assert that interpatient variability in dose volume histograms is due mainly to treatment planning technique and tumor volume definition, and not directly correlated with motion amplitude. Conclusions: Respiration correlated 4D CBCT with soft tissue registration improves accuracy of IGRT because of the more precise target localization in the presence of respiratory motion, allowing the comparison of reference respiratory curve with treatment respiratory curve. Moreover, the system (symmetry xvi, Elekta) enables the realization of 4D CBCT without external surrogates with good correlation with reference 4D CT using external sensors. PILOT DOSE INTERCOMPARISONS OF 3D AND 4D ADVANCED LUNG RADIOTHERAPY D.I. Thwaites a,b, C.R. Hansen a,c, M. Kafrouni a, M. Caloz a, Q. Leturgie a, S. Corde d, S. Downes d, J. Barber a, e, J. Sykes a, b, P. Juneja a, J. Lehmann a. a Institute of Medical Physics, School of Physics, University of Sydney, Australia; b Medical Physics, Leeds Teaching Hospitals and University of Leeds, UK; c Radiation Physics, Odense University Hospital, Denmark; d Medical Physics, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick (Sydney), NSW, Australia; e Medical Physics, Nepean Hospital, Kingswood (Penrith), NSW, Australia As part of an evaluation of advanced radiotherapy (RT) technology, a number of pilot intercomparisons have been developed and carried out of planning and ‘treatment’ delivery for advanced lung treatments ( FFF beams, VMAT, SBRT and 4D RT, etc). There are few, or no, reported audits/ intercomparisons of many of these combinations. Four main studies are involved, mainly on 6MV beams: i) An SBRT plan parameter comparison across 6 combinations of linac and TPS, using FFF and FF beams; for three lung patients, having targets: close to chest wall; close to bronchial tree; more central in the lung. ii) A consistent Arccheck-based dose delivery intercomparison of these plans; currently on-going, with tolerances of 3%/3mm on distribution, 3% on isocentre dose. iii) An end-to-end test of 4D planning and delivery in 5 centres following their current (different) standard approaches, using an in-house developed 4D thorax phantom, with a variable movement lung ‘tumour’. A mini-ionchamber was used (5% tolerance). iv) The latter was extended to test 4D dose distributions, using a modified ‘target’ with radiochromic film in multiple planes; currently undergoing initial testing. Results have been encouraging: i) differences in plan quality between FF and FFF were small. Protocol violations appeared to inversely correlate with clinical SBRT VMAT experience (up to a factor of 6); ii) initial results indicate high Arccheck gamma passing rates, but some few % average differences in absolute doses, currently under investigation. iii) all 4D measurements were within the pre-determined 5% tolerance, regardless of equipment, methods or techniques. iv) static and small amplitude 4D dose distributions pass dosimetric testing at acceptable levels, but more significant problems are observed for greater amplitudes of motion, currently under investigation. This work provides initial testing and feasibility/pilot studies of audit/ intercomparison phantoms and methods for 3D and 4D advanced RT treatments. This is initially mainly for lung treatment but is extendable to other sites and linkable to IGRT audits. Once tested, each system is gradually being used across NSW RT centres to test the implementation of advanced RT methods. The work has potential for use as the basis of development of national audits. OBSERVATIONS ON MR-LINAC SYSTEMS AND RATIONALE FOR MR-LINAC USE: THE AUSTRALIAN MR-LINAC PROJECT AS AN EXAMPLE D.I. Thwaites a, b, P. Keall c, L. Holloway d, J. Sykes b, e, V. Cosgrove e. a Institute of Medical Physics, School of Physics, University of Sydney, Australia; b Medical Physics, Leeds Teaching Hospitals and University of Leeds, UK; c Radiation Physics Lab, Medical Faculty, University of Sydney, Australia; d Medical Physics, Liverpool Cancer Therapy Centre, Liverpool (Sydney), Australia; e Medical Physics, St James’s Institute of Oncology, Leeds Teaching Hospitals. Leeds, UK Image guided radiotherapy (IGRT) at the point of treatment is now widely available in RT centres, based mainly on 2D and 3D x-ray systems, but with ultrasound and other systems also used. MRI can provide excellent soft tissue imaging and the potential for functional imaging and a number of hybrid systems are being developed with MR in the RT treatment room for imaging at the point of treatment. Notable examples are the pioneering MR-linac work at Utrecht and the Viewray system combining MRI with Co60 radiation sources, now in clinical use. The University of Sydney in partnership with Liverpool Hospital, is developing an MR-linac system to investigate comparative performance of in-line and perpendicular (to the magnet bore) systems, in a project lead by Paul Keall. The rationale of MRlinac use generally and the potential of the different layouts and systems is reviewed and discussed. The literature on a range of approaches for combining MRI imaging and radiotherapy treatment systems is reviewed, to summarise the different systems, their status, their potential advantages and disadvantages and their intended development. The Australian system (6 MV linac, 1T magnet) is described in more detail along with the comparative rationales and likely advantages and disadvantages of in-line and perpendicular systems. Results. Pros and cons of the different systems are significant, but all provide the advantages of MRI imaging, although with different strength magnets and hence different potential. The likely advantages of the in-line mode in the Australian system include benefits when considering effects on the linac, although the layout requires the patient to be rotated, with potential organ changes to be assessed and compensated for. Electron transport effects to the patient and in the patient between the two modes are mixed. Discussion and conclusion. MR-linacs have the potential for improved IGRT and functional IGRT, the latter linked to biological targeting and dose painting. Some systems are in clinical use or close to clinical use. Their wider implementation is likely to follow, leading to a new paradigm in IGRT. MEDICAL DOSIMETRY WITH A RL/OSL PROTOTYPE: 6 MV PHOTON BEAMS L.F. Nascimento a,b, d, F. Vanhavere b, Y. De Deene b, c, D. Verellen d. a Gent University, Department Radiotherapy and Experimental Cancer Research, De Pintelaan, 185, 9000 Gent, Belgium; b SCKCEN Belgian Nuclear Research Centre, Boeretang 200, Mol, Belgium; c Institute of Medical Physics, School of Physics e University of Sydney, Australia; d University of VUB, UZ Brussel, Radiotherapie, Groep Medische Fysica, Brussels, Belgium Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Contemporary therapeutic radiation oncology treatments require the delivery of highly localized doses of radiation to well defined target regions inside the patient. The efficacy of the radiation treatment, however, requires knowledge of the absorbed dose in the organ of interest to better than ±5% as there is a higher risk of local recurrence or complications with incorrect exposure. Furthermore, since it is inevitable that healthy organs and tissue will also be exposed during treatment, overexposure increases the risk of secondary cancers. International regulations [1, 2] have been introduced to adapt to the fast introduction of new radiotherapy technologies and demand an improvement of in vivo dosimetry. Ideally, a real-time in vivo dosimeter would measure absorbed doses during radiotherapy. Optical stimulated luminescent (OSL) dosimeters, using the high sensitive material Al2O3:C, have been successfully used for measuring whole body doses that result from exposure to high energetic photon and beta radiation. OSL dosimeters have also been introduced in medical dosimetry of low and high LET beams [3, 4]. Al2O3:C detectors can also be used as real time dosemeters, because the emitted stimulated light can be guided via light fibers to a remotely placed photomultiplier tube. Furthermore, during exposure to ionizing radiation Al2O3:C emits radioluminescent light (RL), of which the intensity is proportional to the dose rate [5]. In this study, we investigated the dosimetric response of an optical fibre coupled Al203:C RL/OSL dosemeter prototype. In our prototype, a PMMA fibre is coupled to an Al2O3:C detector composed of microparticles of Al2O3:C with diameters ranging from 5 mm to 35 mm dissolved in a photocurable polymer. The RL/OSL dosimeter prototype is a portable and robust instrument that has been developed for the routine assessment of patient exposure to ionizing radiation during radiotherapy treatments. The design principles of hardware and software are described elsewhere [6]. In this study, we present the results obtained using radioluminescence (RL) from Al2O3:C irradiated with a 6 MV linear accelerator (Compact, Elekta, Crawly) and preliminary results obtained using optically stimulated luminescence (OSL). The dose rate dependence was assessed by varying the photon flux (MU/ min) of the linac, effectively changing the pulse rate and keeping the dose per pulse fixed. It was found that the RL measured dose response demonstrated low dose-rate dependency, to within 1%. The dose response was found to be linear in a dose range from 0.1 up to a dose of 6 Gy, with reproducibility below 0.5%. The dosimeter is benchmarked by evaluating the ability to measure depthdose distributions and lateral dose profiles accurately. RL derived dose profiles have been compared with dose profiles measured with a standard ion chamber (PTW). Depth-dose distributions in water were acquired for a 6 MV photon beam using a 1010 cm2 field, set at 350 MU/min, corresponding with 3.5 Gy/min at 10 cm depth. All data have been normalized to the depth-dose maximum. The RL measured dose agreed with the ionization chamber measured dose to within 1% (1 SD) for depths from 0.5 to 20 cm. Lateral dose profile was set at 350 MU/min (3.5 Gy/min at depth 10 cm), using a 10x10 cm2 field size. Differences between measured RL and ion chamber are within 1.5% for de direct beam and 5% in the penumbra region. These results show that the RL/OSL detector system makes it suitable for measurements of depth and lateral dose distributions in clinical photon beams. Furthermore, basic characteristics of OSL in irradiated fibers with Al2O3:C for dosimetry in therapeutic 6 MV photon beam were investigated. References [1] International Commission on Radiological Protection, 2000. Prevention of accidental exposures to patients undergoing radiation therapy. ICRP Publication 86. Ann. ICRP 30, 1e70. [2] IAEA Human Health Reports 8, 2013. Development of Procedures for In Vivo Dosimetry in Radiotherapy. IAEA Publication. [3] Viamonte, A., Rosa, L. A., Buckley, L. A., Cherpak, A., & Cygler, J. E. (2008). Radiotherapy dosimetry using a commercial OSL system. Medical Physics 35. [4] Akselrod, M.S., Lucas, A.C., Polf, J.C., McKeever, S.W.S., 1998. Optically stimulated luminescence of Al2O3. Radiat. Meas. 29, 391-399. 11 [5] Marckmann CJ, Andersen CE, Aznar MC, Bøtter-Jensen L. Optical fibre dosemeter systems for clinical applications based on radioluminescence and optically stimulated luminescence from Al2O3:C. Radiat Prot Dosimetry 120(1-4), 28-32. [6] Nascimento, L. F, Vanhavere, F, Boogers, E, Vandecasteele, J, De Deene, Y. 2014. Medical Dosimetry Using a RL/OSL Prototype. Radiation Measurements. ION BEAMS OF THERAPEUTICAL ENERGY ON PMMA PHANTOMS MEASUREMENTS IN VIEW OF AN INNOVATIVE DOSE PROFILER REALIZATION FOR ON LINE MONITORING IN HADRONTHERAPY TREATMENTS F. Bellini a, b, l, F. Collamati a, b, l, E. De Lucia c, l, R. Faccini a, b, l, F. Ferroni a, b, l, P.M. Frallicciardi a, e, l, M. Marafini a, e, l, I. Mattei c, i, l, S. V. Patera b, d, e, l, L. Piersanti c, d, l, D. Pinci b, l, A. Morganti b, l, Russomando a, b, f, l, A. Sarti c, d, l, A. Sciubba b, d, l, E. Solfaroli Camillocci f, l, C. di Roma, Roma, Voena a, b, l. a Dipartimento di Fisica, Sapienza Universita Italy; b INFN Sezione di Roma, Roma, Italy; c Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati dell’INFN, Frascati, Italy; d Dipartimento di Scienze di Base e Applicate per di Roma, Roma, Italy; e Museo Storico della Ingegneria, Sapienza Universita Fisica e Centro Studi e Ricerche “E. Fermi”, Roma, Italy; f Center for Life Nano Science@Sapienza, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Roma, Italy; i di Roma, Roma, Dipartimento di Matematica e Fisica, Roma Tre Universita Italy; l Dipartimento di Ingegneria Meccanica e Aerospaziale, Sapienza di Roma, Roma, Italy Universita Hadrontherapy is a technique that uses accelerated charged ions for cancer treatment. The high irradiation precision and conformity achievable during hadrontherapy treatments allow the tumor control while sparing the surrounding healthy tissues. The improved spatial selectiveness required the development of a new dose monitoring techniques. It has been proved that secondary protons emitted at large angles can be used to monitor Bragg Peak (BP) position and the related dose release. In this contribution we present the measured flux and energy spectra for secondary particles produced by 12C He and O ion beams of therapeutical energy impinging on PMMA phantoms. We found that the rate of produced protons is large enough to provide the track sample needed for a fast online monitor operating during a typical treatment with the required O(mm) spatial resolution. A clear correlation between the proton generation region and BP position has been measured. In this work we also discuss a novel hadrontherapy monitor (DoseProfiler) whose technology is based on the backtracking of secondary charged particles and prompt photons emitted during the irradiation of the patient, allowing for a precise reconstruction of the BP position and a measurement of the released dose. The DoseProfiler combines a tracker detector made of scintillating fibers and a calorimeter built with pixelated LYSO crystals, for gamma detection and energy measurements. The six tracker squared layers, built from two orthogonal planes of squared scintillating fibers, will provide the particle direction information, while the LYSO crystals will measure the particle energy. PROTON RADIOGRAPHY IMAGING TOOL TO IMPROVE A PROTON THERAPY TREATMENT N. Ghazanfari a, M.-J. Van Goethem b, M. Van Beuzekom c, T. Klaver c, J. Visser c, S. Brandenburg a, A.K. Biegun a. a KVI-Center for Advanced Radiation Technology, University of Groningen, The Netherlands; b Department of Radiation Oncology, University Medical Center, University of Groningen, The Netherlands; c National Institute for Subatomic Physics (Nikhef), Amsterdam, The Netherlands Background: Radiotherapy is one of the most effective and a common method in cancer treatment. Typically in clinics, patients are treated with photons. Treatment with charged particles, mostly protons, due to their highly localized dose deposition, have a significant advantage over the commonly used photons in achieving a sufficient radiation dose to the tumor area to ensure complete tumor destruction, while at the same time minimizing the dose to the surrounding healthy tissue [1]. 12 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) The quality of treatment with protons critically depends on accurate predictions of the proton stopping powers of the traversed tissues. Nowadays, proton treatment planning is based on stopping power information derived from X-ray Computed Tomography (CT) images. The conversion of HU values from the CT to proton stopping powers has systematic uncertainties in the calculated proton range in a patient of approximately 3-4% and even up to 10% in regions containing bone [1-7]. A direct measurement of the proton stopping power by transmission radiography of high-energy protons will make it possible to reduce significantly these uncertainties. Materials and methods: Higher energy of a proton beam, compared to a therapeutic beam, minimizes the multiple scattering of protons in the traversed tissues [8-13]. By measuring both the energy loss and the angular deviation from the original path of each proton, the two complementary radiographs can be obtained. The combination of the energy and scattering radiographs delivers the complete information about the proton paths. In presented studies, the novel micro time projection chambers detectors, being developed at Nikhef, are used in the radiography experiment, which has been performed on phantoms with the double scattered proton beam of 150 MeV at the AGOR cyclotron. The experiment was simulated with the Geant4-based simulation package, TOPAS [14]. Results: The first experimental and simulated proton energy radiographs have been obtained for the same geometry with different density materials. The scattering radiographs are being analized. Discussion: It is concluded that both experimental and simulated proton energy radiographs are in a good agreement. Further analysis merging both types of radiographs is ongoing to finally obtain the accurate values of proton stopping powers. [1] Plautz, T. et al.: 200 MeV Proton Radiography Studies with a Hand Phantom Using a Prototype Proton CT Scanner, IEEE NSS/MIC (2012) R04-R24 [2] Schneider, U., Pedroni, E., Lomax A.: The calibration of CT Hounsfield units for radiotherapy treatment planning, Phys. Med. Biol. 41 (1996) 111-124 [3] Schneider W., Bortfeld T., Schlegel W.: Correlation between CT numbers and tissue parameters needed for Monte Carlo simulations of clinical dose distributions, Phys. Med. Biol. 45 (2000) 459-478 [4] Paganetti, H.: Range uncertainties in proton therapy and the role of Monte Carlo simulations, Phys. Med. Biol. 57 (2012) R99-R117 [5] Landry, G. et al.: Deriving concentrations of oxygen and carbon in human tissues using single- and dual-energy CT for ion therapy applications, Phys. Med. Biol. 58 (2013) 5029e5048 [6] Schneider, U., Pedroni E.: Proton radiography as a tool for quality control in proton therapy, Med. Phys. 22(4) (1995) 353-363 [7] Cirrone, G. et al.: The Italian project for a proton imaging device, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment, 576 (2007) 194-197 [8] I. Rinaldi, “Investigations of novel imaging methods using therapeutic beams”, PhD, University of Heidelberg, Germany (2011) [9] U. Schneider and E. Pedroni, “Multiple Coulomb scattering and spatial resolution in proton radiography”, Med. Phys. 21, 1657-1664 (1994) [10] H. Ryu, E. Song, J. Lee, and J. Kim, “Density and spatial resolutions of proton radiography using a range modulation technique”, Phys. Med. Biol. 53, 5461-5468 (2008) €kel, and K. Parodi, [11] I. Rinaldi, S. Brons, J. Gordon, R. Panse, B. Voss, O. Ja “Experimental characterization of a prototype detector system for carbon ion radiography and tomography”, Phys. Med. Biol. 58, 413-427 (2013) [12] R.W. Schulte, V. Bashkirov, M.C.L. Klock, T. Li, A.J. Wroe, I. Evseev, D.C. Williams, T. Satogata, “Density resolution of proton computed tomography”, Med. Phys. 32, 1035-1046 (2005) [13] V. Denyak, S. Paschuk, H. Schelin, R. Rocha, J. Setti, M. Klock, I. Evseev, O. Yevseyeva, “Dose energy dependence in proton imaging”, Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A, 652, 747-750 (2011) [14] Perl, J. et al.: TOPAS-An innovative proton Monte Carlo platform for research and clinical applications, Med. Phys. 39 (2012) 6818-6837 EXPLORING NEW PATHS IN PARTICLE THERAPY: A MONTE CARLO STUDY ON THE USE OF SPATIAL FRACTIONATION OF THE DOSE C. Peucelle, I. Martínez-Rovira, Y. Prezado. IMNC e UMR 8165, IN2P3-CNRS, Universit e Paris 7, Universit e Paris 11, Orsay, France Purpose: In order to overcome the current limitations of radiation therapy (RT), a new irradiation approach was explored. It combines the well-established healthy tissue sparing of minibeam radiation therapy (MBRT) [1,2] and the high dose conformality of particle therapy. In particular, this new concept might trigger the re-discovery of the use of “very” heavy-ions (Ne and heavier) in therapy. Indeed, despite their very high effectiveness in the treatment of hypoxic radioresistant tumours, their use was discarded due to important toxicity in healthy tissue [3]. Materials and methods: Dose distributions were evaluated by mean of the GATE (v.6.1)/Geant4 Monte Carlo simulation platform [4]. Arrays of minibeams (700 mm 2 cm) of five different heavy-ions (O, Ne, Si, Ar, Fe), covering a 2 2 cm2 area, impinged on a cylindrical water phantom mimicking a human head (16 cm high and 16 cm diameter). Realistic beam divergences were considered. Beam energies were chosen so that the Bragg peak was located at 8 cm-depth, which was assumed to be the tumour location. Dose distributions were scored considering several center-to-center distances (c-t-c) from 1400 to 3500 mm. To spare the healthy tissues high peak-to-valley dose ratios (PVDR) and low valley doses are required [1]. Therefore, as a figure of merit, PVDR, valley doses and penumbras were assessed. Additionally, the contribution of hadronic and electromagnetic secondary processes was also evaluated. Results: Very high PVDR (>100) and low valley doses were reached in the healthy tissues. Extremely small penumbras (<450mm) were also observed. These results suggest a potential gain in healthy tissue sparing. In the tumour (Bragg peak position), the dominant contribution to the peak and valley doses was associated to hadronic processes. Whereas, in the healthy tissue, the relative weight between hadronic and electromagnetic processes depends on the type of incident ion, the c-t-c distance and the depth. Conclusion: Preliminary results show that a spatial fractionation of the dose in heavy-ion therapy might provide a promising alternative for radioresistant tumours while preserving healthy tissue. Biological studies are warranted. References [1] F. A. Dilmanian et al., Neurooncol., vol. 4, p. 26-39 (2002). [2] Y. Prezado et al., J. Synchrotron Radiat. 19, 60e65 (2012). [3] J. Castro et al, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys., 29 647-655 (1994) [4] S. Jan et al, Phys. Med. Biol. 56 881-901 (2011) Key-words: Heavy-ion therapy, Minibeam radiation therapy (MBRT), Monte Carlo simulations A COMPARISON OF TWO PRACTICAL APPROACHES FOR CONE BEAM COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY (CBCT) DOSIMETRY USING MONTE CARLO TECHNIQUE A. Abuhaimed a, b, C.J. Martin b, M. Sankaralingam a, D. Gentle c. a Radiotherapy Physics, Department of Clinical Physics and Bioengineering, Beatson West of Scotland Cancer Centre, Glasgow, UK; b Department of Clinical Physics, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK; c Health Physics, Department of Clinical Physics and Bioengineering, Gartnavel Royal Hospital, Glasgow, UK Purpose: Studies have shown that the computed tomography dose index (CTDI) measured with a 100 mm long pencil ionisation chamber, used for conventional CT scanners, is an inappropriate dose metric for use with cone beam CT (CBCT). A number of alternative practical approaches have been proposed to overcome the limitations. The aim of this project was to compare two of these in terms of their dose efficiency using Monte Carlo simulation. Materials and methods: Monte Carlo (EGSnrc/BEAMnrc) and (EGSnrc/ DOSXYZnrc) codes were used to model dose distributions within PMMA head and body phantoms with 16 and 32 cm diameters respectively for the kV imaging system of the Varian Truebeam linac. The Monte Carlo model was benchmarked against experimental measurements. The approaches studied were: (1) proposal by IEC (CTDIIEC) to replicate CTDI100 for a long pencil chamber, and (2) point dose measurements D(0) with a small ion chamber. Three phantom lengths (150, 600, 900 mm) were Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) used, where the latter two were considered to represent infinitely long head and body phantoms, respectively. The efficiencies were estimated as the ratios of CTDIIEC and D(0) in 150 mm long phantoms to CTDI∞ calculated within the infinitely long phantoms. Beam widths studied ranged from 60 to 300 mm. Results: For beams of width 80 mm, the CTDIIEC,w was more efficient in terms of recording a greater proportion of the absorbed radiation, but for wider beams >80 mm the D(0)w was more efficient. The ratios for CTDIIEC,w were approximately constant over all beam widths, where the values for the head and body phantoms were 82.2 ± 0.9% and 75.7 ± 0.7%, respectively. The ratios for D(0)w in the head and body phantoms increased from 73% to 94% and 71% to 92%, respectively, with beam width as the beam extended beyond the phantom edges, respectively. Conclusion: As most CBCT machines utilize a beam width >80 mm, results suggest that the D(0) approach is the better option for CBCT dosimetry. This involves fewer measurements than CTDIIEC,w and is more practical for regular use in the medical environment. PATIENT DOSE ESTIMATION IN CARDIAC COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY WITH A 320 DETECTOR ROW SCANNER BASED ON MONTE CARLO SIMULATION ndez-Giro n a, A. Calzado c, M. M. Cros a, J. Geleijns b, R.M.S. Joemai b, I. Herna d a a Dewey , M. Salvado . Unitat de Física Medica, Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV), Spain; b Radiology Department, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), The Netherlands; c Departamento de Radiología, Universidad Complutense de Mardrid (UCM), Spain; d Department of Radiology, Charite. €tsmedizin Berlin, Germany Universita Purpose: To estimate organ doses and effective dose for CT calcium scoring, CT coronary angiography and CT myocardial perfusion according to the internationally recognized recommendations of the ICRP. Materials and methods: Monte Carlo simulations based on the EGS4 code were used to model the Aquilion ONE CT scanner and the two ICRP computational phantoms representing the standard female and male patient models. Dose calculations were performed for the cardiac CT acquisition protocol used in a multicenter study for the assessment of the calcium score, coronary arteries CTA and CT myocardial perfusion (CORE320). All acquisitions were performed as axial volumetric scans, covering the entire heart in a single (low heart rate 65 bpm) or dual (high heart rate 66 bpm) heart beats. This was done by positioning the phantoms in the isocenter (common practice in MC calculations) and by centering their hearts to the rotation axis (clinical practice). The effect of removing the arms from the phantom was also evaluated since the ICRP phantoms have their arms stretched along the body whereas in clinical practice the arms are removed from the scanned volume. Results and discussion: Effective dose averaged for females and males was 1.9 mSv for coronary calcium score; 5.1 mSv for coronary CTA including rest cardiac perfusion at low heart rates, 9.7 mSv at high heart rates; and 4.3 mSv for stress cardiac perfusion at low heart rates, 8.5 mSv at high heart rates. No significant differences in effective dose were observed for centering versus off-centering for both phantoms. Removing the arms from the scan region led to an increase of effective dose of about 6% to 8%. For coronary CTA and rest cardiac perfusion and using the most relevant configuration (phantom off-centered without arms) at low heart rate, the highest organ doses averaged for females and males were 16 mGy in breast, 15.5 mGy in heart and 11 mGy in lung. The k-factors used in other studies led to underestimations of effective dose by a factor of 2 and 3 for an average male and for an average female patient, respectively, compared to this study results. A NEW OPTICAL PHOTON TRANSPORT MONTE CARLO CODE FOR MODELLING PARALLEL- AND FOCUSED-ELEMENT SCINTILLATION DETECTOR ARRAYS AND ITS USE FOR EXAMINATION OF THE FULL MTF RESPONSES OF THICK SEGMENTED CSI(TL) SCINTILLATORS Mohammad Amin Mosleh-Shirazi a, Zinat Zarrini-Monfared b, Sareh Karbasi a, Ali Zamani b. a Physics Unit, Department of Radiotherapy and 13 Oncology, Iran; b Department of Medical Physics and Engineering, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Purpose: Arrays of thick segmented crystalline scintillators are considered useful x-ray converters in electronic portal imaging and cone-beam megavoltage CT for radiotherapy verification. They consist of a 2D matrix of scintillators separated by optically opaque, reflective septal walls and can offer a high quantum efficiency and acceptable spatial resolution. However, it has been shown using ionizing-radiation-only simulations, that in such parallel-detector-element arrays, obliquely incident x-rays reduce modulation transfer function (MTF) performance and degrade spatial resolution in peripheral areas. A focused geometry has therefore been proposed. The full performance of such a focused geometry is still unclear. The aim of this work was to investigate the imaging performance of such arrays using a detector model that supported light transport, as well as x-rays and electrons. Methods: To simulate x-ray and electron transport, we used the MCNP Monte Carlo code to model the required array geometries added to a validated model of a 6 MV linac head. Then, the transport of the generated optical photons was modelled using ScintSim2, an optical Monte Carlo code we wrote in MATLAB for simulation of parallel- and focused-element scintillation detector arrays. We present ScintSim2 and report the results of using it to examine the full (ionizing and optical radiation) MTF responses of focused- and parallel-element geometries, for a large array of 33 mm2 CsI(Tl) elements with thicknesses of 10, 40 and 60 mm. A slit geometry was simulated to obtain the line spread function (LSF) of the energy deposited in the elements (radiation-only) or the number of optical photons incident on an underlying screen (full simulation). Then, for each case, a composite LSF was calculated and Fourier transformed to obtain the MTF. Results: Differences were observed between the radiation-only and full MTF performances of the arrays. At the Nyquist frequency, focused elements provided an increase of up to 8 times in peripheral-area full MTF values. Further, the light exiting thicker scintillators exhibited a more forward-directed distribution. Conclusion: The observed differences in the results obtained with and without optical photon simulation justify the additional effort of including light transport when optimizing these promising thick segmented detectors. Key words: Optical photon transport; Detector optimization; Thick segmented crystalline scintillators; Monte Carlo simulation; Megavoltage electronic portal imaging; Radiotherapy treatment verification. OPERATIONAL EXPERIENCE FROM THE MANAGEMENT OF I-131 LIQUID WASTES FROM PATIENTS TREATED FOR THYROID CANCER IN “THEAGENION” CANCER HOSPITAL M. Tsiouprou, M. Kotzassarlidou, N. Papadopoulos, S. Georgitzikis, V. Chatzipavlidou. Nuclear Medicine Dept., THEAGENIO” Cancer Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece Aim: Problems and pitfalls exist in management of I-131 liquid wastes, in hospitals treating patients for thyroid cancer. In this report, data of current practice drawn from the Nuclear Medicine Department of “Theagenio” Cancer Hospital, where three radioactive decay tanks are installed, are presented. Materials and methods: Records of time period 2011-2013 are reported.Two single-bed isolation rooms exist, linked to three tanks positioned in hospital’s second basement. Each tank’s volume is 6500lt, whereas total capacity of filling is 85%, ie 5525lt. Tanks are equipped with submersible blade systems and ultrasound system for level monitoring. Electronic control system exists in the medical physics department, in order to inspect effluent levels of tanks. Based on biokinetic data from ICRP 53 (ICRP, 1988), I-131 activity discharged in the sewage system is equal to 95% of the administered dose to each patient. Prior tank’s drainage, samples are taken out from it and activity concentration is measured by 1024 Multichannel Analyzer spectrometer of Captus 3000 Thyroid Uptake System. Records for filling, closing, emptying, interruption of operation are saved into the PC running the system’s management. SPSS Statistics was used for statistical analysis of patient data, calculation of tank’s mean time for filling and delay. General equation estimating activity at the end of filling 14 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) phase, as a function of the mean value of administered activity per patient treated each week was also acquired. Results: 675 patients were treated through 2011-2013. Mean administered activity 113,5±31.8mCi. Tank’s filling phase:42±4days.Rest decay duration:63±3days. I-131 activity,T, at the end of tank’s filling phase is given by the formula: T¼5.6*Aavg,[mCi] whereas Aavg[mCi] is the average amount of administered activity during tank’s filling time period. Tvalues:560-835 mCi and average monthly concentration 0.13mCi/lt. In accordance with Greek legislation, maximum limit of discharge is 110MBq /day. Liquid samples collected at releasing time documented radioactive releases of I-131, equal to those derived from estimations, much below recommended levels of once release. During the above time period a tank’s operation was interrupted twice as a consequence of clogging. Graphs that depict the measurements beyond are also provided. Conclusions: Above real practice data may be useful for further studies of environmental radiation protection from liquid waste of patients undergoing I-131 therapy for thyroid cancer. Physicists, taking into consideration ALARA principle, economic and social factors, must design in advance, emergency plan assuring that, any individual’s exposure is kept to the minimum practicable, in case of system’s mulfunction. A COMPARISON OF PATIENT SPECIFIC DOSIMETRIC CALCULATIONS OBTAINED BY PLANAR IMAGES AND MONTE CARLO SIMULATION IN 111 IN OCTREOTIDE THERAPY Maria Argyrou a, Maria Andreou a, Nefeli Lagopati a, Irini Baka a, Ioannis Vamvakas b, Maria Lyra a. a Radiation Physics Unit, A’ Radiology Department, Kapodistrian University of Athens, Aretaieion Hospital, 76 Vas. Sophias Ave, Athens, Greece; b Medical Physics Department, Iaso Hospital, Athens, Greece Aim: The purpose of this study is to estimate absorbed doses in the lesions and in critical organs after administration of therapeutic dose of 111 In octreotide, in patients diagnosed for neuroendocrine tumors in liver. Methods: 20 patients, with histologically confirmed neuroendocrine tumors located in liver and normal kidney function were infused therapeutic dose of 111In octreotide, with mean activity of 4500 MBq, via intrahepatic catheterization, which is well established technique in our Institution in hepatocellular carcinoma and neuroendocrine tumors treatments. The dosimetric protocol was based on quantitative bi-planar whole body scintigrams to determine the pharmacokinetic properties and the estimation of the imparted energy per unit of accumulated radioactivity implementing the Monte Carlo method. Planar scintigraphy was performed after radiopharmaceutical infusion, through hepatic arterial port, 24 and at 48 h post infusion, for the patients with liver lesions. For this reason, gamma camera was calibrated in order to estimate source organ activity considering count rate, patient’s body diameter and source organ size. The MIRD schema, as well as the Monte Carlo simulation (MCNP code) was employed, for absorbed dose calculations. The Monte Carlo geometries, were prepared in order to approach the patient’s anatomy. Two patients, one male and one female of similar weights (70 kg), were considered to be as representative cases, to be used in the simulation process. The tumor was consider as sphere inside a spherical liver and the radioactive source was considered as point source. One million events were counted. Results: The results from planar scintigraphy showed that the tumor absorbed dose ranged from 2.5 to 18.4 mGy/ MBq, depending on the lesion size. The overall standard deviation is about 11 % for planar data calculations compared to those, obtained by Monte Carlo simulation. Conclusion: High deviations of absorbed dose between patients were observed. Consequently patient specific dosimetry calculations are necessary in order to help the physician to optimize the planning of the treatment, avoid side effects to healthy tissue and assign administered dose to treatment results, so the optimization of this method is very desirable. Monte Carlo simulation is an effective and easy method for dose estimation taking into account anatomical features without the need for experimental processes. VALUE OF DOSIMETRIC CALCULATIONS OF SM-153 BETA PARTICLEEMITTER, IN TREATMENT OF METASTATIC BONE DISEASE Irini Baka a, Maria Argyrou a, Marina Michalitsi a, Maritina Rouchota a, Alexia Valassi a, Maria Lyra a, b. a Radiation Physics Unit,1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion hospital, University of Athens, Greece; a Nuclear Medicine Section, 1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion hospital, University of Athens, Greece Aim: Optimum treatment planning of patients suffering from painful skeletal metastases requires accurate calculations concerning absorbed dose in metastatic lesions and critical organs, such as red marrow. Delivering high absorbed doses to tumor cells, while limiting radiation dose to normal tissue is the aim of palliation therapy. Such a combination can be achieved with the application of bone-seeking phosphonate ethylenediaminetetra methylenephosphonic acid (EDTMP) chelated with the beta particle-emitting radionuclide Sm-153. Methods: In our institution, patients received (18-37) MBq/kg per treatment cycle which has proved to be highly justified and efficient. Planar scintigraphic images were acquired and used for an estimation of dose in site specific lesions, according to the MIRD schema. For counts conversion to activities, calibration factors were calculated. Planar images of cylindrical water - filled phantom, with five different known amounts of activity, were obtained. Corrections for scatter attenuation, collimator efficiency and detector response were calculated. The MIRDOSE 3.1 software was used for the calculation of spot site absorbed dose. For the crucial bone marrow dosimetry two different approaches are presented. Marrow rich regions, sacral area and sternum were drawn. Counts obtained and the mean residential time was the input for MIRDOSE software template. By the second procedure, the activity in the whole body was calculated as the residual of the activity excreted in urine, AWB (t) ¼A0Acum (Ur) (t). Using the MIRD formalism, DRM ¼Acum (skel) *0.5 *[SRM)TB +SRM)CB] assuming an equal distribution of skeletal activity in the trabecular bone and cortical bone and neglecting the contribution of activity in blood. S values (absorbed dose per cumulated activity) were taken from RADAR software. Results/conclusion: The site specific lesion dosimetry revealed a relatively high uptake of Sm-153-EDTMP. The estimated marrow dose from the latter procedure was 1.179 ±0.8 mGy / MBq demonstrating a good approach comparing the results from the imaging method indicating heterogeneity of the marrow itself or the radionuclide distribution. Patient specific dosimetry is of primary importance in helping establish the optimum activity dosage for each patient enhancing the therapeutic efficacy with limited red marrow doses and no toxic effects in other organs. Dosimetry of Sm-153-EDTMP is a necessary tool for its patient specific therapeutic application. EXPERIMENTAL DETERMINATION OF MINIMUM DETECTABLE ACTIVITY FOR RADIONUCLIDE ACTIVITY METERS F. Zagni a, F. Cesarini a, G. Lucconi b, G. Cicoria a, D. Pancaldi a, A.Infantino c, S. Vichi c, M. Marengo a. a Medical Physics Department, University Hospital “S.Orsola - Malpighi”, Bologna, Bologna, Italy; b Postgraduate School in Medical Physics, Physics Department, University of c Nuclear Engineering Laboratory of Bologna, Bologna, Italy; Montecuccolino, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy Aim: Radionuclide activity meters are normally used in nuclear medicine to measure relatively large amount of activity, ranging from few MBq to tenth or hundreds GBq. The aim of this work was to evaluate the minimum detectable activity (MDA) for these devices, in order to check the feasibility of their use in the lower range of measurement. Materials and methods: Four different activity meters installed at our institution were tested. For each device, a vial containing >10 MBq 11C (positron emitter, half-life 20 minutes) was assayed at fixed time intervals until complete decay and each activity reading was recorded. The Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) ratio between the activity reading and the expected activity, based on the exponential decay law, was evaluated (% relative error, RE%). Each reading was decay corrected to the same reference time, and the coefficient of variation (CV%) was calculated for contiguous measurements. The two obtained quantities were plotted and analyzed as a function of the expected activity. This procedure was repeated using 99mTc, in order to verify the minimum response, which is correlated to the MDAs through the calibration factors, to be independent on the radionuclide being assayed. The MDA was estimated by selecting threshold values, based on the uncertainty level and taking the worse between the two observed parameters. Results: For each tested activity meter, both RE% and CV% gradually increase as the activity of the source decreases. The minimum response in term of ionization current for each equipment, was found to be the same for the two tested radionuclides; we could then estimate MDAs values for several commonly used radionuclides. For each meter we obtained different MDAs. For example, for a Capintec CRC15PET, 180 kBq (99mTc) and 50 kBq (11C) estimated at 90% of confidence level. Conclusion: This work shows that MDA can be assessed in terms of ionization current and be converted for different radionuclides using specific calibration factors. The measurement technique can be reproduced by every laboratory, allowing for use of activity meters in some radiopharmaceuticals quality controls procedure. EVALUATION OF A NEW METHODOLOGY FOR PAEDIATRIC DOSIMETRY: OPTIMIZATION OF SPECT PROTOCOLS, BASED ON MONTE CARLO SIMULATIONS WITH HIGH-RESOLUTION ANTHROPOMORPHIC PHANTOMS George Loudos b, George C. Panagiotis Papadimitroulas a, Kagadis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Greece Background: Patient specific dosimetry is of high interest, especially in pediatric applications where the risks of the exposure to ionizing radiation is widely debated. The aim of this study, is to evaluate the dosimetric factors in nuclear imaging, exploiting the advantages of realistic Monte Carlo simulations and the ground truth of accurate, high resolution computational models. Methods: The latest version GATE (v6.2) toolkit was used for the execution of realistic simulations. A series of pediatric phantoms, developed by the “IT’IS Foundation”, were preprocessed in order to be inserted in the simulations serving as attenuation and activity maps. The procedure was standardized on a 5 years old girl, 17.8kg. The full series of the models includes 3 boys and 3 girls in the range of 5-14 y old. The resolution of the phantoms was set to 2 mm3. The S-factors of 99m Tc-MIBI biodistribution were calculated, in two different time periods (30 min and 2 h post-injection), considering the whole-body as source and the most critical organs as target. The administered activity was set equal to 232.5 MBq according to the EANM dosage protocol. 3D maps with the deposited energy per voxel as well as their uncertainty were calculated for every simulation. Results: In figure 1 the results of the S-factors in Gy/(MBqsec) are presented for a 5 years old girl for the whole body exposure to 99mTceSestaMIBI, 30 minutes and 2 hours post administration. The mass of each critical organ is also presented namely heart, kidney, liver, ovary, pancreas and brain. The statistical uncertainty in the simulation procedure was kept lower than 5%. The highest S-factor was calculated for kidneys and it is equal to 9.2910-10 for 30 min and equal to 7.1610-10 for 2 h post injection. Discussion: We consider that the present study presents a new methodology to evaluate dosimetric techniques in pediatric nuclear imaging applications. Our goal is to extend the internal dosimetric calculations for the most common imaging protocols using various children models. Fig. 1. Dosimetric calculations for a 5 y old girl for and 2 h post injection. 15 99m Tc-MIBI biodistribution 30 min NUCLEAR CARDIOLOGY IMAGE ENHANCEMENT USING WAVELET TRANSFORM ANALYSIS A. Poulakis a, c, S. Angelakis a, b, G. Fountos a, G.S. Panagiotakis b, I. Asteriadis d, I. Valais a. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, 12210 Athens, Greece; b Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Patras, 265 00 Patras, Greece; c Biomedical Informatics and Technology Graduate Program, School of Computer Science, University of Crete; d Department of Nuclear Medicine, General Hospital of Kavala, 65 500 Kavala, Greece Background: Myocardial scintigraphy is a Nuclear Medicine Imaging technique that commonly uses Thallium Chloride (201 Tl-chloride) as a radioactive tracer. The main disadvantage of this method is the increased noise level in the extracted images due to poor counting statistics (low count rate, lung uptake etc). One method that can be used to improve image quality is Wavelet Transform Analysis. The contrast, as well as the background and the gray level tonalities have been preserved. Materials and methods: In this study, the task is to maintain image integrity improving quantitative information data useful in patient diagnosis, therapy and care. DICOM images form patients undergone myocardial scintigraphy where examined. Noise reduction by Wavelet Coefficient Thresholding 2D was used (Matlab, yet another wavelet toolbox), removing the background activity, followed by compression and reconstruction of the image respectively. Results: Results were calculated using both Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) and Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) and are presented in a detailed way with graphs and figures. The process of a nuclear cardiology image with the use of Discrete or Continuous Wavelet Transform results in a homogenized image background so that the medical information is carefully outlined. The contrast, as well as the background and the gray level tonalities have been preserved. Discussion: This method doesn’t need much cpu time and can be used after the post acquisition so, valuable image information can be showed right away for a more precise diagnosis. Findings showed that using Discrete or Continuous Wavelet Transform on Nuclear Cardiology images, more information is gained and the image quality improves LONG-LIVED RADIONUCLIDE IMPURITIES ACEUTICALS: PRACTICAL ASPECTS IN RADIOPHARM- John Kalef-Ezra, Stratos Valakis, Stavroula Pallada. Medical Physics Departments, University of Ioannina and Ioannina University Hospital Ioannina 451.10, Greece 16 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Background: Long-lived radioactive impurities in radiopharmaceuticals administered at time of calibration usually have minor impact on image quality and the uncertainty of the activity measurement. However, such impurities may result to non-negligible additional radiation burden to patients, personnel, relatives, caregivers and the public, and may trigger innocent alarms in radiation portal monitors. In addition, the presence of certain levels of impurities may impose modifications in waste management policies. The aim of the present study was to identify the most important long-lived impurities, quantify their amount in the patients’ body and address radiation protection issues. Methods and materials: Initial analysis of the radiopharmaceuticals used at the Ioannina University Hospital indicated substantial amounts of longlived (T1/2> 14 d) photon emitting impurities only in 123I-ioflupene (DaTSCAN, GE) and 153Sm-EDMTP (Quadramet, IBA). Spectroscopic analysis of the residuals of at least ten administrations per agent was carried out at least five times per sample. A prototype shadow-shield whole body counter equipped with 16 NaI(Tl) detectors was used to measure the activity present in at least 7 seven patients per agent, 2 to 5 five weeks postadministration. The in vivo activity measurements were coupled with external dose rate measurements using a portable system with spectroscopic capabilities. Results: 121Te, 123Te and 125I were the main photon emitting impurities in 123 I-ioflupene, resulting in a median 30 nSv/h external Hp(10) rate and a 3 kBq 121Te body burden. 152Eu, 152Eu and 156Eu were the main impurities in 153 Sm-EDMTP, resulting in a median 300 nSv/h external rate, mainly due to the 152Eu (T1/2:13.5 y) and 154Eu (T1/2:8.6 y) presence in the body, 25 and 33 kBq, respectively. Thus patient and waste management protocols were modified accordingly. Conclusions: Both patient and waste management have to take into account the long-lived impurities present in some of the agents used in daily clinical practice. MEDICAL WORKERS OPERATING IN NUCLEAR MEDICINE VS PET/CT: RADIATION EXPOSURE COMPARISON K. Dalianis a, J. Malamitsi b, K. Gogos a, R. Efthimiadou a, J. Andreou a, V. Prassopoulos a. a PET/CT Department Hygeia SA, Athens, Greece; b Medical Physics Laboratory School of Medicine, University of Athens, Greece Purpose: Personnel monitoring results provide information on routine radiation exposure, assist in work planning and allow control of the workplace. The aim of this study was to compare the gamma dose received by dedicated medical workers operating in the first PET/CT department in Greece and also by dedicated medical workers operating in conventional Nuclear Medicine procedures in the same center. PET/CT studies are restricted to the use of 18F fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG). In addition Tc-99m, Tl-201, Ga-67 and I-131 are the radiotracers mostly used in our Nuclear Medicine department. Method: To estimate the effective dose from external exposure, all 9 members of the staff (2 nurses, 2 medical physicists, 5 technologists) had TLD badges worn at the upper pocket of their overall and digital dosimeters worn at the side pocket. Nurses and Medical Physicists also had TLD rings. The nurses and technologists 1,2 are working only in the PET/CT department, while technologists 3,4,5 are operating only in the Nuclear Medicine department covering the most common procedures. Medical Physicists 1,2 are operating in both departments. Results: In the period of January 2013 to December 2013 a total of 982 PET/ CT studies and 2157 conventional Nuclear Medicine procedures were performed. The collective effective and finger doses received by all 4 members of the PET/CT staff were the following: Nurse 1 received 2,94 mSv as a whole body dose and 6,84 mSv as a hand dose and Nurse 2 received 2,87 mSv whole body dose and 5,91 mSv hand dose respectively. Technologists 1 and 2 received 1,95 mSv and 1,56 mSv as the whole body dose respectively. Medical Physicist 1 received 1,75 mSv whole body dose and 7,77 mSv hand dose and Medical Physicist received 2 2,17 mSv and 4,68 mSv respectively. Technologists 3,4 and 5 received 1,85 mSv, 1,76 mSv and 1,82 mSv as whole body doses respectively Conclusion: The personnel dose results are significantly lower than the recommended annual dose by International Commission for Radiological Protection. The higher value of gamma dose for PET/CT workers by comparison with the staff operating conventional Nuclear Medicine procedures is attributable to the higher specific gamma constant of 18F, as well as the longer exposure time required for accurate positioning. THREE-DIMENSIONAL METRICS FOR QUANTITATIVE MONITORING OF TREATMENT EFFECTS WITH PET/CT N. Politis a, A. Georgakopoulos b, M. Metaxas b, S. Chatziioannou b, c, M. Kallergi a,b. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Greece; b Nuclear Medicine Division, Biomedical Research Foundation of the Academy of Athens, Greece; c Nuclear Medicine Section, 2nd Department of Radiology, “Attikon” University General Hospital, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece Background: Quantitative monitoring of tumor response to treatment with PET has been introduced in the last decade and volume-based criteria have been proposed for this purpose (PERCIST 1.0 in 2009). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the expansion of the standardized uptake value corrected for lean body mass (SUL) metric to tumor volume size measurements pre- and post-treatment for more standardized and accurate treatment monitoring. Materials & methods: A database was developed of 24 serial PET/CT scans of patients with non Hodgkin’s lymphoma; each patient had one scan before and one after at least one cycle of chemotherapy. An expert nuclear medicine physician manually outlined all tumors, before and after treatment, on all PET and CT slices they are observed in. The expert’s outlines were used as “ground truth” to image processing and tumor segmentation that was done in MATLAB. A semi-supervised algorithm was implemented for the generation of 2D and 3D outlines of the tumors on PET and CT slices. The tumors’ maximum diameter and volume were measured in addition to SUL estimates. Binary logistic regression was used to evaluate the association between the three metrics (diameter, volume, and SUL) and treatment outcome, expressed as progression free survival (PFS) rate. Results: The data analysis is ongoing. However, preliminary results suggest that volume is a more standard and reproducible metric than the diameter in assessing response to treatment; even a 10% in volume shrinkage can be a strong predictor of long term outcome. In addition, the combination of volume changes with SUL changes yields a significantly better predictor of treatment outcome and correlates more to PFS rates than the tumor diameter or SUL. Discussion: Changes in tumor volume corresponding to anatomic changes combined with SUL changes indicating metabolic tumor response are stronger predictors of treatment outcome than changes in tumor diameter or SUL changes alone as proposed by the RECIST or PERCIST criteria. POSITRON EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY'S NEWEST TECHNOLOGIES TO ADDRESS PRESENT AND FUTURE APPLICATIONS: A FOCUS ON TIMEOF FLIGHT L. Theodorakis a, b, G. Loudos b, V. Prassopoulos c, C. Kappas d, I. Tsougos d, P. Georgoulias a. a Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital of Larissa, Biopolis, Larissa 41110, Greece; b Department of Medical Instruments Technology, Technological Educational institute of Athens, Ag. Spyridonos Str., Egaleo 122 10, Athens, Greece; c PET/CT Department, Hygeia Hospital, Erythrou Stavrou Str. & Kifisias Av., Marousi 151 23, Athens, Greece; d Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Thessaly, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece Introduction: Positron Emission Tomography (PET) is constantly moving towards newer applications, extending its scope far beyond of just providing with the answer for the presence of cancer or not. Novel radiopharmaceuticals for the functional characterization in the brain or stem cells tracking after their transplantation are among these applications [1]. Taking also into consideration that treatment planning and response-to-therapy assessment usually involves a PET/CT scan, the Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) need for count rate sensitive scanners has been replaced by the need for high spatial resolution, contrast and reproducibility in quantification even in the case of really small activities [2]. In this work, the newest technologies to address these needs are mentioned, with a focus on reconstruction schemes that include the Time-of-Flight (ToF) kernel. Monte Carlo simulations are used to project how ToF can improve NECR (Noise Equivalent Count Rate ¼T2/(T+S+kR) for a given scanner geometry since they can record the history of all detected photons (T, S, R are the trues, scatter and randoms count rate respectively, k¼2 for a delayed window randoms correction). Materials and methods: Monte Carlo simulations using GATE [3], an open source software based on the GEANT4 toolkit, are used to provide comparative NECR data between a scanner utilizing “ToF-permitting” detector crystals (Lu2(SiO4)O:Ce, or “LSO”) and the same scanner utilizing a “non-permitting” one (Bi4Ge3O12, or “BGO”). The geometry and the digitizer settings for the simulations are based on an existing clinical system (Biograph 16 HiRez, SIEMENS AG) and adapted to the crystal type. A 40 cm cylindrical phantom uniformly filled with a range of 18F-FDG activities between 1 and 30 microcuries (mCi) is also used to mimic the average human size. Results and discussion: Figure 1 shows the non-ToF NECR response for the BGO and LSO scanner. The ToF implementation results in a NECR magnification with a gain equal to 6 for the 40 cm phantom, compared to the non-ToF NECR for the same activity [4]. The BGO and the LSO scanner are presenting an almost identical NECR behavior for activity values up to 15 mCi. Slightly higher values for the BGO scanner in this range are due to higher density of the crystal material compared to its LSO counterpart. NECR(non-ToF, BGO) shows a horizontal response for activity values beyond 25 mCi, mainly attributed to the broader coincidence time window and increased deadtime of detectors based on BGO. Figure 2 shows the distribution of the deposited energy for the two crystals. Conclusion: Evolving technology for PET scanners is guided from the needs dictated by novel applications. The advent of Lutetium-based scintillators enabled ToF implementation, this way improving NECR performance. The introduction of Silicon Photomultiplier detectors with ToF capability is expected to further improve the performance of fast scintillators. ToF is an excellent representative of such innovations to address present and future challenges in the medical and research field. References [1] Zhou R, Acton P, Ferrari V. Imaging Stem Cells Implanted in Infarcted Myocardium. Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2006;48(10):2094-2106. [2] Freedenberg M, Badawi R, Tarantal A, Cherry S. Performance and limitations of positron emission tomography (PET) scanners for imaging very low activity sources. Physica Medica 2014;30(1):104-110. [3] http://www.opengatecollaboration.org/ [4] Conti M, Focus on time-of-flight PET: the benefits of improved time resolution. European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 2011;38:1147-1157. 17 Fig. 2 Distribution of total deposited energyĂ OPTIMIZATION OF CONE BEAM CT PROTOCOLS USED IN IMAGE GUIDED RADIOTHERAPY APPLICATIONS Theofano Riga, Efi Koutsouveli, Christos Skarleas, Konstantinos Dardoufas Pantelis Karaiskos. Medical Physics and Radiotherapy Department, Hygeia Hospital, Athens, Greece Image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) using kilovoltage (kV) cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) can provide accurate three dimensional volumetric knowledge about the patient’s anatomy and target localization at treatment position and thus has dramatically improved the delivery accuracy in radiotherapy. This is achieved through registration of the CBCT images with the reference CT images utilized for treatment planning purposes, using automatic rigid body image registration algorithms. However, the acquisition of CBCT images adds an additional radiation dose thus entailing new radiation risks to the patient. The purpose of this work is to study the relationship between the image registration accuracy and the imaging dose and image quality for different CBCT protocols using a commercially available image guidance system (Synergy, Elekta, UK). A Catphan phantom (The Phantom Laboratory, Salem, NY) was used for image quality (low contrast visibility, spatial resolution and uniformity) measurements. Radiation dose was determined using a Farmer chamber that had been calibrated in the kV energy range by an accredited laboratory. The ability of the CBCT system to correctly register the localization geometry with the reference CT geometry was tested using a Rando phantom (The Phantom Laboratory, Salem, NY) for a head and a pelvis irradiation. For this purpose a pelvis and a head plan were created in the reference CT images of the Rando phantom; for each plan its icocenter was defined using the CBCT system and subsequently the phantom was moved by specific distances in one or more directions relatively to the reference icocenter position using the couch; these distances were compared to the corresponding ones calculated by the CBCT system registration algorithm. All measurements (including image quality, radiation dose and registration accuracy) were repeated for different CBCT by changing the tube current and pulse length per projection image and thus the total mAs. Results show that a significant reduction of the additional radiation dose given to the patient due to the CBCT images acquired during an IGRT treatment can be achieved by optimizing the imaging protocol without a significant reduction of image quality or a significant loss of dose delivery accuracy. TESTING OF DEFORMABLE IMAGE REGISTRATION IN RADIOTHERAPY USING COMPUTATIONAL PHANTOMS Stephen Skett a,b. a Peterborough City Hospital, UK; b King's College London, UK Fig. 1 NECR response for the BGO and LSO scannerĂ Purpose: Deformable image registration (DIR) involves ‘deforming’ one image to match another ‘reference’ image of a given patient. This technique has great potential in the drive towards adaptive radiotherapy. However, it is crucial to benchmark the performance of DIR software before it is used 18 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) clinically. The present study concerns the testing of the DIR algorithm in Prosoma 3.3, a radiotherapy virtual simulation and contouring software package, to evaluate its geometric accuracy. Materials & methods: DIR testing was undertaken by creating an in-house software system (‘vCTphantoms’) capable of producing CT-like images containing arbitrary combinations of geometric structures and performing simple global deformations to them. DIR was performed in Prosoma for several such phantom test images, including: a) a spheroid stretched to differing degrees; b) two phantoms with anthropomorphic features modelling the anatomy of lung and prostate radiotherapy patients respectively. Where possible, the Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) was computed by manually contouring significant volumes of interest in Prosoma on both deformed & reference images, as a means of assessing their geometric correspondence. Results: When applied to the spheroid phantom images mentioned above, the Prosoma DIR algorithm managed to achieve good correspondence (DSC0.99) for stretches of maximum displacement 11mm. For the other phantom types, levels of visual correspondence were somewhat mixed; discrepancies between deformed & reference images were in some cases quite strident, and the DSC could not be evaluated since it was impossible to generate valid contours of important structures in the deformed images. Two other key observations were made concerning the DIR functionality in Prosoma. Firstly, it was not possible to export the deformed image data, or to obtain details of the deformation vector field. Secondly, the displayed HU values did not correctly represent what was seen for the deformed data set; rather, they were the same as those for the reference image. Conclusion: In simple test conditions, the DIR in Prosoma 3.3 responded well to image changes at spatial scales similar to those expected in real clinical anatomy. However, its testability and potential usefulness for clinical radiotherapy is somewhat undermined by the inability to obtain accurate quantitative information about the deformed image set. References R. Varadhan, G. Karangelis, K. Krishnan and S. Hui, “A framework for deformable image registration validation in radiotherapy clinical applications,” J. Appl. Clin. Med. Phys., vol. 14, no. 1, p. 4066, Jan. 2013. USING STATISTICAL MODELS TO OPTIMISE CURE AND MINIMISE SIDEEFFECTS IN CANCER RADIOTHERAPY Herschtal Alan a,b, Te Marvelde Luc c, Mengersen Kerrie d, Foroudi Farshad e, Kron Tomas f. a Senior Biostatistician, Centre of Biostatistics and Clinical Trials, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne; bPhD candidate, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia; c Biostatistician, Centre of Biostatistics and Clinical Trials, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne; d Research Professor of Statistics, Science and Engineering Faculty, Queensland University of Technology; e Chair of Uro-Oncology, Radiation Oncology, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre,Melbourne, Australia; f Principal Research Physicist, Physical Sciences, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre Traditional CTV-to-PTV margin recipes for external beam RT, are used to ensure sufficient dose to tumour despite day-to-day variability in tumour position relative to treatment beams (i.e. random error). Most methods of setting margins assume that the random error is constant across patients and hence provide a “one size fits all” margin. We have collected data that shows that there is large variability in random error between patients, and that therefore the one size fits all approach yields margins which are too large for more stable tumours (small random errors), and too large for the less stable ones (large random errors). A hierarchical Bayesian model is capable of optimising the margin for each individual patient by optimising the trade-off between the traditional generic group margin, and a personalised margin based on displacement data that accumulates as the individual progresses through treatment. We have constructed a novel two layered Bayesian model which can accurately calculate personal margins despite time trends, unexpected “spikes”, and sudden shifts in tumour position, thus ensuring maximum cure rates while minimising side-effects. By simulating on real patient motion data, collected for patients who underwent hyperfractionated EBRT, we show that a single replan of the patient after two weeks of an approximately seven week treatment course yields an average reduction of 20% in radiation dose to healthy tissue relative to current methods, with no loss of dose to the CTV itself and thus no expected increase in the risk of recurrence. This work was funded by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council grant PERIPHERAL DOSE ASSESSMENT AFTER IMRT AND VMAT VS CFRT nchez-Nieto a, R. El-far a, M.R. Expo sito b, J.I. Lagares c, J.C. Mateo d, J.A. B. Sa n e, G. Zeladas f, L. Irazola g, F. S anchez Doblado g. a Instituto de Física, Terro lica de Chile, Santiago, Chile; b Universitat Pontificia Universidad Cato noma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain; c Centro de Investigaciones Auto gicas, Madrid, Spain; d Hospital Energ eticas Medioambientales y Tecnolo Duques del Infantado, Sevilla, Spain; e Hospital Universitario Virgen Macarena, Sevilla, Spain; f Unidad de Radioterapia, Clínica Alemana de edica y Biofísica, Santiago, Santiago, Chile; g Departamento Fisiología M Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain Background: The higher survival rate of radiotherapy patients entails a growing concern on second cancers associated to peripheral doses. This is enhanced due to the higher beam-on time of new techniques (VMAT and IMRT). Currently, dosimetry of out-of field doses is still under development. Our group has developed a methodology to estimate neutron equivalent dose in organs (PMB 57 (2012) 6167e6191) as well as an analytic algorithm for photon peripheral doses (RO 103 (2012) S530). The aim of this study was to assess peripheral doses in IMRT and VMAT versus CFRT. Materials and methods: Prostate and rectum treatments where delivered to the Alderson phantom using 3DCFRT and one modulated technique. Plans were designed to get the same PTV coverage. Neutron doses at peripheral organs were estimated from the readings of a digital detector using our methodology. Photon doses were calculated using our algorithm from specific treatment and phantom parameters (prescription dose, MU, PTV volume, phantom size, etc.). Results: Photon and neutron doses for prostate treatments ranged 118-254 mSv and 35-232mSv, respectively. For rectum treatments doses ranged 210-255mSv and 25-136mSv. For both treatments, the highest and lowest photon to neutron doses ratios were obtained for the 3DCFRT at 15MV and IMRT18 at 18MV, respectively. Average neutron doses increased 7mSv per 1000UM (4mSv for photon doses). Discussion: As neutron doses strongly depend on MU, multiplying by three the MU at 18 MV (IMRT vs CFRT) implies doubling the peripheral dose. At 15MV, comparing VMAT with CFRT (i.e., doubling the MU) has almost no impact on peripheral doses. MEASUREMENT, MODELLING AND REPORTING OF SMALL FIELD OUTPUT FACTORS REQUIRES SYSTEMATIC APPROACHES FOR ACCURATE DOSIMETRY G. Cranmer-Sargison b, P.H. Charles c, J.V. D.I. Thwaites a, c a Trapp . University of Sydney, Institute of Medical Physics School of Physics, Sydney, Australia; b Saskatchewan Cancer Agency, Department of Medical Physics, Saskatoon, Canada; c Queensland University of Technology, School of Chemistry Physics and Mechanical Engineering, Brisbane, Australia Small field dosimetry is difficult, yet consistent data is necessary for advanced radiotherapy techniques. However, the reported data in the literature contains relatively large inconsistencies and differences. To help to resolve these and to improve the approaches and associated uncertainties requires careful standardised measurements, validated MonteCarlo (MC)-based correction factors, possible new thinking on detectors and clear reporting of data, correlating to actual/delivered/dosimetric field size to enable comparison between linacs. For very small field sizes, greater attention is required to the experimental measurement and reporting methods, requiring clear guidelines for what is a ‘very small field size’ and for when such more detailed methods are needed. A range of measurements and MC modelling studies have been reported by our group. Based on these methods and results, recommendations are given as to: Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) commissioning/fine-tuning a MC model for small field sizes; and the interplay between modelling and measurements to achieve this modelling-based correction factors for a range of shielded and unshielded diodes for 6MV beams; what constitutes a ‘very small field size’ (essentially fields smaller than 1.5 cm in size for 6 MV), based on the different effects as field size gets smaller and their consequences for uncertainties; measurement methods necessary to control uncertainties at these smaller field sizes (essentially measuring beam profiles at the same time as output factor, to ensure good alignment, but also to measure the exact dosimetric field sizes reporting of output factors for consistent comparison and applications; ie reporting against an effective field size taking into account measured dosimetric field sizes; and not just against nominal field size, in order to reduce the variations in reported data and allow interpolation between reported tabulated data eg on correction factors. observations on detector design and modelling for possible ‘correctionfree’ small detectors (eg scintillators, but also modified standard detectors such as diodes) As national (eg AAPM) and international (eg IAEA) bodies develop protocols for small field dosimetry, it is critical that clear measurement and modelling based methods and data are recommended to improve the consistency and uncertainties involved and to provide the best accuracy possible in these increasingly clinically-used conditions. DOSIMETRIC EVALUATION OF A MICRODIAMOND PROTOTYPE IN CLINICAL PROTON AND CARBON-ION BEAMS Marco Marinelli a, G. Prestopino a, C. Verona a, G. Verona-Rinati a, A.K. Mandapaka b, A. Ghebremedhin b, B. Patyal b, G.A.P. Cirrone c, G. Cuttone c, S. La Rosa c, L. Raffaele c. a INFNeDipartiment of Industrial Engineering, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”, Italy; b Department of Radiation Medicine, Loma Linda University Medical Center, California, USA; c Laboratori Nazionali del SUD, INFN, Catania, Italy Background: The aim of the present study is to evaluate the dosimetric properties of a pre-market prototype of PTW Freiburg microDiamond dosimeter for accurate relative dose measurements in clinical proton beams. Preliminary results on carbon-ion irradiation will be reported as well. Materials and methods: The device was fabricated at the University of Rome “Tor Vergata” and tested under clinical proton beams both at the Loma Linda University Medical Center and at the INFN-LNS laboratory in Catania, Italy. The performance were assessed by comparison with reference parallel plate ionization chambers (PTW Markus Chamber 23343 and Advanced Markus Chamber 34045) and a micro ionization chamber (Exradin A16). All measurements were performed in a water phantom. The warm-up/stability of the detector response, dose linearity and dose-rate dependency were firstly evaluated. Comparative dose measurements were performed by means of percent depth dose curves and lateral beam profiles. ICRU 78 recommended beam parameters were used to compare the percent depth dose curves and lateral profiles obtained using the SCDD and the reference ionization chamber. Results: During warm-up/stability test, the diamond detector showed maximum deviation from the average reading less than 0.5%. The detector response as a function of dose was linear with deviations below 0.5% over a 50 cGy e 500 cGy dose range. The detector response was also found to be dose rate independent, with deviations below 0.5% in the investigated dose-rates. Percent depth dose curves and lateral beam profiles obtained with the diamond detector were in good agreement with those obtained using reference dosimeters. Percentage depth dose curves were found in good agreement with the ones from reference dosimeters and beam profiles evidenced the good spatial resolution capability of the device. Discussion: The performed dosimetric tests evidenced that the SCDD response is stable, reproducible and LET independent, thus indicating its suitability for accurate relative dosimetric measurements in large and small field clinical proton and carbon-ion beams. 19 EVALUATION OF DNA DAMAGES INDUCED BY PHOTON AND PROTON MINIBEAM RADIATION THERAPY (MBRT): A MONTE CARLO STUDY M. Dos Santos a, R. Salmon a, C. Villagrasa b, Y. Prezado a. a IMNC, Imagerie et Mod elisation en Neurobiologie et en Canc erologie, Orsay, France; b IRSN, Institut de Radioprotection et de Suret e Nucl eaire, BP17, 92962 Fontenayaux-Roses, France Nowadays, radiation therapy (RT) is one of the most effective methods to treat cancers. Nevertheless, for radio-resistant tumors, RT is only palliative due to the tolerances of the surrounding healthy tissues. In order to overcome this limitation, the close bind of physics and biology in RT may be exploited: the modification of some physical parameters, like the method of dose delivery, leads to different biological outcomes. Following this idea, two innovative approaches are under development: photon and proton Minibeam Radiation Therapy (MBRT). They are based on the combination of a spatial fractionation of the dose and the use submillimetric field sizes (500 e 700 mm). The resulting dose profiles consist in peaks and valleys [PRE09]. This type of dose delivery has proven a remarkable tissue-sparing [DIL06, DEM12]. In parallel, significant tumor growth delay was observed in highly aggressive tumor models (glioblastoma multiforme) [DEM12, PRE12]. However the biological basis are not yet well-understood. In order to deepen the knowledge of the possible mechanisms, a nanodosimetric study has been performed. DNA damages induced by MBRT at different depth on peaks and valleys regions have been calculated by using Monte Carlo simulations (Geant4/Geant4-DNA) [AG06, INC10]. Irradiations with proton (105 MeV) and photon (mean energy of 80 keV) minibeams were simulated. As a target, a detailed DNA geometrical model of a neuronal cell was generated. This geometry is composed of a spherical nucleus of 10 mm in diameter and fill with nucleosomes composed of a cylindrical histone wrapped by roughly two turns of DNA double helix (200 bp) [DOS13]. The energy transfer points located on the DNA were recorded and analyzed with an adapted clustering algorithm allowing the detection of DNA strand breaks (simple or double) [DOS13, FRA11]. This has been the first nanodosimetric study in the context. The first results have shown an increase of the number and complexity (number of energy transfer points composing the break) of single and double strand breaks with the depth, so with radiation LET due to the increasing of the track density. Theses results seem to corroborate the remarkable healthy tissue-sparing with this promising RT technique. Keywords: Mini Beam Radiation Therapy, Monte Carlo simulations, DNA damages. [AGO03] S. Agostinelli et al. Geant4: a simulation toolkit. NIMA 506, 250303 (2003). [DIL06] F.A. Dilmanian et al., “Interlaced x-ray microplanar beams: A radiosurgery approach with clinical potential”, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 103, 9709e9714 (2006). [DEM12] P. Deman et al., “Monochromatic minibeams radiotherapy: from healthy tissue-sparing effect studies toward first experimental glioma bearing rats therapy”, Int. J. Radiat. Oncology Biol. Phys. 82, e693ee700 (2012). [DOS13] M. Dos Santos et al. Infleunce of the DNA density on the number of clustered damages created by protons of different energy. NIMB 298, 47-54 (2013). [FRA11] Z. Francis, C. Villagrasa, I. Clairand. Simulation of DNA damage algorithm after proton irradiation using an adapted DBSCAN algorithm. Comput. Meth. Programs Biomed. 101, 265-270 (2011). [INC10] S. Incerti et al. Comparison of Geant4 very low energy cross section models with experimental data in water. Med. Phys. 37, 4692-4708 (2010). [PRE09] Y. Prezado et al “A new method of creating minibeam patterns for syn- chrotron radiation therapy: a feasibility study”, J. Synchr. Radiat. 16, 582e586 (2009). [PRE12] Y. Prezado, S. Sarun, S. Gil, P. Deman, A. Bouchet, G. Le Duc, “Increase of lifespan for glioma-bearing rats by using minibeam radiation therapy”, J. Synchrotron Radiat. 19, 60e65 (2012). 20 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) CHARACTERIZATION OF GALLIUM NITRIDE RADIOLUMINESCENT TRANSDUCERS FOR DOSIMETRY AND QUALITY ASSURANCE IN HDR BRACHYTHERAPY MEASUREMENT OF THE ATTENUATION OF HYALURONIC ACID IN THE RECTAL PROTECTION DURING PROSTATE CANCER TREATMENT WITH HIGH DOSE RATE BRACHYTHERAPY Pierrick Guiral a, Patrice Jalade a, Julien Ribouton a, Patrick Pittet b, Ruoxi Guo-Neng Lu b, Jean-Marc Galvan c, Denis Wang 2, Dauvergne d. a Hospices Civils de Lyon (HCL); Service de Physique et de Radioprotection du Centre hospitalier Lyon Sud (CHLS), Pierre-B enite Fe de Lyon; Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon 69495, France; b Universit INL-UMR5270, CNRS, Universit e Lyon 1, Villeurbanne F-69622, France; c Universit e de Lyon; Institut des Nanotechnologies de Lyon INL-UMR5270, e de Lyon; Institut de CNRS, CPE, Villeurbanne F-69622, France; d Universit Physique Nucl eaire de Lyon IPNL, IN2P3/CNRS, Universit e Lyon 1, Villeurbanne F-69622, France nchez Mazo n a, A. Man ~ anes Pe rez b, J. Sa M.A.A.S. García Blanco a, Mendiguren Santiago a, P.J. Prada a. a Servicio de Oncología pica, Hospital Universitario Marqu Radiotera es de Valdecilla. Avenida Valdecilla s/n, 39008 Santander. Spain; b Departamento de Física Moderna, Universidad de Cantabria. Avenida de los Castros s/n, 39005 Santander. Spain High dose rate brachytherapy (HDR-BT) treatments are typically administered in large dose per fraction (>5 Gy) and with high-gradient-dosedistributions, with serious consequences in case of treatment delivery error. Thus, Quality Assurance (QA) and in vivo Dosimetry (IVD) should be systematically and independently implemented. However, their use remains limited due to some instrumental issues [1]. For QA and IVD in HDR-BT, we propose the use of Gallium Nitride (GaN) radioluminescent transducers. They have a real time dosimetric response and their small size (volume <0.4 mm3) makes them suitable for punctual dose measurements in high-dose-gradient profiles. Our studies include both characterization of radioluminescence (RL) properties of GaN transducers under 192Ir and 60Co irradiations and modeling of their dosimetric response in such irradiation conditions. For the former, a QA instrumented phantom implementing GaN transducers has been designed and tested for source strength verification (within ±5%), for seed position monitoring (within ±2 mm), and of dwell time measurements (within 100 ms). For the latter, a GaN dosimetric response model based on anisotropic TG43 formalism and specific correction factors for energy dependence has been developed. GaN dosimetric response to HDR irradiations has also been studied by Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, with obtained results in good agreement with measurements. These studies confirm that GaN Transducers can be implemented for QA and IVD in HDR-BT. New techniques in Brachytherapy, either as an exclusive treatment or combining both external radiotherapy and hormonal therapy, allow for increasing the radiation dose to the prostate in order to achieve appropriate local tumour control [1,2]. The increasing doses produce nonnegligible rectal complications. Actually, the impact on late rectal bleeding of grade II to 4 can be as high as 17% [3]. This research aims to determine the possible reduction in the rectal dose due to the transperineal injection of hyaluronic acid (Restylane®) in the anterior perirectal fat of the rectum. For that purpose, we have measured the radiation attenuation in hyaluronic acid, and compared it to the attenuation in water (which mimics natural tissues). In order to perfectly control the geometry of the problem, we have used a 133Ba source instead of the 192mIr conventional one, as 133Ba has one energy peak close to 308 keV (the most probable 192mIr energy peak), and it is less radioactive, therefore easier to work with. We placed the hyaluronic acid between the 133Ba source and a NaI scintillation detector (see Figure 1). Then we measured the photon attenuation varying the mass thickness (see Figure 2). As can be seen in the green curve in Figure 2 (E ¼ 299.9 keV, the closest to the most probable 192mIr energy peak) the nature of the hyaluronic acid helps with the radiation attenuation. Fig. 1 Normalized measured response of GaN compared to MC simulated GaN response as a function of the axial distance from GaN probe to a 192Ir source. Water response as a function of the axial distance given by TG-43 protocol is plotted too for over-response comparison. The source position is considered to be at 0 cm. [1] K. Tanderup et al., “In vivo dosimetry in brachytherapy”, Medical Physics 40, 070902 (2013) Fig. 1 Experimental setup for the measurement of the radiation attenuation in hyaluronic acid. The hyaluronic acid lies on top of the NaI scintillation detector. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 21 Acknowledgement: This research has been co-financed by the European Union (ESF) and Greek national funds through the Operational Program “Education and Lifelong Learning Investing in knowledge society” of the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF). Research Funding Program: Aristeia. INDICES FROM DOSE-VOLUME HISTOGRAMS AS TOOLS FOR OPTIMIZED BRACHYTHERAPY IN INTERSTITIAL IMPLANTS FOR TREATMENT OF SARCOMAS Gialousis G a, b, Papageorgiou Sp a, b, Kostakis V a, b, Vamvakas I a, b, Maragoudakis Em b. a IASO hospital, medical physics department; b IASO hospital, radiation therapy department Fig. 2 Natural logarithm of the counts (N) as a function of the mass thickness for several 133Ba emission energies. [1] Pollack A., Zaggars G., Starkschall G. et al., “Prostate cancer radiation dose response: results of the M. D. Anderson phase III randomized trial”, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 2002, 53, 1097-1105. [2] Zelefsky M.J., Fuks Z., Hunt M. et al., “High-dose intensity modulated radiation therapy for prostate cancer: Early toxicity and biochemical outcome in 772 patients”, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 2002, 53, 11111116. [3] Zelefsky M.J., Cowen D., Fuks Z. et al., “Long term tolerance of high dose three dimensional conformal radiotherapy in patients with localized prostate cancer”, Cancer 1999, 85, 2460-2468. EXPERIMENTAL DOSIMETRY FOR MODEL-BASED BRACHYTHERAPY TREATMENT PLANNING 192 IR HDR A. Moutsatsos, E. Pantelis, E. Pappas, P. Papagiannis. Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 11527 Athens, Greece Background: Model-based dose calculation algorithms (MBDCA) have been recently introduced in 192Ir High Dose Rate (HDR) brachytherapy treatment planning systems (TPS). Relative to the water-based TG43 dosimetry formalism, commissioning and quality assurance (QA) of MBDCAs is rather demanding, since verification is required for dose distributions calculated in patient-specific scatter and material heterogeneity conditions. A recently published report (TG186) recommends that both experimental means and reference dosimetry data obtained using Monte Carlo (MC) simulation should be used to verify MBDCA-based predictions. This work aims to establishing an experimental, phantom-based procedure for commissioning and QA management of MBDCA-based TPSs, as well as for benchmarking MC-calculated reference dose distributions. Materials and methods: A PMMA phantom incorporating inserts of different density and material composition was constructed from nonsymmetrical slabs, thus permitting measurements in non-isotropic scatter conditions. PMMA slabs were properly machined to accommodate TLD detectors, radiochromic films and a plastic catheter facilitating source positioning. The phantom was CT-imaged and a treatment plan consisting of multiple 192Ir source positions was prepared using the Oncentra® Brachy v4.4 TPS. Dose calculations of the Oncentra-ACE MBDCA were DICOMRT exported for further evaluation. Irradiation was delivered using a microSelectron v.2 source. Reference dosimetry data were obtained using the MCNP v6.1 MC code. In specific, the treatment plan along with the phantom CT-images were imported into an in-house developed software tool (BrachyGuide) used to automatically prepare a MCNP input file. Film and TLD detector measurements were compared to corresponding MCand MBDCA-calculated results in terms of absolute point dose differences and 2D relative dose and gamma index distributions. Results and conclusion: Experimental and MC-calculated dosimetry results were found in agreement within corresponding uncertainties. Comparison of measured and TPS-calculated results showed also a good agreement which deteriorates at large radial distances due, mainly, to MBDCA assumptions and optimization settings. The proposed methodology combined with the slab-phantom described herein, provides an efficient experimental means for the quality management of MBDCA-based TPSs. Background: The Interstitial brachytherapy is an important tool for the treatment of sarcomas. The aim is the optimal target coverage of Clinical Target Volume (CTV) by the desired radiation dose with parallel conditions not to irradiate healthy tissue and not to overdose important part of the CTV because of dose distribution of the radioisotope. For this reason qualitative indices derived from dose - volume histogram (DVH) characterizing the quality of the spatial coverage. Materials and methods: The practical process begins by surgical implantation - placement of flexible catheters, the three-dimensional treatment planning and implementation of the plan to the patient. A key role is the assessment of 3D-planning, made with the use of indices such as: dose heterogeneity index (DNR), coverage index (CI), conformal coverage index (COIN) and indices based on physical dose histogram - volume (NDVH) as the quality index (QI) and the natural dose ratio (NDR). Some of the data used in the calculation of indices are the total volume receiving a dose equal to 150 % of the dose target volume and CTV receiving a dose equal to 100 % of the target dose. These values are calculated by Oncentra Brachy v4.3. Results: Good values considered for the DNR index are values of less than 35 % or 50 %, for CI values greater than 80% or 90 % and for COIN values greater than 75% or 80 %. Also dose distribution is evaluated with the help of other indices such as NDR. For NDR ¼ 1 the volume corresponding to the implant is equal to the target volume and therefore the coverage is satisfactory, while values NDR <1 or> 1 indicate that the implant volume is larger or smaller respectively than the target volume. The comparison and optimization of indices in a spreadsheet finally derives an optimal treatment plan. Discussion: DVH indices for interstitial brachytherapy sarcomas are a handy tool to optimize coverage of the CTV, as used in real time during the design of the plan. The results of calculations are also comparable with values reported in the literature. ANALYSIS OF ULTRASOUND ELASTOGRAPHY IMAGES FOR TUMOR GUERIN CARCINOMA DURING MAGNETIC NANOTHERAPY V.E. Orel a, T. Mitrelias b, c, M. Tselepi b, c, O.B. Dynnyk d, A.V. Romanov a, A.Y. Rykhalskiy a, N.N. Barnes a, C.b Nikolov a,b, c, d, I.B. Schepotin a. a National Cancer Institute / 33/43, Lomonosova Str., 03022, Kyiv, Ukraine; b Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge / JJ Thomson Avenue, Cambridge CB3 0HE, United Kingdom; c Cavendish NanoTherapeutics Ltd / CPC1 Capital Park, Fulbourn, Cambridge CB21 5XE, United Kingdom; d Bogomoletz Institute of Physiology / 4 Bogomoletz Str., 01024, Kyiv, Ukraine The paper presents digital images of transplanted Guerin’s carcinoma in rats during treatment with magnetic nanotherapy. The animals with Guerin carcinoma treated by magneto-mechano-chemically synthesized magnetic nanocomplex (MNC) based on Fe3O4 nanoparticles conjugated with antitumor anthracycline row antibiotic doxorubicin and followed by irradiation with local electromagnetic irradiation (EI) by spatially inhomogeneous constant magnetic and electromagnetic fields had a better outcome than those treated with conventional doxorubicin and MNC without EI. Color Doppler examination, elastography and dynamic viscosity were performed with the diagnostic ultrasound system “ULTIMA SE” (Radmir, Ukraine). Previously studies nuclear magnetic resonance images obtained over time showed that the application of local electromagnetic irradiation does not alter the position of the MNC in the tumor. B-mode sonography demonstrated that injection of MNC in the tumor and 22 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) EI of the animals had echogenicity throughout the tumor, which characterized the increase in blood perfusion. Сolor Doppler ultrasound (US) image of Guerin’s carcinoma showed that the largest decrease of vessel area occurred after injection of MNC in the tumor after the application of local EI. The elastography performed on diagnostic ultrasound system showed that the injection MNC in tumor increased Young’s modulus for Guerin’s carcinoma as compared to the group of animal without nanoparticles. These results here suggest that US elastography may provide a useful method to monitor the effectiveness of treatment of cancer patients during magnetic nanotherapy. Кеуwords: Tumor; Magnetic Nanotherapy; Digital Images; Magnetic Nuclear Resonance; Ultrasound; Elastography EVALUATION OF CO-OCCURRENCE TEXTURE FEATURES ON AM-FM INSTANTANEOUS AMPLITUDE FOR BREAST DENSITY CLASSIFICATION Styliani Petroudi a, Ioannis Constantinou a, Marios Pattichis b, Chrysa Tziakouri c, Constantinos Pattichis a. a Department of Computer Science, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus; b Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of New Mexico, New Mexico, USA; c Nicosia General Hospital, Nicosia, Cyprus Mammographic breast density has been recognized as an important risk for developing breast cancer. Depending on her mammographic breast density a woman may benefit from additional screening, other than mammography.The American College of Radiology describes mammographic breast density with the Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System (BI-RADS) 4-class density categorization.Women with dense breasts are at a 4-6 times higher risk for developing breast cancer. Different methods are being developed for automatic breast density classification. Amplitude-Modulation Frequency-Modulation (AM-FM) methods provide image decompositions that describe non-stationary content and capture instantaneous variations in amplitude, frequency and phase. The Instantaneous Amplitude (IA) reflects the local image texture contrast. This work presents the estimation of texture features on normalized IA co-occurrence matrices evaluated for different frequency scales using AM-FM. AM-FM demodulation is used to estimate the IA at different frequency scales using a Gabor filterbank and multi-scale Dominant Analysis. Following normalized co-occurrence matrices are evaluated for different cell distances on the IA estimates for each scale, for the segmented breast region. They are used to capture the relative variations in the breast tissue characteristic to the different breast density classes. The co-occurrence matrices are evaluated for a number of different distances as the IA is slow-varying. Then, different second-order statistical and other features such as contrast, correlation, entropy, etc. are evaluated on the IA co-occurrence matrices for each AM-FM frequencies scale. These values are used to characterize the mammographic breast density. Classification of a new mammogram into one of the density categories is achieved using the k-nearest neighbor method and the Euclidean distance metric. The method is evaluated using the BI-RADS mammographic density categorization on the Medical Image Analysis Society mammographic database and the classification accuracy of over 82% is most favorably compared to other methods in the literature. AM-FM provides the IA from a very very low frequency scale to a very high frequency scale and thus encapsulates differences in mammographic appearance e.g homogeneity vs heterogeneity that characterize different mammographic density variations. Additionally, the multi-scale texture analysis methodology captures both structural and statisticalinformation for the different scales and uses a compact set of features that effectively quantify mammographic parenchyma characteristics; leading to high classification accuracy. Keywords: Medical Image Analysis, Texture, Classification, Mammography, Amplitude-Modulation Frequency-Modulation Acknowledgements: This work is supported by the Cyprus Research Promotion Foundation's Grant ΤPЕ/ΟРІΖΟ/311(ВІЕ)/29 and is co-funded by the Republic of Cyprus and the European Regional Development Fund. A PATTERN RECOGNITION SYSTEM FOR COLORECTAL CANCER CHARACTERIZATION, BASED ON AIB STAINED HISTOPATHOLOGICAL IMAGES Angeliki Theodosi a, Spiros Kostopoulos b, Dimitris Glotsos b, Vassiliki Panagiota Ravazoula c, Dionisis Cavouras b, George Tzelepi c, Sakellaropoulos a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, 26500 Rion, Greece; b Medical Image and Signal Processing Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Egaleo, Athens, Greece; c Department of Pathology, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion, Greece Background: Colorectal cancer is the third most common malignancy and early detection is vital in patient treatment. Routine clinical diagnosis and histological tumour grade assessment is based on qualitative features observed under the microscope on biopsy material, stained with Нaematoxylin and Eosin (H&E). The nuclear coactivator 3 (NCOA3 or AIB) has been previously shown to be an important prognostic factor regarding various pathological regions, other than colorectal cancer. The purpose of the present study is to develop an image analysis methodology for discriminating between low and high grade colon cancer lesions, employing microscopy images of biopsy material, stained for AIB protein expression. Materials and methods: Clinical material comprised thirty eight biopsies of colon carcinomas that were H&E stained, for histological tumour grade assessment, and immunohistochemically (IHC) stained, for AIB protein expression. Clinical diagnosis was performed by two experienced histopathologists in collaboration with the Department of Pathology, University Hospital of Patras. Nine cases were characterized as of high grade and twenty nine as of low grade. Each case was represented by four gray-scale microscopy images, digitized from regions indicated by the physicians. Images were digitized using a light microscope. A set of 40 textural features were calculated from the images, based on first and second order statistics. A pattern recognition system (PR-system) was developed, that takes as input textural features extracted from AIB expressed regions and characterizes the images into low and high grade malignancies. Three different classifiers (kNN, PNN, and SVM) were employed and were evaluated by means of the leave one out (LOO) method. The PR-system was also tested for ‘unseen’ cases by means of External Cross Validation (ECV) method. Results: In discriminating low from high grade colorectal cancer images, the PR-system achieved 85% accuracy. Optimal number of features employed in the design of the PR-system carried useful and distinct textural information regarding differences in texture homogeneity between grades that could be of value to the physicians. Conclusion: Preliminary results show that textural features, based on AIB staining of biopsy material, may contain important information for the characterization of colorectal cancer and that employing pattern recognition methods may be of assistance to pathologists, as a second opinion diagnostic tool. ULTRASOUND ELASTOGRAPHY IMAGE PROCESSING FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC APPROACH OF CHRONIC HEPATITIS AND LIVER CIRRHOSIS P.S. Zoumpoulis a, I. Mathioudakis a,b, c, d, e, O. I. Theotokas a, Karapanagiotou e, E. Gatos a, E. Manessis b, M. Shina c, I. Vafeiadi d, E. a I. Mastorakou e, G. Mousoulis c. Diagnostic Panteleakou a, Echotomography S.A., 317C Kifissias Ave., GR 14561, Kifissia, Greece; b Euroclinic Athens, 9 Athanasiadou Str. & D. Soutsou Str., GR 11521, Athens, Greece; c Evagelismos Hospital, 45-47 Ipsilantou Str, GR 10676, Athens, Greece; d Laiko General Athens Hospital, 17 Ag. Thoma Str., GR 11527, Athens, Greece; e Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center, 356 Sygrou Ave., GR 17674, Kallithea, Greece Background: This study compares two methods of liver elasticity determination, Shear Wave Elasticity (SWE) and Trancient Elastography (VCTEFibroscan). Images will be provided by a group of patients with chronic parechymal liver diseases which will be compared against histological liver biopsy findings of the same patients. Materials and methods: 55 consecutive patients with chronic liver disease with liver biopsy and histology examination were included in the Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) study. Findings were compared with elastography measurements from 50 normal subjects. А B-Mode and Color/Power Doppler examination is performed on each patient for examining liver morphology and hemodynamic study of the portal vein. 1. SWE: All SWE measurements were performed in the right lobe of the liver using an appropriate intercostal space. Every patient is examined by two different examiners, using the same examination protocol and the same acoustic window, in order to estimate the Inter Observer variability. Each examiner performs two different measurements on each patient using the same examination protocol and the same acoustic window, in order to estimate the Intra Observer variability. 2. VCTE: All VTCE measurements were performed in the right lobe of the liver using the same intercostal space. Anthropometric measurements at the time of SWE and TE should include information from patient’s record about the type of liver disease and histological evaluation of liver biopsies. Results: There was a statistically significant difference (p<0.01) between the elastography values of normal and diseased subjects with both VCTE and SWE methods. There was a good correlation when the values of the two methods were compared between each other and each one with the liver biopsy, where available. In addition, intra- and inter-observer variability was low with both methods, if the adequate strict protocol of study was applied. VCTE showed 82.3% sensitivity and 68.2% specificity in diagnosing liver cirrhosis at a cut-off value of 11,9 kPa. SWE showed 88.5% sensitivity and 74.2% specificity in diagnosing liver cirrhosis at a cut-off value of 12,8 kPa. Discussion: Although the number of patients included in this prospective study is small, it was clearly shown that VCTE and SWE can definitely differentiate normal from fibrotic liver tissue. There is also differentiation with SWE between F1-F2 stages of fibrosis and F3-F4 appearing more evident comparing with discrimination offered by VCTE (Fibroscan). Larger number of patients is needed in order to investigate whether VCTE and SWE are able to differentiate between various stages (F1, F2, F3, F4) of fibrotic liver disease. THE IMPORTANCE OF MR MULTIPARAMETRIC DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS. FASMA. A CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM Ioannis Tsougos a, Evangelia Tsolaki a, Patricia Svolos a, Evanthia Eftychia Kapsalaki b, Ioannis Fezoulidis b, Kostas Kousi a, Fountas c, Constantine Kappas a, Kyriaki Theodorou a. a Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Thessaly, 41110, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece; b Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Thessaly, 41110, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece; c Department of Neurosurgery, Medical School, University of Thessaly, 41110, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece Background: Accurate brain tumor diagnosis plays a crucial role in the selection of the optimum treatment strategy and overall improves the therapeutic outcome. A clinical decision support system (CDSS) for brain tumor classification can be used to assist in the diagnosis and grading of brain tumors. A Fast Spectroscopic Multiple Analysis (FASMA) system that uses combinations of multiparametric MRI data sets was developed as a CDSS for brain tumor classification. Materials and methods: MRI metabolic ratios and spectra, from long and short TE respectively, as well as diffusion and perfusion data were acquired from the intratumoral and peritumoral area of 126 patients with untreated intracranial tumors. These data were categorized based on the pathology, and different machine learning methods were evaluated regarding their classification performance for glioma grading and differentiation of infiltrating vs. non-infiltrating lesions. Additional databases were embedded to the system, including updated literature values of the related MR parameters and typical tumor characteristics (imaging and histological), for further comparisons. Custom Graphical User Interface (GUI) layouts were developed to facilitate classification of the unknown cases based on the user's available MR data. Results: The highest classification performance was achieved with a support vector machine (SVM) using the combination of all MR features. FASMA correctly classified 89% and 79% in the intratumoral and peritumoral area respectively for cases from an independent test set. FASMA 23 produced the correct diagnosis, even in the misclassified cases, since discrimination between infiltrative vs. non-infiltrative cases was possible. Discussion: FASMA is a prototype CDSS, which integrates complex quantitative MR data for brain tumor characterization. FASMA was developed as a diagnostic assistant that provides fast analysis, representation and classification for a set of MR parameters. This software may serve as a teaching tool on advanced MRI techniques, as it incorporates additional information regarding typical tumor characteristics derived from the literature. CORRELATION BETWEEN HIP MUSCLES MRI TEXTURE PARAMETERS AND FEMORAL NECK BONEAREAL BONE MINERAL DENSITY (ABMD) IN DIFFERENT ATHLETES GROUPS Gabriel Nketiah a, Harri Sievanen b, Hannu Eskola a. a Department of Electronics and Communications Engineering, Tampere University of Technology, Tampere, Finland; b The UKK Institute for Health Promotion Research, Tampere, Finland Background: Both skeletal muscles and bones are known to adapt to specific long-term loadings to which they are subjected [1, 2]. A number of studies have been conducted on the relationship between muscle and bone traits in different athletegroups[3-5], but no study has employedtexture analysis (TA) method especially in the hip region.TA describes thetextural propertiesofa digital image by examining the gray-level spatial distribution within an image, and quantifying these propertiesusing textural features (mathematical parameters).We therefore exploredMRI TA as a potential means to study how hip muscles and femoral neck boneare correlated in terms of specific exercise-loadings. Materials and methods: The study comprised ofninety-oneelite female athletes representing five distinct exercise-loading groups: high-impact (triple- andhigh-jumpers), odd-impact (soccer and squash players), highmagnitude (power-lifters) low-impact (endurance runners)and nonimpact (swimmers) [7].Axial 3D T1-weighted FLASH sequence images of the proximal femur, and femoral neck areal bone mineral density (aBMD) were acquiredfrom the dominant hip region of each subject using a 1.5T MRI and dual energy X-ray absorptiometry respectively. Four selected 2Dco-occurrence matrix-basedtexture parameters were computed [8] from the MRI images of four hip muscles (gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, iliopsoas and obturator internus), and femoral neck trabecular bone. Correlation (Spearman) betweenfemoral neck aBMD andhip muscle MRItexture parameterswere studied in the athlete groups. Results: Generally, the correlation between hip muscle MRItexture parameters andfemoral neckaBMD were low (Table 1). However, some moderateand significant correlations (both positive and negative)were also observed, especially in the gluteus maximus and gluteus mediusmuscles of the high-impact and high-magnitude exercise-loading athlete groups. Table 1 Correlation between DXA-measured areal Bone Mineral Density (aBMD) at the femoral neck andhip muscle MRI texture parametersin five different athletes groups. Athlete Group High-impact Odd-impact Angular second moment Entropy N Muscle S(4,0) S(4,4) S(4,0) S(4,4) 19 Gluteus maximus Gluteus medius Iliopsoas Obturator internus -0.567* -0.437 -0.335 0.020 -0.249 -0.422 -0.094 0.054 0.567* 0.496* 0.343 0.020 0.230 0.460 0.073 -0.054 Gluteus maximusmaximus Gluteus medius Iliopsoas Obturator internus -0.301 0.307 0.301 -0.333 0.218 -0.042 -0.197 0.286 0.096 0.440 -0.218 0.040 0.197 -0.218 -0.089 -0.437 19 (continued on next page) 24 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) MR COMPATIBLE ENDOSCOPE FOR ASSESSING THE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION OF CO-REGISTERED OPTICAL AND 1H SIGNALS (continued ) Athlete Group Highmagnitude Low-impact Non-impact Angular second moment Entropy N Muscle S(4,0) S(4,4) S(4,0) S(4,4) -0.493 -0.565* 0.508* 0.567* 17 Gluteus maximusmaximus Gluteus medius Iliopsoas 0.681** -0.330 -0.108 0.200 -0.711** 0.276 0.209 -0.200 Obturator internus 0.541* 0.341 -0.541* -0.341 Gluteus maximus Gluteus medius Iliopsoas Obturator internus 0.102 -0.049 -0.106 0.158 0.115 0.044 -0.174 -0.228 -0.161 0.042 0.166 -0.146 -0.115 -0.050 0.143 0.223 Gluteus maximus Gluteus medius Iliopsoas Obturator internus -0.032 -0.270 -0.410 -0.386 0.032 0.270 0.337 0.276 -0.488* -0.282 -0.381 -0.064 0.488* 0.282 0.386 0.064 18 18 * p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; N: number of subjects. Co-occurrence matrix-based texture parameters (Angular second moment (AngScM) and Entropy (Entr)) [9]were computedfrom each region of interest (10 x 10 pixels) for four directions (q ¼ 0 , 45 , 90 , 135 ) and at 1-4 distances (d ¼ 1, 2, 3, 4 pixels) resulting in a total of 32 parameters. Angular second moment and entropychosen because they have been shown to correlate well with trabecular bone structural indices [10]. To determine the most relevant parameters, a correlation between the trabecular bone MRI texture parameters and DXA-measured aBMD was tested. Parameters computed in 0 and 90 and at a distance of 4 pixels (i.e. s(4,0)AngScM, s(4,4)AngScM; s(4,0)Entr, s(4,4)Entr) showed higher and consistent correlation, and were therefore selected for further analysis. Discussion: Skeletal muscles and boneswork in synchrony to support the body in motion, hence knowledge about how these two correlate during loading would be important in understanding and preventing certain musculoskeletal problems(e.g. fracture, osteoarthritis). In this study we found correlation between the textureof gluteus maximus and gluteus medius muscles and femoral neck bone mineral density for high-impact and high-magnitude exercise. To explain these results, more specific studies are needed. References [1] Kawakami Y, Abe T, Kuno SY, Fukunaga T. Training-induced changes in muscle architecture and specific tension. Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol 1995: 72: 37e43. [2] Lanyon LE. Control of bone architecture by functional load bearing. J Bone Miner Res 1992;7:S369eS375. € m P, Henriksson-Larse n K, Lor[3] Pettersson U, Alfredson H, Nordstro entzon R. Bonemass infemalecross-countryskiers: relationship between musclestrength and differentBMDsites. Calcif Tissue Int. 2000: 67:199-206. [4] Elkin SL, Williams L, Moore M, Hodson ME, Rutherford OM. Relationship of skeletal muscle mass, muscle strength and bone mineral density in adults with cystic fibrosis. Clin Sci (Lond) 2000: 99: 309-14. € m P, Thorsen K, Bergstro €m E, Lorentzon R. High bone mass and [5] Nordstro altered relationships between bone mass, muscle strength, and body constitution in adolescent boys on a high level of physical activity. Bone 1996: 19: 189-95. [7] Nikander R, Kannus P, Dastidar P, Hannula M, Harrison L, Cervinka T, Narra NG, Aktour R, Arola T, Eskola H, Soimakallio S, Heinonen A, Hyttinen €nen H. Targeted exercise against hip fragility. Osteoporos Int 2009: J, Sieva 20: 1321e1328. ski PM, Strzelecki M, Materka A, Klepaczko A. MaZda e a [8] Szczypin software package for image texture analysis. Comput Methods Programs Biomed 2009: 94: 66e76. [9] Haralick RM, Shanmugam K, Dinstien I. Textural features for image classification. IEEE Trans Syst Man Cybern 1973: 3: 610e621. [10] Tameem HZ, Selva LE, Sinha US. Texture measure from low resolution MR images to determine trabecular bone integrity in osteoporosis. Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc 2007: 2007: 2027e2030. Junmo An a, Andrew Webb b, Ioannis Seimenis c, Eftychios Christoforou d, Nikolaos V. Tsekos a. a Medical Robotics Laboratory, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA; b C.J. Gorter Center for High Field MRI, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands; c Medical Physics Lab, Medical School, Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece; d Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Cyprus, Cyprus Background: We describe an MR compatible endoscope that combines an optical sensor for light-induced fluorescent (LIF) and a micro-MRI coil for loco-regional biosensing of tissue that (I) co-registers MR image, LIF and MR 1H spectra, and (II) mechanically scans to assess the spatial distribution of fluorophores (LIF) and metabolites (MRS). Methods: The optical/MR probe composes of: (1) a 1.25mm 7-fiber optical sensor (6 fibers emit light from a 450nm LED and 1 for reception), (2) a 2.3mm RF coil and (3) a mechanical scanner using a PiezoWalk motor. This probe was tested on a three-compartment phantom with characteristic optical (Fig. 1(a)) and 1H (Fig. 1(b)) signals: (I) comp-1 water-based gelatin (1H at 4.9 ppm) and fluorescein for LIF, (II) comp-2: oil-based gelatin (1H peak at 1.4 ppm) and no fluorophore and (III) comp3: water-based gelatin with choline (1H at 3.3 ppm) and fluorescein/ rhodamine-B for LIF.. Results: The presence and operation of the probe and manipulator had no effect on the SNR of acquired GRE images and 1H spectra. Figure 1 shows spectro-spatial contour plots for both modalities clearly demonstrating the two boundaries between the three compartments. LIF spectra (Fig. 1(a)) show fluorescein in comp-1, Rhodamine-B/fluorescein in comp-3, and lack of any signal in comp-2. MRS spectra (Fig. 1(b)) exhibit identical patterns: comp-1 has only water signal(not shown), comp-2 has oil signal (peak at 1.4 ppm), and comp-3 has choline (peak at 3.3 ppm). Spatial matching was within the LIF/MRS mechanical resolution of 0.5 mm: the boundaries from MRI were calculated at -9.2 and +3.3 mm, from LIF spectro-spatial plot at -8.8 and +3.6 mm and from MRS at -8.2 and +3.7 mm. Discussion: A forward looking MR compatible optical/MR probe for assessing the spatial distribution of co-registered optical and 1H signal sources using a pull mechanical scan is described and tested. The use of MR and optical sensors can have impact in improving diagnosis in situ, as well as in performing basic research in vivo. For instance, it may enhance the detection of tumor margins and even used to guide biopsies. HIGH RESOLUTION MR EYE PROTOCOL OPTIMIZATION: COMPARISON BETWEEN 3D-CISS, 3D-PSIF AND 3D-VIBE SEQUENCES Irene Tsiapa a, d, Miltiadis K. Tsilimbaris c, Penelope Bouziotis d, Apostolos H. Karantanas b, Ioannis G. Pallikaris c, Thomas G. Maris a. a Department of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece; b Department of Radiology, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece; c Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital of Crete, Heraklion, Greece; d Institute for Nuclear and Radiological Sciences, Technology, Energy and Safety, National Center of Scientific Research “Demokritos”, Aghia ParaskeviAthens, Greece Background: The purpose of this study was to compare selected pulse sequences for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the eye and to evaluate their potential for the depiction of specific anatomic regions of the eye. Materials and methods: A High-Resolution (100x100x600 mm) MRI protocol was developed on a 1.5-T clinical system and applied in the left eye of an albino rabbit. Experiments were performed using T1w, T2w and postGd T1w sequences utilizing both a head or body coil and a small surface coil. The comprehensive MR imaging protocol consisted of two 3D T2w sequences: (reverse fast imaging with steady state precession (3D-PSIF), constructive interference in steady state (3D-CISS)) and one 3D T1w sequence: (volumetric interpolated breathhold examination (3D-VIBE)). The T1w 3D-VIBE sequence was acquired, before and after intravenous injection of 0.2 mmol/kgr gadolinium-DTPA. MR image artifacts presence was rated subjectively utilizing a 5 point scale. Signal-to-Noise Ratios Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) (SNR) and Contrast-to-Noise Ratios (CNR) amongst specific eye anatomical areas were calculated for each sequence. Results: 3D-PSIF and 3D-CISS provide better delineation and visualization of the eye as compared with 3D-VIBE sequences. 3D-PSIF provides better visualization of the eye segments with better CNR between aqueous and vitreous humor but lower visibility and discrimination for the eye surrounding tissues. In contrast, 3D-CISS had better SNR and provided the best CNR amongst aqueous or vitreous humor and the eye surrounding tissues. Severe H0 artifacts were present in eye tissues with higher T2 values (aqueous and vitreous humor). In post-contrast imaging, the T1w 3D-VIBE sequence provided the best SNR and CNR amongst the anatomic layers of the eye which were clearly visualized by the specific sequence and were not visible in any other T2w sequences. Discussion: MRI offers unique advantages over existing retinal imaging techniques, including the ability to image multiple layers without depth limitation and to provide multiple clinically relevant data in a single setting. The 3D-PSIF and 3D-CISS sequences can provide good anatomic depiction of the eye segments on T2w-like images and could be combined with T1w 3D-VIBE sequences, in post-contrast MR imaging, for a comprehensive MRI protocol in high resolution MR eye imaging. 25 features in the future and is free for utilization upon request (dimglo@ teiath.gr). Discussion: The proposed web-based platform may be used to automatically combine information from both radiological and microscopic findings for reducing potential sources of misinterpretations in breast cancer diagnosis. INNOVATIVE WEB-BASED DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM FOR COMBINING MAMMOGRAPHIC, HISTOLOGICAL AND CYTOLOGICAL IMAGE DATA IN BREAST CANCER DIAGNOSIS Spiros Kostopoulos a, Dimitris George Xenogiannopoulos a, Glotsos a, Ioannis Kalatzis 1, Pantelis Asvestas a, Kostas Sidiropoulos b, Eirini Konstantina Nikolatou c, Panagiota Ravazoula d, Nikos Dimitropoulos e, George Sakellaropoulos f, George Nikiforidis f, Dionisis Cavouras a. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Education Institute of Athens, Greece; b School of Engineering and Design, Brunel University West London, Uxbridge, Middlesex, United Kingdom; c Department of Economic Sciences, University of Patras, Patras, Greece; d Department of Pathology, University Hospital of Patras, Greece; e Delta Digital Diagnostic Center, Semitelou 6, Athens, Greece; f Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras, Greece Background: Diagnostic mammography is the most important and reliable screening method for confirming the location, extent, and other important clinical features of breast tumours. However, in early stage cancer, the subtle differences between normal and abnormal tissues have been proven challenging for viewing even by experienced physicians: up to 30% of breast lesions are missed during routine diagnosis. In the presence of suspected lesion(s), pathologists are called to reach the final diagnostic conclusion on the basis of visual evaluation of histological and/ or cytological material under the microscope. Although microscopic examination is a critical process for treatment planning, the potential of diagnostic errors still remains substantially high; even the most experienced pathologist’s diagnosis is sometimes a biased opinion. Recent literature has highlighted that diagnostic, prognostic, and predictive misinterpretations in breast cancer management can be reduced by combining information from both radiological and microscopy findings. Material and methods: This paper introduces a web-based decision support tool (Figure 1) that was designed to combine information from radiological and histological images of breast cancer from the same patient in order to be used as a second opinion tool by expert physicians. The beta version of the platform is accessible upon request (http://medisp.bme. teiath.gr:9090) and in its current form can be used to automatically separate low from high grade breast cancer cases. The platform requires a/ the user’s estimation regarding the mammographic appearance of potential findings, such as breast density, microcalcifications etc, b/ a the user’s estimation regarding the histological appearance of biopsy material, such as necrosis, vascularity, mitoses, cellularity etc, c/ at least one microscopy image at 40x magnification stained with Haematoxylin and Eosin and d/ optionally the mammographic image. The beta version incorporates a series of automated image processing steps involving enhancement and segmentation (Laplacian of Gaussian filter, Canny edge detection, morphological opening and closing), image analysis (morphological feature extraction) and classification (Probabilistic Neural Network classifier). The user automatically receives the classification result in text format. The platform will expand to accommodate more user-friendly Fig. 1 Web-based decision support system for diagnosis of breast cancer.Ă Keywords: Breast cancer, Mammography, Histology, Cytology, Microscopy, Decision support system Acknowledgements: This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “Archimedes III: Funding of Research Groups in TEI of Athens” project of the “Education & Lifelong Learning” Operational Programme. Ă OBJECTIVE NOISE EVALUATION IN DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY, TOWARDS IMAGE QUALITY TRACKING OF CLINICAL IMAGES A. Ivory a, C. Walsh b, S. Cournane b. a School of Medicine, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland; b Department of Medical Physics & Bioengineering, St James's Hospital, Dublin 8, Ireland Background: European guidelines for assessing image quality of Full Field Digital Mammography (FFDM) systems recommend measurements taken using unprocessed images of non-anthropomorphic test objects on an annual basis.[1] These tests are preformed on raw unprocessed images and do not assess the clinically relevant image processing algorithms of clinical images and, due to the frequency of testing, for a period of time a reduction 26 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) in image quality may go unnoticed. To date no objective image quality analysis techniques for ongoing assessment of clinical mammography images have been suggested in the literature. The purpose of this study is to identify and assess potential noise measures for continuous objective image quality evaluation of clinical images in digital mammography. Methods: A number approaches were investigated to measure the noise present in mammography images. A percentage noise method, based on a noise threshold established using wavelet coefficients, similar to that used by Luo et al. [2], was employed. Variance of parameters from a power law fit of the NPS, as proposed by Cockmartin et al. [3], was also examined. Initial investigations were carried out on both raw and processed images of uniform physics phantoms and anatomical test objects by varying imaging parameters and computationally incorporating noise. Results: In preliminary tests, both methods investigated indicated computationally simulated noise levels in images. On investigation of processed images for physics phantoms and anatomical test objects, the wavelet threshold method showed little variation in percentage noise. The NPS beta fit parameter displayed variation similar to standard noise measurements currently preformed on raw images. Discussion: Application of the NPS method retrospectively to clinical images in normal operation and in the weeks preceding a detector failure will be investigated and the method adapted to develop an objective metric applicable to clinical images on a continuous basis in a remote setting. Conclusion: This work investigates a novel application of noise power spectrum evaluation for the purpose of monitoring changes in noise in clinical images, if successful this method could be incorporated into a remote image quality monitoring system in the future. Key references [1] European Guidelines for Quality Assurance in breast cancer screening and diagnosis, Fourth Addition, Health and Consumer Protection, Directorate General [2] Luo et al., Journal of Remote Sensing, 2006, 27(22):5003-5025 [3] Cockmartin et al, Medical Physics, 2013, 40,081920 AVERAGE GLANDULAR DOSE IN DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY: COMPARISON OF REAL TIME CALCULATIONS WITH RETROSPECTIVE CALCULATIONS USING THE DICOM HEADER DATA I.A. Tsalafoutas PhD, S. Kanellopoulou MSc. Medical Physics Department, General Anticancer Oncology Hospital of Athens ‘Agios Savvas’, 171 Alexandras Avenue, 115 22, Athens, Greece Objective: To investigate the accuracy of entrance surface air kerma (ESAK) and average glandular dose (AGD) values calculated in real time by the dosimetric software of digital mammography units. Methods: 1241 mammograms performed in three identical digital mammography units (Essential, General Electric Medical Systems) were studied. Using appropriate software (DICOM Info Extractor), all patient dose related parameters were extracted from DICOM headers into three Microsoft Excel files (one for each unit). These files contained embedded equations and algorithms to allow the retrospective calculation of ESAK and AGD values automatically, using the DICOM header info and tabulated values of ESAK to AGD conversion coefficients reported in relevant publications of Wu et al (1991, 1994), Dance et al (1990, 2000) and Boone et al (1999, 2002). Results: Real time calculated ESAK values agreed within ±10% with the retrospectively calculated ESAK values for the whole sample studied. The same was valid for the vast majority of real time calculated AGD values when compared to those retrospectively calculated using Wu’s method, since this is the method used by the mammography unit. The Boone’s and Dance’s method resulted in slightly larger AGD values when the glandularity values given in the DICOM headers were used. However, when typical glandularity values were used, much larger differences (up to about 50%) were observed for individual breasts, as a result of the large differences observed among the glandularity values given in the DICOM headers and the Dance’s method typical glandularity values. Conclusion: The accuracy of real time calculations of ESAK and AGD values was considered satisfactory for all three units studied. However, it was understood that comparisons among studies or mammography units with respect to the AGDs should be made with caution, since different AGD calculation methods are used. Some of them are based in real time estimated glandularity, some on typical glandularity values and others on the assumption of 50%-50% breast composition. The estimation of the actual breast glandularity remains a challenge for digital mammography unit manufacturers. CT OPTIMIZATION AND PERFORMANCE CHARACTERIZATION AFTER THE INSTALLATION OF AN ITERATIVE RECONSTRUCTION ALGORITHM Sofia D. Kordolaimi MSc a, Agapi Ploussi MSc a, Nektarios Kalyvas PhD b, George Sthathis MD a, Athanasios Athanasakos MD a, Ioannis Saradeas a, Stylianos Argentos MD a, Efstathios P. Efstathopoulos PhD a. a 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece; b Technological educational institute of Athens, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Greece Background: In recent years, the rapid introduction of new imaging technology in clinical practice has improved the role of diagnostic radiology in early diagnosis. The introduction of iterative algorithms (IR) in clinical practice necessitates an initial optimization of CT exposure parameters with respect to diagnostic image quality prior to patient examinations. Purpose: The presentation of a methodology for the adjustment of the exposure settings to the new requirements of an IR algorithm and the evaluation of its performance. Materials and methods: For that purpose, a CT quality assurance phantom was multiply scanned for various settings and acquired images were reconstructed with all available levels of the IR algorithm. For the evaluation and optimization of the system the parameters assessed were: CT number accuracy, image noise (standard deviation measurements and Noise Power Spectrum- NPS calculations), high contrast (by visual inspection and by Modulation Transfer Function- MTF calculations), low contrast (by visual inspection and CNR calculations) and a Figure of Merit (FOM) index. CTDIvol as displayed in the console was recorded, as well. For the system optimization, a “useful” tube current- time product (mAs) area,for each tube voltage, where the system functions according to the manufacturer’s specifications, was determined. High mAs values that did not further improve the image quality indices were excluded from this area, as well. Results: The “useful” mAs ranges were 300-600 mAs, for 80 kVp, 50-200 mAs for 120 kVp and 30-100 mAs for 140 kVp. FOM results indicated that the optimum mAs-kVp settings were 300mAs-80kVp, 100mAs-120kVp, and 90mAs-140kVp using the highest level of iterations corresponding to CTDIvol of 5.7mGy, 6.5mGy and 8.7mGy, respectively. Concerning the IR algorithm’s performance, noise was decreased with the increase of the IR level however, noise texture did not change. High and low contrast resolution did not exhibit any variations from the use of IR algorithm. Discussion: Authors developed an optimization/ performance characterization methodology for the integration of a new technology aspect in clinical routine. The widespread availability of the phantom along with the easily applicable methodology will facilitate that process. 3 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE WITH THE AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL MULTIDETECTOR COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY DIAGNOSTIC REFERENCE LEVEL SERVICE (NDRLS) P. Johnston, A. Wallace, P. Marks, P. Thomas, T. Beveridge, A. Hayton. Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency, Yallambie, Victoria, Australia ARPANSA, in collaboration with various stakeholders have developed a web based survey for individual imaging practices to log patient scanning data for the construction of diagnostic reference levels for MDCT (ARPANSA, 2014). The ARPANSA national adult DRL is the 75th percentile (third quartile) of the spread of the median practice doses for common MDCT protocols from a national survey of imaging practices. A local facility reference level (FRL) is defined as the median value of the spread of doses for common protocols surveyed at the local radiology practice for 20 patients. The MDCT DRLs have been derived from a nationwide survey of local PRLs which, it is assumed, have produced images of acceptable diagnostic quality as defined by the reporting specialist. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 27 The Australian NDRLS has been acquiring MDCT DRL survey data since August 2011. It is estimated that nationally there are 1000 scanners distributed across 850 facilities. At the end of 2013, 217 facilities have voluntarily registered with the NDRLS and approximately, of the 2400 surveys started, 1600 where completed. Each survey was categorized by facility, scanner, patient age, scanned habitus (head, neck, chest, abdomenpelvis, chest-abdomen-pelvis, lumbar spine). A complete survey requires 20 patients and any number greater than 10 can be submitted. Patient metrics include CTDIvol, DLP, weight, age and sex per acquisition. Participants are also required to record and log primary acquisition parameters for use in future optimization strategies. The current MDCT DRLs are shown in Table 1. Adult habitus DLP DRLs over the 3 year period shows little variation at the 95% confidence interval as demonstrated in figure 1. In early 2013 the NDRLS requested information on the use of iterative reconstruction for protocols. Limited data across all habituses supports the application of this technology, with a significant dose reduction delivered per protocol see figure 2. The NDRLS has shown that Australian MDCT doses are; 1. in the mid-range of international DRLs for similar scans, 2. relatively invariant over the past 3 years, and 3. reduced by the introduction of iterative reconstruction techniques. Table 1 Australian MDCT DRLs. MDCT Adult DRL Protocol Head Neck Chest Abdomen-Pelvis Chest-Abdomen-Pelvis Lumbar Spine MDCT Child (5-14 years) DRL Head Chest Abdomen MDCT Baby (0-4 years) DRL Head Chest Abdomen Fig. 1 Adult DLP DRL Variation.Ă DLP (mGy.cm) 1000 600 450 700 1200 900 CTDIvol (mGy) 60 30 15 15 30* 40 600 110 390 35 5 10 470 60 170 30 2 7 Fig. 2 DLP (mGy.cm) reduction using iterative reconstruction for single phase acquisitions. References: ARPANSA. 2014. National Diagnostic Reference Level Service [Online]. Yallambie: ARPANSA. Available: http://www.arpansa.gov.au/services/ndrl/ index.cfm. STUDY OF PAEDIATRIC EXPOSURE TO RADIATION MICTURATING CYSTOURETHROGRAPHY PROCEDURES DURING Abdelmoneim Sulieman a, Esameldeen Babikir b, Khalid Alzimami b, Nada Alrihaima c, Kiki Theodorou d. a Radiology and Medical Imaging Department, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Salman bin Abdulaziz University. P.O.Box 422, Alkharj11943, Kindom of Saudi Arabia; b Radiological Sciences Department, College of Applied Sciences, King Saud University, P. O.Box 10219, Riyadh 11433, Saudi Arabia; c Sudan Atomic Energy Commission, P.O.Box 55, Khartoum, Sudan; d Medical Physics Department, University Hospital of Larissa, PO Box 1425, Larissa 41110, Greece Background: Paediatrics and children have been documented that they have a higher risk of developing carcinogenic effect from the irradiation than adults. Paediatric fluoroscopic procedures expose the patients to a considerable radiation dose. Micturating cystourethrography (MCU) is one of the most radiographic procedures that performed in paediatric patients. This study aims to measure the entrance surface air kerma dose (ESAK) and effective doses for pediatric patients undergoing MCU. Materials and methods: The study was carried out in five hospitals in Khartoum. The ESAK dose was determined by using calibrated thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLDs- GR 200 A) for 167 children. Furthermore, the surface dose was evaluated for the comforters. Patient's demographic data and imaging parameters were recorded. Ethics and research committee approved the study and informed consent was obtained from the parent prior the procedure. Results: The mean ESAK± sd and range (mGy) resulting from MCU procedure has been estimated to be 2.2±0.5 (0.5-4.5) for the total paediatric patient population. The mean effective dose was 0.45±0.1 per procedure. The mean the range of films and screening time were 5.6 (4-7) and 1.1 ( 0.6-3.2) min at the same order per single procedure. Discussion: The radiation dose to the patients is well within established safety limits in five hospitals, in the light of the current practice. All the X ray machines have low X ray filtration compared to the European guidelines. Pediatric patients exposed to unnecessary radiation as a results of long fluoroscopic imaging, large number of films an inadequate training in pediatric procedures. A written protocol is required to harmonize the practice for adoption a local dose reference level for dose optimization. 28 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) CT RADIATION DOSE IN CHILDREN: A SURVEY TO ESTABLISH AGE-BASED DIAGNOSTIC REFERENCE LEVELS IN MITERA HOSPITAL (A PRIVATE MEDITERRANEAN HOSPITAL) Tagkalakis Panayiotis, Zabelis Ioannis, Trimis Panayiotis, Tsatsaronis Konstantinos, Papaioannou Georgia, Paraskevopoulou Chryssa. Department of Imaging, Mitera Hospital, Athens, Greece The aim of this study is to assess the doses delivered in Mitera Hospital -a large private Mediterranean hospital- (Athens, Greece) to pediatric patients during computed tomography examinations of the brain, chest and facial bones and to establish diagnostic reference levels (DRL) for different age groups. All CT examinations are performed with a SIEMENS Somatom Sensation 64 CT with Automatic Exposure Control System. 146 pediatric patients were divided in into four age groups (less than 1 year old, 1-5 years old, 5 to 10 years old and 10 to 15 years old). For each examination, CT acquisition parameters including number of series, use of contrast medium, tube kV, tube current and rotation time, slice thickness, the displayed CT dose index (CTDIvol) and the Dose Length Product (DLP) were reported. The most common value of CTDIvol and DLP for each type of examination and each age group was determined. Our results were compared to the pediatric DRLs of Switzerland (2008), UK (2003) and Germany (2006) and were found significantly lower. These values are used as our hospital’s Dose Reference Levels (DRL) until a more extensive -detailed study- survey is organized in Greece for the establishment of -the- country’s pediatric reference levels. SHOULD THE JUSTIFICATION OF MEDICAL EXPOSURES TAKE ACCOUNT OF RADIATION RISKS FROM PREVIOUS EXAMINATIONS?1 Walsh C a, Murphy D b. a St James’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland; Children’s Hospital, Dublin, Ireland b Our Ladys With the growing availability of dose histories for patients, the question of whether previous diagnostic radiation exposures should affect decisions on future examinations is coming into sharper focus. In the case of higher dose diagnostic exams such as CT or PET/CT, where patients may receive several scans as part of their treatment, the question of how cumulative dose should be treated is of particular interest. In this presentation we discuss ways in which cumulative dose information may affect our thinking in justifying exposures1. Part of the difficulty relates to the complexities of interpreting and communicating statistically modelled risk. Based on a common tendency to see a connection between past and future events even where we know them to be independentdthe gambler’s fallacydwe may find ourselves treating past risks as if they contribute to the present risk. We take the example of two patients scheduled for CT scans, one with no previous diagnostic radiation exposures, whereas the other with a history of previous CT scans, to show that the risks, and justification process, are equivalent in both cases. For the patient with a history of diagnostic exposures, there are only two possibilities: either harm has been caused or there has been no effect. If previous CT examinations have not caused harm, then as past risks, they are irrelevant. The patient is in precisely the same position with regard to risk as a patient with no dose history. If harm has been caused, avoiding further diagnostic exposures does not change this outcome; again in this case, a justified radiation examination should proceed. We argue that bringing dose history into the decision process for justifying examinations is contrary to our understanding of stochastic risk and, rather than improving patient safety, would unnecessarily restrict access to radiation-based diagnostic examinations. 1 Walsh C, Murphy D, Should the justification of medical exposures take account of radiation risks from previous examinations? BJR, 2014 EFFICIENCY OF LEAD GLASSES FOR FLUOROSCOPICALLY-GUIDED PROCEDURES: A SYSTEMATIC MONTE CARLO STUDY OF EYE LENS DOSES L. Struelens a, C. Koukorava b, c, J. Farah c, d. a Belgian Nuclear Research Centre (SCKCEN), Mol, Belgium; b Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC), Athens, Greece; c Department of Medical Physics, University of Athens, Greece; d Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûret e Nucl eaire (IRSN), Fontenay-auxRoses, France Background: Previous measurements of eye lens dose performed on interventionalists have shown that the new recommended annual limit of 20 mSv can be exceeded. This increases the need for systematic and appropriate use of protective equipment in standard clinical conditions. In this study, a very comprehensive Monte Carlo study is performed to evaluate the protection efficiency of different designs of lead glasses, considering all different working practices during interventional procedures. Materials and methods: Two models of lead glasses were considered: one “wrap-around” type (L1) and one with rectangular front lenses and side protection (L2), similar to those commercially available. Several modifications to these models were operated with respect to lead thickness, shape and position on the head. For each design and different working conditions, the MCNP-X code was used to determine the protection efficiency of the glasses for both eyes. Results: The L1 type reduces the dose to the left and right eye on average by 87% and 23% respectively, while the L2 type reduces on average the dose by 45% (left) and 33% (right). In case of L2 type glasses, a much larger proportion of the dose to the left eye is coming from the air gaps beneath the lead glasses. The protection efficiency for the right eye is particular low for the L1 type glasses. For all tested projections, the right eye is exposed by photons crossing the gaps beneath the glasses (around 50%) and the gap between the glasses (16%). When the gap beneath the glasses is increased by 1 cm for L1, the efficiency of the glasses is reduced by almost 20%; while for the L2 type an increase by only 0.35 cm increased the dose by 25%. The simulations showed that there was minimal effect of the lead thickness. Discussion: Simulations showed that the glasses shape, the operator’s position and the beam orientation play an important role in the protection efficiency of the eye. It is clear from the study that wearing any kind of lead glasses will not protect the operator in the same way. It is strongly advised to wear glasses with the minimum possible gaps between the face and the eyewear. EYE-LENS EXPOSURE TO MEDICAL STAFF DURING ERCP A. Zagorska a, b, K. Romanova c, J. Hristova-Popova a, J. Vassileva a. a National Centre of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection, Sofia, Bulgaria; b Medical University, Sofia, Bulgaria; c Military Medical Academy, Sofia, Bulgaria Background: ICRP recommend in its Statement on Tissue Reactions on 2011 an equivalent dose limit for the lens of the eye of 20 mSv in year. The aim of this study is to report doses to eye lens of medical staff working in gastroenterology during Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) procedures. Materials and methods: Data of ERCP procedures performed in a Department of Gastroenterology during a period of 2 months was recorded. Patient doses were measured with Dose-Area Product (DAP) meterintegrated in the C-arm fluoroscopy system.Eye-dose was measured with EDD 30 e Unfors at the level of the left eye of the main operator, which is closest to the X-Ray tube side. For each procedure dose equivalent to the eye Hp(0.07), exposure time, dose rate, DAP and fluoroscopy time were recorded. Results: The mean dose to the eye-lens per procedure was 26.2 mSv, minimum measured value was 2.6 mSv and maximum e 111.5 mSv. The mean estimated annual eye-lens dose is 11 mSv with minimum - 2.29 mSv and maximum - 45 mSv.The estimated mean annual value does not exceed the existinglimit but the real doses could be higher presuming that ERCP is not the single procedure in this department. Discussion: Taking into consideration the workload of physicians and the lack of additional shields we recommend that lead glassesto be used to decrease radiation exposure on the lens of the eye. CYTOGENETIC TECHNIQUES FOR DOSE EVALUATION AFTER AN ACCIDENT WHEN ACCURATE, FAST AND RELIABLE RESPONSE IS NEEDED D. Zafiropoulos a, E. Facco b, L. Sarchiapone a. a Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro, IstitutoNazionale di FisicaNucleare,Legnaro, Italy; b Istituto Oncologico Veneto, Padova,, Italy Background: The SPES (Selective Production of Exotic Species) project at the LNL aims to produce radioactive ion beams using a proton beam on a Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) uranium carbide target.In case of an accident, where workers are involved, the dose can reach tens of cGy. In the absence of physical dosimeters or in the case we need to confirm such exposures, biological methods are necessary to be adopted. Biological dosimetry based on the analysis of dicentrics and rings in human peripheral blood lymphocytes after theGiemsa staining of a metaphase is a well-established method. In this work is shown that applying the fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique, using telomeric/ centromericpeptide nucleic acid (PNA) probes, in metaphase chromosomes for radiation dosimetrycould become a fast and accurate method for biological dosimetry in radiation emergency exposures. Both the methods described above need at least three days to get results, a time considered too long to support adequately the triage and treatment of the radiation exposed individuals. Using premature chromosome condensation (PCC),irradiated human peripheral blood lymphocyteswere fused with mitotic CHO cells and the yield of dicentrics and rings seen under PCC conditions, using FISH and PNA probes for centromere and telomere detection, were determined by image analysis in less than 24 hours. Materials and methods: Standard Giemsa staining method was used for the construction of calibration curve. This calibration curve is compared with that using the same donors and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) techniqueusing PNA probes. The methodology of cell fusion mediated premature chromosome condensation was used combined with the FISH analysis using telomere/centromere PNA probes reducing dramatically the time of detecting and scoring of unstable chromosome aberrations for dose evaluation. Results: Dose response calibration curves with 95% confidence limits used to estimate uncertainties on dose have been constructed for conventional metaphase analysis and FISH. Comparison with the dose-response curve constructed after scoring of dicentrics and rings using PCC combined with FISH and PNA probes is also presented. Discussion: The various methods used will be illustrated and the FISH analysis using PNA probes for centromers and telomersin PCC metaphases for radiation dosimetry purposes will be presented as a fast, accurate, and useful method for radiation dosimetry in emergency and incidental situations, a method that can be considered the “gold-standard” of biological dosimetry. 29 REVISITING AN OLD CHALLENGING ISSUE: DO PATERNAL AND MATERNAL OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURES TO IONIZING RADIATION AFFECT THE GENDER OF THE OFFSPRING? S.M.J. Mortazavi a, b, S. Aghajari b, S. Taeb c, M. Haghani b, L. Sannipour c. a The Center for Research on Protection against Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; b Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; c Vice Chancellery for Health , Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Background: Numerous studies have been performed globally to investigate whether exposure of the parents to occupational and environmental factors such as ionizing and non-ionizing radiation affect the sex ratio of the offspring. Currently, there is a limited evidence for a reduced proportion of male offspring due to paternal exposures. On the other hand, alteration of sex ratio due to maternal exposures is more complicated and controversial. Aims: This study aimed at answering the question whether paternal and maternal occupational exposures to ionizing radiation affect the gender of the offspring. Materials and methods: A total of 402 medical radiation workers (202 males and 200 females) comprising diagnostic radiology, radiotherapy and nuclear medicine technologists were studied. Dosimetric records of the whole-body doses (measured by film badge dosimetry technique) of these radiation workers were studied. Results: Among male radiation workers, 16.9% reported at least one record of the above the background dose. This proportion in female radiation workers was 14.1%. The sex ratio among children of male radiation workers was 1.22, significantly higher than that among children of female radiation workers which was 1.09. Conclusion: Male radiation workers fathered a greater proportion of boys than would be expected for general population. These findings are in contrast with the reports indicating a reduced proportion of male offspring due to paternal exposures. Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Physica Medica journal homepage: http://www.physicamedica.com e-Posters with presentation DOSIMETRIC EVALUATION TO MEDICAL WORKERS OPERATING IN A PET/CT DEPARTMENT AFTER THE USE OF DYNAMIC TECHNIQUES K. Dalianis, A. Nikaki, R. Efhtymiadou, J. Andreou, V. Prassopoulos. PET/CT Department Hygeia SA, Athens, Greece Aim: Positron Emission Tomography is considered to be one of the most relevant diagnostic imaging techniques having peculiar characteristic to provide both functional and morphological information for the patient. Due to the high-energy tracers emitting 511 KeV used in PET/CT departments and considering the risks associated to ionizing radiation that have been derived from previous studies, special attention is needed when dealing with radiation protection aspects in a PET/CT modality . Since new radiopharmaceuticals such us [18F]-fluorothymidine and 18F fluoromethylcholine are used, new imaging dynamic techniques are performed and new measurements concerning the doses to medical staff are needed. The aim of this study was to measure the effective wholebody dose of the personnel in comparison with measurements that have been made in the past. Method: The estimation of equivalent dose from external dosimetry for all seven members of the staff was monitored with the use of TLDs badges and electronic dosimeters worn at the upper pocket of their overall. The average workload of the department is 6-8 patients per day. In 2013, 983 patients were examined. In our department 18F-FDG, 18F-FCT, 18F-FCH is available in multi dose vials. Data were collected day-to-day concerning the interaction of the staff during PET/CT procedures. Results: We compared the first six months of 2013 a period in which no FLT or FCH procedures were performed, with the second semester in which 96 FLT and 66 FCH examinations were performed. The average number of FDG patients was the same for every day, and all patients received 330-390 MBq dose each. Regarding the whole body doses no changes were observed concerning medical physicist. The measurements for the nurses show increased wholebody dose of about 7-12% and that is due to the longer time spent near the patient. Concerning the technologist doses, an increase of about 15-21% was measured because they are near to patient at the time of the injection. Conclusions: Regulations exist to ensure safety of the medical workers according to ALARA principles. From our results we can observe that although there is an increase of the doses for technologists and nurses the numbers are significantly lower than the recommended annual dose limit by Euratrom 97/43. MEDICAL PHYSICS TRAINING AND AUDITING IN THE NETHERLANDS Marion Essers, Marloes Damen, Wim van Damme, Marcel Greuter, Stan Heukelom, Jochen van Osch, Dyon Scheyen, Christoph Schneider, Esther van Schrojenstein, Ad Snik, Christiaan van Swol, Pieter Wijn;. on behalf of the Dutch Medical Physicist Training Foundation Background and introduction: In the Netherlands, the ‘Dutch Medical Physicist Training Foundation’ (OKF) organizes the education of medical physics experts (MPE). Approximately 90 MPE-residents are in training, in groups of 2-4 per trainer. They are trained in one of the areas of expertise: radiotherapy, radiology, nuclear medicine, audiology/videology or general medical physics. In this presentation, the Dutch Curriculum for MPEs will be discussed, and compared with European guidelines (the EFOMP Policy Statement 12.1, and the ESTRO/EFOMP Core Curriculum for Medical Physicists in Radiotherapy) with respect to knowledge, skills and competences (KSC). In addition, the training program, assessment methods, minimum training institute requirements, and training auditing will be presented. Design: OKF is responsible for the Curriculum and the accreditation of institutions, trainers and trainees. Access to the MPE program is restricted to students with an MSc in physics or an equivalent academic education. The Curriculum consists of a general part (similar for all areas of expertise) of two years and a two year specialisation part. A complete revision of the Curriculum during 2011-2014 was based on ESTROs European CC for medical physicists in radiotherapy, the Dutch medical residency programs, and the CANMEDs system of competences. Based on this Curriculum, each resident writes an individualized training program covering the two general years and two specialisation years (not necessarily in consecutive order), which has to be approved by the review board of OKF. During their training, the development of the MPE residents with respect to KSC is assessed using progress reports twice a year and several feedback methods. Quality aspects of individual trainers and requirements and educational settings of the training institutes are reviewed and accredited every five years by the review board. Discussion: In the Netherlands the Curriculum for medical physicists in training has recently been fully revised, and most of the recommendations on Medical Physics Education and Training in Europe 2014 (EFOMP Policy Statement 12.1) are implemented. Still, we would like to discuss our Curriculum and approach in order to further improve the quality and uniformity of Medical Physics Education and Training in the Netherlands and Europe. MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND TASTE A. Adamopoulos, T. Gemousakakis, P. Anninos, I. Seimenis, A. Kotini. Lab of Medical Physics, Medical School, Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece Magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings were evaluated in five different states: normal condition, sweet, bitter, sour, and salty taste. We report two study protocols. The first protocol included 28 healthy volunteers, 14 male and 14 female (12 - 50 years old). Fourier spectral analysis of the MEG showed that, in the normal condition, as well as in the sweet and bitter taste, the male volunteers exhibited a higher count of low (2 Hz) than high frequencies (7 Hz) compared to the female ones; in the case of the sour taste, there was no clear differentiation between the genders; with the salt taste, the female volunteers exhibited a higher count of low frequencies (2 Hz) whereas there was no clear differentiation in the number of high frequencies (7 Hz) between the gender. The second protocol included 25 healthy female volunteers. They were divided in two groups according to age: group A (10e19 years old) and group B (20e30 years old). There was a higher count of low (2 Hz) and a lower count of high frequencies (7 Hz) with increasing age, in all studied states. We compared each state for the frequencies of 2 Hz and 7 Hz between the two groups. Statistically significant differences were found in the normal and sweet states for the frequencies of 2 Hz and 7 Hz and in the salty taste for the frequency of 7 Hz. We also intra-compared the five states in group A and the five states in group B for the 2 Hz and 7 Hz frequencies. The results were not statistically significant. A differentiation in the distribution of frequencies may provide novel insights into the gender-related taste sensation and the age-dependence of taste quality brain centers. 2 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) THE DOSIMETRY OF NON-IONIZING RADIATION IN THE EDUCATION PROGRAMME FOR MEDICAL PHYSICS STUDENTS AT THE AGH UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY (AGH UST) Zenon Matuszak, Marta Wasilewska-Radwanska. AGH University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science, Department of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Al. Mickiewicza 30, PL-30059, Krakow, Poland After introducing the three level (cycle) system of education in Poland (socalled Bologna System), the Medical Physics studies in AGH-UST are accomplished as a separate branch of education. Medical Physics studies encompasses 1st cycle (7 semesters) and 2nd cycle (3 semesters) which lead to awarding bachelor’s and master’s degree, respectively. These circumstances and the progress in using of non-ionizing radiation in medical diagnostic and therapy, which occurred in last 15 years caused the need for change in position of the Dosimetry of Non-ionizing Radiation (DNR) in the general scheme of education of the Medical Physics students. Now, the DNR course is part of 2nd cycle of education (Master’s degree programme). The DNR course is obligatory for students of both specialization Dosimetry and Electronics in Medicine and Imaging and Biometry. The content of the DNR course is under continuous modification taking into account the current trends in applications of non-ionizing radiation in medical physics practice and research. At present, the basic DNR course encompasses the following didactic units: lectures (30 h), laboratory (30 h), student’s projects (15 h); the total scoring 5 ECTS points. Lectures content: static electric and magnetic fields, radiofrequency, microwave and terahertz radiation, optical radiation (infrared and UV-VIS), acoustic and ultrasonic waves, photoacoustics. The purpose is to give the students knowledge about the physics of non-ionizing radiation; sources, methods of measurements, interaction of non-ionizing radiation with biological matter, some legislation problems and safety regulations are also discussed. Laboratory - the laboratory exercises contain following units: electrode measurements, measurements of environmental electromagnetic fields, thermal effects of strong microwave fields, UV-VIS optical spectroscopy (both absorption and reflectance), fluorescence spectroscopy, photosensitizers and chemical actinometry, investigation of magnetostriction ultrasonic generator, measurement of speed of ultrasonic waves in water and biologically important solutions. Student’s projects: the topics cover all areas of non-ionizing radiation; from proposed themes the students choose the topics which are connected to their area of interest. EFFECT OF COMBINATION OF ACUTE EXPOSURE TO (50 HZ, 1MT) ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS AND CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKERS ON MICE’S MOTOR COORDINATION Lama Sakhnini a, Afnan Freije b, Habib A. Nabi Habib c, Mohammed Naiser c, Mohamed Hameed Alrahim c, Ahmmed Adel Almubarak c, Amer Kamal c. a Department of Physics, College of Science, University of Bahrain, PO Box 32038, Kingdom of Bahrain; b Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Bahrain, PO Box 32038, Kingdom of Bahrain; c Physiology Department, College of Medicine, Arabian Gulf University, Manama, Kingdom of Bahrain Behavioral studies on animals provide a useful indicator of the possible cognitive effects on human. Extremely low frequency electromagnetic field ELF-EMF was found to be directly, enhances the expression of voltagegated Ca2+ channels on plasma membrane of the exposed brain cells, leading to abnormal accumulation intracellular calcium. This is thought to affect different neurobehavioral functions in animals, including motor coordination. Therefore the possibility that calcium channel blockers CCB might exert neuroprotective effects in exposed animals has been of interest. In this study, the possible effects of ELF-EMFs on the motor performance in adult mice was investigated, using rotarod experiments. The effect of rotation speed (45,50,55,60 rpm) of the rotating rod was also tested on a 5-day course. Moreover the role of calcium channel blockers as neuroprotector against the ELF-EMFs was evaluated. Exposed mice to (1mT, 50Hz) EMF for 5 days (2 hours/day), showed an enhancement in their motor coordination abilities but a deficit in their learning abilities. Another group of ELF-EMF exposed mice were treated with a therapeutic dose of CCB (amlodipine 3mg/kg/day) for 23 days prior to their exposure and for 5 days during their exposure. Treatment with CCB improved learning abilities but did not alter the enhancement of motor coordination, compared with the performance of the exposed untreated mice. When a group of mice were exposed to EMF but left to rest for two weeks with no electromagnetic field exposure, an improvement of learning abilities were noticed but no improvement of motor coordination. Hence, learning abilities effects were improved by a therapeutic dose treatment of calcium channel blockers, and by stopping the ELF-EMFs exposure for two weeks, which indicates that these deficits are transient and reversible. However enchantment in motor coordination performance induced by ELF-EMF exposure were irreversible by CCB treatment or by time. NEUTRON FLUENCE MEASUREMENTS IN THE TREATMENT ROOM AND LABYRINTH OF A HIGH ENERGY MEDICAL ACCELERATOR USING ACTIVATION DETECTORS P. Georgolopoulou a, T. Vasilopoulou b, I.E. Stamatelatos b. a Department of Medical Physics, General Anticancer-Oncologic Hospital of Athens‘Saint Savvas', Greece; b Institute of Nuclear & Radiological Sciences, Technology, Energy & Safety, National Centre for Scientific Research 'Demokritos' Aghia Paraskevi, Greece Neutrons are produced in medical accelerators operating at energies above the threshold of photonuclear reactions. Treatment room shielding in such installations is usually adequate to also attenuate neutrons. However, neutron streaming along the accelerator maze may result in a significant dose at the bunker door. Monte Carlo and analytical approximation methods have been used for estimating photo-neutron doses at the maze entrance and hence optimize the linac shielding design. Nevertheless, measured and calculated neutron fluence may show significant discrepancies, often attributed to uncertainties in the neutron source term used as input in the simulations. In this work, activation detectors were used to determine the neutron fluence of a 23 MV linac at the “Saint Savvas” Anticancer-Oncologic Athens Hospital. Bare and cadmium covered gold, indium, manganese and copper foils were irradiated in mid-air and within polyethylene moderator assemblies. Sets of foils were positioned in-beam, in the treatment room and along the accelerator maze. The foils were counted using a germanium based gamma spectrometry system at the NCSR “Demokritos”. Neutron fluence evaluation was based on the analysis of the 198Au, 64Cu, 56Mn and 116 In peaks at 411 keV, 511 keV, 847 keV and 1294 keV, respectively. The results of this study provide experimental data for the neutron source term and the spatial distribution of the neutron fluence in the treatment room and along the maze of a high energy medical accelerator. These data will be used for assessing the capability of Monte Carlo and analytical methods to correctly predict neutron transport in the complex shielding geometry characterizing the accelerator bunker. QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS ON PEDIATRIC RENAL SCANS USING 99M-TCMAG3 V. Letsas a, H. Delis a, D. Apostolopoulos b, T. Skouras c, G. Panayiotakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, 265 00 Patras, Greece; b Department of Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital of Patras, 265 00 Patras, Greece; c Department of Medical Radiation Physics, University Hospital of Patras, 265 00 Patras, Greece Objective: Radioisotope 99m-Tc-MAG3 is mainly used for the diagnosis of renal disorders in children. As this group of patients is highly radio-sensitive, the need for non-invasive person-specific dosimetry arises, by quantification of the images acquired during the dynamic renogram. Method: The study was realized on a single headed gamma camera. Initial experimental phantom studies were conducted to quantify self-absorption of the source organs, containing 99m-Tc-MAG3, and define the attenuation correction under different conditions. Results: Counts in designated ROIs were measured and applying proper correction factors the activity in each source organ was calculated as a Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) function of time. Utilizing the MIRD schema and a theoretical model for the spherical expanding urinary bladder, major organ and effective dose values were initially derived for ten patients with ages varying from 2,5 months old to 10 years old. The results of the proposed model under/ overestimate the patient dose, compared to the ICRP published values for MAG3. The detailed quantification during the whole renogram duration, combined with appropriate assumptions regarding the time after the study, allow for evaluation of further interesting parameters, such as the excretion percentage of 99m-Tc per voiding interval. Conclusion: The proposed model for person-specific dosimetry of MAG3 pediatric examinations in nuclear medicine, can be utilized, with a sufficient degree of accuracy, as a reliable non-invasive, non-time consuming method for quantitative analysis. Keywords: MAG3, Renal scan, Radiation dosimetry, Quantitative analysis DESIGNING AND ESTABLISHING AN INTERNATIONAL DOUBLE DEGREE MASTER’S PROGRAM IN MEDICAL PHYSICS e THE INTERNATIONAL MASTER “CLINICAL MEDICAL PHYSICS” (CMP) AT PONTIFICIA UNIVERSIDAD CATOLICA DE CHILE (PUC) AND HEIDELBERG UNIVERSITY, GERMANY (UHD) € tzel a, O. Ja €kel a, b, B. €fer a, S. Barthold-Beß a, J. Debus b, L. Gebauer-Ho M. Scha Sanchez c, W. Schlegel a. a Department of Medical Physics in Radiation Oncology, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany; b Department of Radiation Oncology, University Hospital Heidelberg, lica de Heidelberg, Germany; c Instituto de Física, Pontificia Universidad Cato Chile, Chile Purpose: In 2008 both universities initiated a project to establish an international Double Degree Master’s program in Medical Physics e the International Master “Clinical Medical Physics” (CMP) e in order to meet the special needs of young professionals in the respective field in Latin America. Funded by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) the program is part of the “Center of Excellence in Investigation and Teaching” at Heidelberg University, Germany (UHD) which is supported by the German Federal Foreign Office. In 2012 the first study group joined the program and will be awarded with the Master of Science degree (MSc) in summer 2014. Material and methods: CMP is designed for graduates in physics or engineering from Latin America. During the first two semesters students participate in on-site courses at the Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile (PUC), mainly covering the basics of Medical Physics such as e.g. anatomy, physics of radiation, dosimetry and radiobiology. The third semester concentrates on modern treatment techniques (IMRT and IGRT) and covers dosimetry methods needed for these new modalities. It is held online at UHD supplemented by practical sessions at PUC. The fourth semester is dedicated to writing the final master thesis either at PUC or UHD. Finally, each successful student exits with a MSc degree from both universities. Results: To establish a Double Degree program at two universities from two continents is a challenge. Program regulations have to be approved by both universities. Furthermore, the curriculum needs to be coordinated by both partners over a distance of more than thousand kilometers. Consequently, the whole process requires both time and staff to ensure a continuous supervision. But ultimately, the program represents a good combination of on-site and online teaching approaches for students coming from Latin America as it fits in their individual situation of being newcomers to both Medical Physics and online learning. Conclusion: The program requires further modification and adaptation to the situation in Latin America to best prepare students for their professional careers. However, apart from the continuous personnel and financial support, from the students’ perspective and the students’ feedback these efforts are worth to continue. Literature: Kerres, Michael: Mediendidaktik. Konzeption und Entwicklung mediengestützter Lernangebote. 3. Aufl. München 2012. Nolda, Sigrid: Einführung in die Theorie der Erwachsenenbildung. 2. Aufl. Darmstadt 2012. Reich, Kersten: Konstruktivistische Didaktik. Das Lehr- und Studienbuch mit Online-Methodenpool. 5. Aufl. Weinheim, Basel 2012. 3 OPTIMIZATION OF IMAGE-BASED DOSIMETRY IN Y90 RADIOEMBOLIZATION: A MONTE CARLO APPROACH USING THE GATE SIMULATION TOOLKIT. K. Mountris a, A. Autret c, P. Papadimitroulas a, G. Loudos b, D. Visvikis c, G. Nikiforidis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion, GR 265 04; b Department of Medical Instruments Technology, Technological Educational institute of Athens, Ag. Spyridonos Street, Egaleo GR 122 10, Athens, Greece; c LaTIM, UMR 1101 INSERM, CHRU Brest, Brest, France Purpose: The ability of Monte Carlo simulation for PET acquisition of Y90 radioembolization and the correlation of image-based dosimetric results derived from the simulated data with respective results derived from the MC simulation of the treatment planning surrogates Tc99m-MAA (macroaggregated albumin) and Ga68-MAA were investigated. Methods: We used the XCAT phantom, using GATE MC platform, since this combination can provide ground truth data. The tiny branch of Y90 internal pair production was modeled (32 ppm) for a 30 minutes PET acquisition. We assumed homogeneous distribution of a 2.5GBq activity in the liver tissue and the tumor with a TNR 3:1 to compare our results with the partition model. The Tc99m-MAA SPECT acquisition simulated assuming homogeneous distribution of 200MBq Tc99m-MAA for 10 min with 64 frames (20s/frame). For pretreatment dosimetry optimization we simulated a Ga68-MAA PET acquisition for the same activity and acquisition time as in the Tc99m-MAA protocol. Comparison was applied between the dosimetric results of Y90-surrogates and the Y90 protocol. We generated 3D dose maps using a kernel-convolution method on the reconstructed images with an onsite generated Y90 kernel. Furthermore the total doses of tumor and normal liver parenchyma were calculated for all the scenarios creating 1D histograms. Results: For the Y90 scenario the liver dose was 62.94Gy, 15.5% higher than the dose calculated with the partition model (54.50Gy) and the tumor dose was 147.28Gy, 9.9% lower than the partition model (163.50Gy). For the Ga68 scenario the liver dose was 65.62Gy and the tumor dose 143.44Gy. For the Tc99m scenario the liver and tumor doses were 70.98Gy and 149.60Gy respectively. In all cases the tumor dose was underestimated relating to the partition model while the normal liver dose was overestimated. The difference between Ga68 derived doses over Y90 was +4.29% for the liver dose and -2.64% for the tumor dose while for the Tc99m acquisition the difference was +12.8% and +1.6% respectively. Conclusion: The Ga68-MAA showed significantly lower dosimetric differences with Y90 than Tc99m-MAA in liver dose calculation. As liver dose estimation is a key limiting factor in the treatment planning, the better correlation of Ga68-MAA can improve the therapeutic results of the treatment. Further investigation in the usage of Ga68-MAA in radioembolization must be done. Keywords: Yttrium-90, Radioembolization, Image-based dosimetry, Tc99m-MAA, Ga68-MAA A PROTOTYPE WHOLE BODY COUNTER WITH “INVARIANt” RESPONSE TO BODY HABITIUS AND RADIONUCLIDE DISTRIBUTION Stratos Valakis, John Kalef-Ezra. Medical Physics Department, University of Ioannina, Ioannina 451.10, Greece Background: A prototype shadow-shield moving bed whole body counter equipped with 16 NaI(Tl) detectors is operated at the University of Ioannina for clinical studies and the detection and measurement of radioactive contamination in workers, patients and the general public. The counter design aimed to provide high sensitivity and detection efficiency, eff, coupled with minimal influence on eff of the body shape, body composition and radionuclide biodistribution. Methods and materials: A Monte Carlo counter model was developed to study the influence of a number of parameters on eff of photons 0.1 to 1.8 MeV in energy. The simulation predictions were validated by measurements carried out on a number of phantoms loaded uniformly or nonuniformly with radionuclides of known activity. 4 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Results: Body mass and body height of the 15 modeled homogeneous phantoms (30 to 113 kg in mass and 138 to 193 cm in height) were the only body habitus parameters with substantial impact on eff. For example, the maximum calculated differences in the 662 and 1461 keV eff values between the simulated homogenous phantoms, +26% and +19%, respectively, were found between phantoms of the 35 kg / 138 cm and 91 kg /162 cm. Density changes in the entire body (mainly due to variations in fat content), or only in the thoracic region had marginal, if any, impact on the eff values of 140 to 1461 photons. The detection efficiency of 362 keV photons originating in the thyroid did not differ from that in the case of uniform source biodistribution. On the other hand, the eff of 140 to 1461 keV photon emitters located in the upper trunk or in the pelvic region was lower than that in the case of uniform source distribution in the entire body by about 10% and 15%, respectively. Conclusions: The high measurement precision of the counter coupled with the small influence of body habitus and source biodistribution on eff allow for accurate activity measurements. REVIEW AND REVISION OF THE NATIONAL REGULATORY FRAMEWORK FOR THE MEDICAL EXPOSURES ON THE OCCASION OF THE TRANSPOSITION OF THE NEW EC DIRECTIVE 59/2013 V. Kamenopoulou, C. Hourdakis, P. Dimitriou. Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC), P. Grigoriou & Neapoleos, Ag. Paraskevi, 15310 Athens, Greece Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC) is the regulatory body for radiological and nuclear safety and as such establishes and monitors the implementation of the respective regulatory framework. The publication of the new EC BSS Directive is the trigger for the revision and review of the legal framework governing the radiation protection and radiological safety of the country. In this respect, GAEC has initiated the preparation of the pieces of legislation needed. In practice, the current “Radiation Protection Regulations 2001”, (RPR), that transposed the EC Directives 29/96 and 43/97, will be thoroughly revised and reviewed. Apart from the EC Directive 2013/59, basis for this revision, and specifically the Medical Exposures part is: (a) the IAEA BSS, (b) the new scientific findings and recommendations, (c) the Policy, Strategy and Goals of GAEC, (d) the Recommendations given during the IAEA Integrated Regulatory Review Mission in Greece in 2012, and (e) the operational experience gained from the implementation of the current regulatory framework. Due consideration will be given to issues like (a) the need for clarification of competence, roles and responsibilities of professionals involved in the practical aspects of the exposure, (b) the need for clarification of competence, roles and responsibilities of experts involved in the radiation protection aspects (e.g. MPE, RPE), (c) the increase denoted in the exposure of patients due to technological and scientific developments (justification), (d) the promotion of Quality Management Systems, (e) the need for quality assurance programmes, and (f) the need for a different approach to cope with the “medico-legal” exposures. The major lesson learned from the operational experience of the RPR indicated the need to implement the “graded approach” in the legislative scheme and in the regulatory requirements. The priorities, concerns as well as the main current legislative initiatives taken for the Directive’s transposition will be presented and discussed, focusing in the field of Medical Exposures. RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS: TRANSPORTATION, PURCHASE PRICES IN GREECE DISTRIBUTION AND A. Tsamadou, E. Kounadi, P. Valsamos, M. Rekkas, Sampatakakis. Ministry of Health in Greece, SEYYP, Athens Greece S. Background: The transportation, distribution and the purchase prices of radiopharmaceuticals at the Greek Health System have been investigated after a complaint that was submitted to our service through the General Secretary of Transparency and Human Rights. The complaint was that radiopharmaceuticals prices are much higher in comparison to those at other EU countries. Radiopharmaceuticals are radioactive medicinal products (drugs) which, when ready for use, contain one or more radionuclide (radioactive isotopes) included for a medicinal purpose (Directive 2001/83/EC Article 1). They are used in nuclear medicine procedures to diagnose or treat various diseases. Materials and methods: Data were collected from the Ministry of Health, the National Drug Organization, the Greek Atomic Energy Commission, the National Center for Scientific Research “Democritos”, and the Health Supplier Commission as well as from five import companies or manufacturers of radiopharmaceuticals and specific health care radiopharmaceutical users (Data from Departments of Nuclear Medicine, Pharmacies and Departments of Administration from various hospitals of National Health System). The used tools were structured questionnaires for the examination of facts, legal framework, work cooperative practices etc. An extensive data processing and analysis was followed. Results: There is confusion about the radiopharmaceutical pricing. According to the law, the Ministry of Health and the National Drug Organization are in charge for the license of circulation and the purchase price of radiopharmaceuticals. There aren’t official comparative data between purchase prices in Greece and other EC countries. In Greece there are different purchase prices for the same radiopharmaceutical regardless the size of the medical department, the distance of the delivery, the extent of the order. Discussion: The cost analysis according the data provided from manufactures and importers suggests that profit margins can be lowered. Enhancement of the Health Procurment Commission services will help substantially to the price control. The minimization of cost differences in radiopharmaceuticals can be achieved by pricing from the government. SCREENING STUDY OF THE EFFICIENCY OF COMMON SUNGLASSES IN BLOCKING ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION AND VISIBLE LIGHT BY A NOVEL SIMPLE METHOD S.M.J. Mortazavi a, b, M. Hashemi a, M. Haghani a, S. Namavar c, S. Masoumi b, M. Eghlidospour b, H. Daneshmandi d. a The Center for Research on Protection against Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; b Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; c Ophtalmology Resident, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; d Department of Ergonomics, School of Health, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Background: Overexposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation has been linked to eye damages such as cataract, macular degeneration, pingueculae, pterygia and photokeratitis. Sunglasses can protect the eyes and the delicate skin around the eyes. Ideal sunglasses are expected to block 99-100% of UVA and UVB radiation. Although it was previously believed that sunglasses should allow the unrestricted transmission of longer wavelengths of visible light, new findings indicate high energy visible (HEV) light (blue region of the visible spectrum) can also increase the risk of macular degeneration. Aims: This study aimed at introducing a simple method for screening studies of the efficiency of common sunglasses in blocking ultraviolet radiation and visible light. This study also aimed at answering this question whether the brand and the price of sunglasses guarantees efficient protection against ultraviolet radiation. Materials and methods: One hundred twenty pairs of common sunglasses (26 different brands) were tested. In this simple screening study, a UV meter (Lutron UV-340A, Band pass 290 nm to 390 nm) that is designed to measure UVA and UVB was used for intensity measurements. Considering this fact that dark sunglasses make the pupil dilate and allow more light reach the retina, when the sunglasses have poor UV protection, the eyes can be severely damaged, we also used a Lutron LX-101 lux meter (range 0-50000 lux) for measuring the decreased luminance by sunglasses. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Results: Although all of the 120 sunglasses tested in this study were effective in reducing the intensity of visible light, nearly none of the sunglasses could offer efficient protection against UV radiation. The UVA and UVB transmittance of the sunglasses were in the range of 0.31% (price category of more than 150$) and 72.2% (price category of 30-90$). Conclusion: The majority of sunglasses tested in this study strongly decreased the visible light intensity but couldn’t block all UV radiation. According to the ANSI Z80.3-2001 (U.S. standard) the lens should have a UVB (280 to 315 nm) transmittance of no more than 1%. These findings lead us to this conclusion that these sunglasses can endanger the vision due to dilation of the pupil and overexposure of the lens to UV radiation. MEDICAL PHYSICS TRAINING FOR RADIATION ONCOLOGY RESIDENTS IN GREECE S. Nikoletopoulos b, P. Georgolopoulou c, D. G. Pissakas a, Kardamakis a. a Hellenic Society of Radiation Oncology, Greece; b Hellenic Association of Medical Physicists, Greece; c Medical Physics Department, G.Anticancer Athens Hospital “Saint Savvas”, Greece Purpose: Medical physics is an essential part of recommended curricula for residents in radiation oncology (RO). With no official training programs in place, medical physics training is often incidental and incomplete for RO residents in Greece. The aim of this work is to measure the effectiveness of an educational session on medical physics offered to RO trainees of the country. Method: The Hellenic Society of Radiation Oncology (EEAO) hosts quarterly educational meetings for RO residents of all levels. On April 2013 a physics-dedicated meeting was planned for a body of 52 residents. Topics ranged from basic radiation physics, physics of radiotherapy, brachytherapy, 3DCRT, IMRT to physics of specialized treatment modalities. Attendance compared favourably to 30 previous EEAO meetings focusing on clinical issues. Assimilation of material was measured by completion of a test at the end of the meeting focused on main Learning Objectives (LO). Results: Test questions covered all sessions of the meeting with equal weights. Main Bloom’s taxonomy categories were represented. Top 3% of grades achieved corresponded to residents whose home institutes put a substantial effort in training. Students responded better to sessions of an interactive nature with higher grades on respective LO’s but indicated their enthusiasm over sessions on cutting edge technology. Given the lack of adequately equipped training institutes in the country, this suggests the need for rotation of residents, as recommended by international guidelines on RO training programs (IAEA, ESTRO, ASTRO). Conclusions: Educational meetings for RO residents focused in medical physics are quite effective in bringing together the physics background needed in their clinical practice. The need remains for implementing official training programs throughout the country and for rotation of residents in different institutes during their training. PORTUGUESE PATHWAY TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NEW EUROPEAN GUIDELINES ON MEDICAL PHYSICS EXPERT Ana Rita Figueira a, b, Esmeralda Poli a, c, Jorge Isidoro a, d, Maria do Carmo Lopes a, e. a Professional Matters and Education and Training Technical Commissions of the Medical Physics Division of the Portuguese Physics ~o Joa ~o, EPE e Porto - Portugal; Society (DFM-SPF); b Centro Hospitalar Sa c Centro Hospitalar Lisboa Norte, EPE e Lisboa - Portugal; d Centro rio de Coimbra, EPE e Coimbra e Portugal; e Instituto Hospitalar Universita Portugu^ es de Oncologia de Coimbra de Francisco Gentil, EPE e Coimbra e Portugal Background: The new European Guidelines on Medical Physics Expert (MPE)[1] define this health professional as a medical physicist who, through planned advanced clinical training and continuous professional development, achieves the highest level in education and training (i.e., European Qualifications Level 8) in her/his specialty. Given the degree of responsibility of the MPE and the impact they have on patient safety, it is urgent that the Membres States take the necessary steps towards harmonization in Europe. 5 Materials and methods: Given the lack of a proper education and training framework in Portugal, the portuguese pathway to a full accomplishment of the European recommendations will be hard and all stakeholders, universities, hospitals, health authorities and scientific and professional organizations, should be involved. Following the establishment of a structured qualification framework that accomplishes the European Guidelines in terms of Knowledge, Skills and Competences (KSC), and in order to reach harmonization and to allow free mobility of the MPE between the Member States, a process of recognition of the MPE should be put in place. Results/discussion: The current Portuguese situation and the steps needed to level up to the new Euratom Basic Safety Standards Directive[2] and European Guidelines on MPE[1] will be described. The Medical Physics Division of the Portuguese Physics Society (DFM-DPF), as the Portuguese national member organization in EFOMP, can and should have a role in this process and be closely involved in all subjects related to the medical physics area, including the release of new legislation and the definition of professional roles and responsibilities of the MPE. [1] RADIATION PROTECTION No. 174 - EUROPEAN GUIDELINES ON MEDICAL PHYSICS EXPERT, European Commisssion, 2014 [2] Council of the European Union. (2013). Council Directive 2013/59/ Euratom. Official Journal L-13 of 17.01.2014. ADVERSE HEALTH EFFECTS IN MRI WORKERS S.M.J. Mortazavi a, b, L. Saanipour a, M. Haghani a, S. Taeb a. a Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation Protection Research Center (INIRPRC), School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; b Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Background: Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is a widely used important diagnostic imaging method. MRI workers are exposed to a static magnetic field during the whole working hours. As the static magnetic field of an MRI scanner is always on, MRI personnel moving around the scanner will be exposed to a time-varying extremely low frequency magnetic fields which induce electric fields and currents in their bodies. On the other hand, MRI personnel are occupationally exposed to radiofrequency radiation and the switched gradient fields used for image encoding only during patients’ examinations. Aims: The main goal of this study was to investigate the adverse health effects in MRI workers. Materials and methods: A questionnaire was designed to collect information from MRI personnel from seven teaching hospitals affiliated to Shiraz University of Medical Sciences. The collection of data about the adverse health effects was based on self-reporting by the participants (120 personnel including technologists and nurses). Results: A statistically significant difference was found between the frequency of individuals who reported headache in MRI workers and the control group (P¼0.037). On the other hand, a statistically significant difference was found between the frequency of individuals who reported sleep problems in MRI workers and the control group (P<0.001). Furthermore, frequencies of myalgia, palpitation, fatigue, concentration problem, attention problem, nervousness and backpain were significantly affected in MRI personnel compared to those of the control group. Conclusion: Altogether our results showed increased frequencies of adverse health effects in MRI workers. These findings are in line with several studies reported temporary and dose-correlated vertigo and nausea in workers and patients exposed to static magnetic fields. Further studies are needed to explore theses bioeffects as well as their magnitudes and possible mechanisms. THE MEDICAL PHYSICS SPECIALIZATION SYSTEM IN POLAND W. Bulski, P. Kukołowicz. Department of Medical Physics, M. SkłodowskaCurie Memorial Cancer Center and Institute of Oncology, Warsaw, Poland This paper presents the situation of the profession of medical physicists in Poland. The official recognition of the profession of medical physicist in Polish legislation was done in 2002. In recent years, more and more Universities which have Physics Faculties introduce the medical physics 6 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) specialty. At present there are about 15 Universities which offer such programs in medical physics. These Universities can graduate about 150 medical physicists per year. In 2002, the Ministry of Health introduced a program of postgraduate specialization in medical physics along the same rules used in specialization of physicians in various branches of medicine. Seven institutions, mostly large oncology centres, were selected as teaching institutions, based on their experience, quality of the medical physics professionals, staffing levels, equipment availability, lecture halls, etc. The first cycle of specialization programme started in 2005 and the first candidates completed their training at the end of 2008 and passed their official state exams in May 2009. As of 2014, there are 112 specialized medical physicists in Poland. Another 120 medical physicists are undergoing the specialization at 9 accredited institutions. The system of formation medical physics professionals in Poland is well established. The principles of postgraduate training and specialization are well defined and the curriculum of the training is very demanding. The program of specialization was revised in 2011 and is in accordance with EC and EFOMP recommendations. However, the system of specialization should be strengthened and supported financially to meet the requirements established by the Ministry of Health. EVALUATION OF RADIATION TOMOGRAPHY PROCEDURES RISKS IN ADULTS COMPUTED Abdelmoneim Sulieman a, Esameldeen Babikir b, Alhadi Alarabi c, Khalid Alzimami b, Kiki Theodorou d. a Radiology and Medical Imaging Department, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Salman bin Abdulaziz University. P.O.Box 422, Alkharj11943, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; b Radiological Sciences Department, College of Applied Sciences, King Saud University, P. O.Box 10219, Riyadh 11433, Saudi Arabia; c Sudan Atomic Energy Commission, P.O.Box 55, Khartoum, Sudan; d Medical Physics Department, University Hospital of Larissa, PO Box 1425, Larissa 41110, Greece Background: The use of CT in medical diagnosis delivers radiation doses to patients that are higher than those from other radiological procedures. It has been estimated that CT examinations make up approximately 11% of the number of radiologic procedures and that radiation from CT delivers approximately 70% of the medically related radiation dose. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the patient radiation dose in three different modalities of CT scanners (64 slices, 16 slices and 2 slices for routine CT investigations. Materials and methods: A total of 108 patients were examined in this study in three different hospitals in Khartoum state. The data was collected from the following examinations: brain, chest, abdomen and pelvis. Data were collected to study the effects of patient-related parameters, exposure-related parameters. The organ dose conversion factor f (organ, z) was obtained from the NRPB datasets (NRPB-SR279) based on the Monte Carlo simulations. Results: The mean dose values for CT brain for 16 slices was 670±380 mGy.cm, the average dose value for 2 slices was 331.1±161mGy.cm, while the average dose for was 1160.8±435.7 mGy.cm. For CT abdomen the averaged dose value in hospital B was 270.6±100 mGy.cm, the average dose value in hospital C was 164±56 mGy.cm, while in hospital A the average dose values was 1444±954 mGy.cm. For CT chest the averaged dose values in the hospital B was 209.6±83.3mGy.cm, the average dose values were in hospital C was 238.8±116.2mGy.cm, while the average dose value in hospital A was 1121.2±872 mGy.cm. Discussion: Dual slice scanner delivered the least radiation dose while 16 and 64 slice scanners delivered the highest radiation dose. The dose values of this study were comparable to the international reference levels CT examination. CT dose optimisation protocol is not implemented in all hospitals MRI DIFFUSION MEASUREMENTS ON PHANTOMS: COMPARISON BETWEEN EPI AND HASTE SEQUENCES UTILIZING TWO FITTING METHODS IN APPARENT DIFFUSION COEFFICIENT (ADC) MEASUREMENTS T. Boursianis a, G. Kalaitzakis a, S. Veneti a, E. Pappas b, J. Damilakis a, T.G. Maris a. a Department of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece; b Department of Medical Radiological Technologists, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece Purpose: The aim of this study is to compare Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) measurements on a specific MRI diffusion phantom utilizing an EPI and a HASTE sequence and two different fitting algorithms for the ADC calculation Materials and methods: Twenty three (23) test tubes with different Polyacrylamide gel and sucrose solution concentrations, simulating ADC values of different organs/lesions, embedded inside a plastic water tank served as a Diffusion Weighting Imaging (DWI) MRI phantom for ADC measurements. This phantom was repeatedly scanned on a clinical MRI system (1.5T) for over a six month period with: (a) a 2D multislice single shot SE Echo Planar Imaging (EPI) DWI sequence and 10 b values (0 to 1000) and (b) a 2D multislice Half fourrier Acquisition Single shot Turbo Spin Echo (HASTE) DWI sequence and 10 b values (0 to 1000). ADC maps were constructed using: (a) a Weighted Linear (WL) and (b) a Non Linear (NL) fitting algorithm. ADC value precision figures (ADC-ROI-CV) and long term time (LTT-CV) reproducibility figures expressed by coefficients of variation (CV %) were obtained. Measurements were performed on each test tube with the two different sequences (EPI and HASTE) for each fitting model. Total Scan Times (TSC), Geometric Distortions (GD), Ghost Ratios (GR), Signal to Noise Ratios (SNR) and Contrast to Noise Ratios (CNR) amongst selected test tubes were estimated using EPI and HASTE sequences for the resultant ADC maps. Results: ADC values of all sucrose test tubes were in agreement with nominal values using both sequences and both fitting algorithms. ADC measurements performed with (NL) fitting algorithms on both EPI and HASTE sequences showed better precision (mean ADC-ROI-CV < 3 %) and LTT-CV (2.5%) as compared to the (WL) fitting algorithms. TSCs were better in the EPI sequences. HASTE sequences showed better GD and GR. SNR and CNR measurements were comparable when using either EPI or HASTE sequences. HASTE sequences were capable to quantify higher ADC values. Conclusion: Both EPI and HASTE sequences enforced with the NL fitting algorithms for the ADC calculations proved to be an excellent means for precise measurement of the ADC. “IN SILICO” EVALUATION OF SYNCHROTRON RADIATION BREAST IMAGING Niki T. Fitousi a, Harry Delis a, George Panayiotakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Patras, 26504 Patras, Greece Background: X-ray mammography dominates in the field of breast imaging for decades. However, as the demands for more accurate and safe techniques increase, scientific research has turned to evolved technologies, such as Synchrotron Radiation. Synchrotron Radiation (SR), being the brightest artificial X-ray source, has the theoretical advantages that could highlight it as a novel suitable tool for a new era in breast imaging. Due to the fact that there is a limited number of SR facilities worldwide, an ”in silico” approach based on Monte Carlo techniques is considered important for the evaluation of SR systems for breast imaging. The model, simulating the complete irradiation procedure, including the attenuation effects taking place inside the breast, was designed and validated in terms of both image quality and dose indices. The validated tool was utilized for SR evaluation experiments. Materials and methods: A mathematical phantom of increasing glandularity was designed and inserted in the model. In particular, the imaging task concerned the irradiation of a 5-cm thick step wedge phantom made of adipose tissue with increasing glandularity in the range of 0-75% and with a 100-um inhomogeneity of Calcium Oxalate in each step. Due to the increased thickness of the phantom and the poor performance of low energies in this demanding task, the energies used were in the range 19-25 keV. The energy on the detector was kept constant, to simulate the Automatic Exposure Control, and equal to 7 mGy. Results: The derived images were evaluated in terms of a selected Figure of Merit containing contrast-to-noise ratio and entrance surface air kerma. The energies that performed best were 24 and 25 keV, due to the significant difference in entrance surface air kerma comparing to the lower energies. Differences in FOM mostly appear as glandularity increases above 50%. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Discussion: Even though more studies need to be performed, SR is gaining ground in the field of diagnostic radiology and particular breast imaging. The developed Monte Carlo-based SR model can contribute to the complete study of the feasibility of using SR as an additional tool for mammography with increased accuracy and flexibility. MONITORING NUCLEAR MEDICINE OPERATION AT NATIONAL LEVEL S. Vogiatzi, G. Drikos, A. Liossis, M. Lamprinakou, C.J. Hourdakis, V. Kamenopoulou. Greek Atomic Energy Commission, P.O. Box 60092, 153 10 Agia Paraskevi, Greece Background: Nuclear Medicine (NM) is one of the fields where, interdisciplinary collaboration is essential for the development of the rapidly increasing molecular imaging. At the same time, NM is governed by a multidimensional set of radiation safety requirements, in terms of human and environmental aspect. Competent Authorities (CAs) for radiological safety have a significant role in monitoring the delivery of NM diagnostic procedures and treatments. The Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC), regulatory body and CA for radiological and nuclear safety in Greece, implements a standard operating procedure (SOP) for monitoring NM departments’ smooth operation and compliance with radiation safety provisions. Materials and methods: Data such as NM annual frequencies, calendar data and administered activities (AAs) for delivered therapeutic treatments and records for delay tank systems’ management are reported to GAEC by the end-users, annually. AAs data for diagnostic NM procedures are collected during onsite inspections performed by GAEC. Additionally, radiopharmaceuticals transport data are reported by the carriers, to the national database maintained by GAEC, prior to each shipment, in terms of approval. The approval criteria are set as activity limits and operation license expiry date. The afore-mentioned sets of data, concern the totality (100%) of the NM departments and radiopharmaceutical shipments in the country. Results: The combined evaluation of therapeutic AAs, patients’ residence times in therapy wards and patient excreta storage time in delay tanks provides a useful tool for monitoring hospital waste, confirming at the same time that radiation safety requirements are met. Radiopharmaceuticals supply data reported by the carriers in correlation with annual frequencies and calendar data, offer a national overview for the evaluation and among others, the potential improvement in the efficient use of existing infrastructure. Public exposure can also be monitored by reviewing the implementation of patient release criteria. Discussion: GAEC’s SOP for monitoring NM operation in the country has been applied for several years and has proven useful for ensuring compliance with public, occupational and environmental radiation safety requirements. TRACKING OF MR COMPATIBLE INTERVENTIONAL ROBOTS BY CONTROLLING THE MRI VISIBILITY OF OPTICALLY DETUNABLE MR MARKERS Andrew Webb b, Ioannis Seimenis c, Eftychios Junmo An a, Christoforou d, Nikolaos V. Tsekos a. a Medical Robotics Laboratory, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA; b C.J. Gorter Center for High Field MRI, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands; c Medical Physics Lab, Medical School, Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece; d Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Cyprus, Cyprus Background: Inductively coupled RF coils comprise a type of MRI-visible markers for tracking devices and tools in MRI guided interventions. We present a technique that utilizes the control of an MR compatible interventional robot to select in real-time which markers need to be visible to track the motion of the robot. With a lower number of markers active, a fewer MRI acquisitions are needed, thus speeding up tracking. Methods: Figure 1 shows the arrangement of the optically detunable MR markers onto the joints of a custom-built MR compatible manipulator. Based on which degrees-of-freedom (DoF) are actuated, the robot control code selects which subset of markers needs to be visible to track this 7 motion. This subset is sent to the marker’s microcontroller that loops through the list of markers turning ON only one marker of the selected subset. The microcontroller triggers the MRI scanner to collect data and receives a TTL after imaging to proceed with the next selected marker. The solenoid coils are 3-mm in diameter??? with a photoresistor in their tuning circuit and optical fiber connecting them to a LED activated by a microcontroller linked to the robot. Results: Figure 2 shows results of controlling the MRI visibility of the markers from the robot control imaged at 1.5T with a GRE sequence (TE/ TR/angle¼1.75ms/227.72ms/1, matrix size¼192x140, FOV¼192x140mm, slice ¼ 8mm). Figures 2(a) and 2(b) were collected when all markers were detuned or tuned, respectively. Figures 2(c) to 2(f) were collected when the operator requested a motion of all DoF. The robot control module sent to the micro-controller the coils (J¼1) ¼ {1111} (i.e. all coils). This resulted in the sequential collection of images, witheach image having only one of the four coils ON. Discussion: Selecting which markers are visible based on the motion of the robot allows speeding up of MRI tracking (since only certain markers need to be visible). Also, by tuning only one marker per acquisition repetition, the location of this particular point of the robot is unambiguously identified, simplifying data acquisition and processing. DEVELOPMENT OF INDIGENOUS COST EFFECTIVE PEDIATRIC HEAD AND BODY COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY DOSE INDEX (CTDI) PHANTOM FOR PEDIATRIC CT DOSE MEASUREMENT A. Saravanakumar, K. Vaideki, K.N. Govindarajan, S. Jayakumar. Department of Applied Science, PSG College of Technology, Coimbatore 641 004, India Computed Tomography scanner plays a prominent role in diagnosing diseases, injuries and other abnormalities in pediatric patients. For an individual child, the risks of CT are small and the benefit always outweighs the risks when used appropriately. CT system manufacturers have recently implemented a dose display Weighted CT Dose Index on their system’s operating consoles in accordance with IEC Standard 60601-2-44. This dose display feature provides a reference dose to CTDI head and body phantoms for any selected head or body scan protocol. However, the displayed CTDIw reference dose always underestimates the actual dose delivered to infants and young children up to about the age of one year. In order to quantify this underestimation. In the current study we developed indigenous pediatric CTDI head, body phantom to suit our average Indian infant size at comparably a low cost. The dimension of the head and body phantom were 10 cm and 16 cm respectively. This simulates the X-ray attenuation of an infant head or body. CT Dose measurements on this phantom were carried out using a calibrated 150mm CT dose profiler with dose profile analyzer software, from RTI Electronics, Sweden. The profiler was calibrated to read the dose in phantom directly. Dose received in the head, body phantom at the centre and periphery was measured by five point method. Using these values weighed computed tomography dose index 29.78 mGy, 15.32 mGy, and 15.32 mGy, for head, chest, and abdomen respectively were calculated. The results of the study have been compared with the estimated console value and are well within the acceptable level approved by Atomic Energy Regulatory Board, India. A SIMPLE AND EFFICIENT STEREOLOGICAL APPROACH FOR ESTIMATING SPLENIC VOLUME ON MDCT IMAGES Michalis Mazonakis a, John Stratakis a, John Damilakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Crete, 71003 Heraklion, Crete, Greece Purpose: The determination of splenic size is of value in the clinical management of several hematopoietic diseases and immunological disorders. The aim of this study was to introduce a new stereological approach for estimating splenic volume on multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) images. Methods: Abdominal MDCT was performed in nineteen consecutive patients with no history of splenic diseases. The volume of the spleen was estimated using the stereological method that involved overlying each 8 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) image with a regular grid of test points. The orientation of the computergenerated grid was always random. The user selected all points falling within the spleen and the software automatically provided the organ volume. The splenic volume was estimated through the systematic image sampling procedure. Stereological assessments were obtained by using sampling intensities of 1/2 and 1/3 that provided samples with every second and third image depicting the spleen, respectively. The repeatability of stereology was evaluated. Stereological estimations were compared with those derived by the reference method of planimetry based on the manual delineation of splenic borders on each image. Results: The use of a sampling intensity of 1/3 led to splenic volume assessments with an unacceptable mean coefficient of error (CE) of 10.7±2.2 %. Precise volumetric estimations with a low mean CE of 5.0±0.9 % were obtained by using samples of 4-7 MDCT images generated from the 1/2 systematic sampling scheme. This stereological approach provided splenic volume in less than 3 minutes and presented a quite good repeatability with a coefficient of variability of 3.2 %. The 95% limits of agreement between the reference method of planimetry and stereology as applied in samples with every second image were clinically acceptable and equal to 12.4 cm3 and -20.5 cm3. No statistically significant difference was found between the two volumetric methods (P>0.05). Conclusions: The application of the proposed stereological approach in samples of abdominal MDCT images arising from the 1/2 systematic sampling scheme may result in quick, accurate and reproducible splenic volume estimations with a known precision. DIFFUSION TENSOR IMAGING IN BRAIN TUMORS: A STUDY ON GLIOMAS AND METASTASES T.S. Papageorgiou a, D. Chourmouzi b, A. Drevelegas b, K. Kouskouras c, A. Siountas a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54124, GREECE,; b D.Chourmouzi, Department of Radiology, Interbalkan Medical Center, GREECE 57001 Thessaloniki, Greece; c Department of Radiology, Aristotle University Medical School, AHEPA University Hospital, Thessaloniki, 54124, GREECE Purpose: To explore the role of Diffusion Tensor Imaging in preoperative glioma grading, as well as in differentiation between gliomas and metastatic brain tumors. Diffusion tensor variables of enhancing and edema regions were compared between the different subject groups. Materials and methods: We performed DTI in 42 patients (9 Low Grade Gliomas, 24 High Grade Gliomas, 9 Single Metastatic brain tumors). We measured FA, l1, l2, l3, ADC, Cl, Cp, Cs, RA, and VR in enhancing portions of tumors and edematous regions. Ratios of enhancement to edema values were created for each variable. Results: In peritumoral edema, FA, Cl, RA and VR were proven to be significantly different between the three groups, in addition to several variables in enhancement regions. numerous other variables were successful in pair-wise comparisons. Conclusion: Diffusion tensor indices could be used for the differentiation between low and high grade gliomas, as well as for the distinction between gliomas and metastases. QUALITY CONTROL FOR DIGITAL RADIOGRAPHY AND FLUROSCOPY EQUIPMENT IN A LARGE UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL IN OMAN: IMPLEMENTATION OF EUROPEAN ACCEPTABILITY CRITERIA I.I. Suliman a,*, Hilal AL-Zeheimi a, Amaal Al Rasbi a, Amna Al Jabri a, Naema Al-Miamani a, Ibtesaam Al-Maskary a, Haddia Bererhi b, Per Rude b, Ahmed Al Shuhaimi b, Humoud Al Dhuhli b, Faisal Al Azri b. a Department of Radiology and Molecular Imaging, Medical Physics Section, College of Medicine & Health Sciences, Sultan Qaboos University; P.O 35; Post code 123; Al-Khod, Sultanate of Oman; b Department of Radiology and Molecular Imaging, Sultan Qaboos University Hospital ; P.O 38; Post code 123; Al-Khod, Sultanate of Oman This paper reports the results of acceptanceand routine quality Control (QC) measurements performed on 12digital radiography and Fluoroscopy equipmentat Sultan Qaboos University Hospital, Oman. QC is a part of quality assurance (QA) program and included acceptance and annual routine QC tests. Main X-ray generator /tube parameters remain the same as previously used in screen-film radiography. For DR , CR and fluoroscopy, image quality was assessed using TOR [CDR] and TOR [18FG], TOR [18FG]+M1+ N3 Leeds test tools, respectively. Threshold contrast-detail detectability (TCDD) wasassessed using Leeds TO.20, TO. 16 and TO. 10; respectively. Automatic exposure control (AEC) was assessed by measuring the exit dose of varying copper thicknesses. In fluoroscopy, emphasis was placed on testing performance parameters (HVL, kV and Dose) under AEC control. Measurements results are compared with European acceptability criteria [1]. HVL in radiography was 2.5-3.0 mm Al ranged, limiting resolution was (2.4-3.6) lp/mm ranged, and contrast resolution was better than 4%.AEC was found to fairly control the patient exit dose but its effect on detector dose index (DDI) was not consistent. Fluoroscopy parameters tested under AEC were within the acceptable limit. Comparative evaluation of equipment performance isdone based on dose, image quality and the TCDD. Fault results were mainly due to errors inkV indication and/or beam alignment emphasising the importance of more frequent QC. New technologies continuously present a superiorimage quality, which might suggest a need for revised acceptability criteria. References [1]. Zoetelief J., van Sold R.T.M., Suliman I.I., et al. Quality control of equipment used in digital and interventional radiology. Rad. Prot. Dosim. 117(1-3): 277-82 (2005). [2]. EC (2012). Criteria for acceptability of Medical Radiological equipment. European Commission Radiation Protection Report No. 162. MODERN 256-SLICE CT PULMONARY ANGIOGRAPHY OR LUNG PERFUSION SCINTIGRAPHY IN PREGNANT PATIENTS SUSPECTED FOR PULMONARY EMBOLISM? A COMPARISON OF ASSOCIATED RADIATION RISKS K. Perisinakis a, I. Seimenis b, A. Tzedakis c, J. Damilakis a. a University of Crete, Medical School, Medical Physics Department; b University of Thrace, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Physics Department; c University Hospital of Heraklion, Medical Physics Department Aim: To a) determine normalized data for maternal radiosensitive organs and embryo/fetus absorbed radiation doses from 256-slice CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA) performed in pregnant patients suspected for pulmonary embolism and b) provide and compare reliable maternal and fetal dose data and associated radiation cancer risk estimates from 256-slice CTPA and lung perfusion scintigraphy (LPS). Methods: Mathematical anthropomorphic phantoms were generated to simulate the average female at early pregnancy and at 3rd, 6th and 9th month of gestation. In each phantom 0-3 additional 1.5 cm-thick fat tissue layers were added to derive 4 phantoms representing pregnant females with different body-sizes. Monte Carlo methods were used to simulate low-dose 256-slice CTPA exposures on each of the 16 generated phantoms. Normalized organ and embryo/fetus dose data were derived for exposures at 80, 100 and 120kV. Maternal effective dose and embryo/fetus dose from 256-slice CTPA and associated life attributable risks of radiation cancer were determined for different body sizes and gestational stages, and compared to corresponding data from lung perfusion scintigraphy. Results: For an average-size pregnant patient, the 256-slice CTPA exposure was found to result in a maternal effective dose of 1 mSv and an embryo/ fetus dose of <0.05 mGy. However, maternal effective dose was found to considerably increase with body size, while embryo/fetus dose was increased with both body size and gestational stage. Compared to LPS, lowdose CTPA to an average-sized pregnant patient was found to result in 15% higher maternal effective dose, but 3.4-6 times lower embryo/fetus dose. Nevertheless, LPS was found to be associated with less aggregated radiation risk for an average size pregnant patient with the difference from CTPA to be further increased for larger patients. Conclusion: Compared to CTPA performed with a modern wide-area CT scanner, LPS remains comparatively more dose efficient and should be definitely maintained as the preferable next step of imaging for pregnant patients suspected for pulmonary embolism who have a normal chest Xray radiograph and require further investigation. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) THE ACDS PILOT: SUMMARY OF OUTCOMES FROM A BESPOKE NATIONAL AUDITING SERVICE Williams Ivan a, f, Lye Jessica a, f, Lehmann Joerg b, f, Kenny John a, c, f, Dunn Leon a, f, Alves Andrew a, f, Cole Andrew a, f, Johnston Peter d, f, Kron Tomas e, f. a Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service, 619 Lower Plenty Rd, Yallambie, Australia, 3085. [Presenter]; b Institute of Medical Physics, School of Physics, University of Sydney, Australia, 2006; c Radiation Oncology Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia, 4350; d Olivia Newton-John Cancer and Wellness Centre, Heidelburg, Australia, 3084; e Australian Radiation and Nuclear Safety Agency, 619 Lower Plenty Rd, Yallambie, Australia, 3085; f Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, East Melbourne, Australia, 8006 Background: The Australian pilot of a national dosimetry audit program has completed the originally contracted three years of operation. The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service, (ACDS) was a pilot program to enable the Australian Government to determine whether the bespoke design was suitable for an on-going Australian service. The outcomes from the three years of operations will be presented and discussed with an analysis of whether the pilot requirements were met and why. Materials and methods: Designed over 2010/11 by experts drawn from the three professions in consultation with the national Department of Health, a list of outcomes required over a three year time frame was formulated. These outcomes were central to a Memorandum of Understanding, (MoU) between Health and the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency (ARPANSA) which hosted the ACDS. The MoU defined the operational and reporting requirements for the ACDS and the need for external advisors drawn from the hospitals: the Clinical Advisory Group, (CAG). Results: The ACDS has achieved all the MoU requirements. The staff within the ACDS engaged with the professional clinical workforce and provided a successful and functioning audit service. External review of the ACDS during its third year of operation identified strengths and weaknesses within the MoU and the ACDS structure and how the ACDS resolved a number of conflicting issues. The report identified the successes within the ACDS and how these were achieved. Analysis of the ACDS design and operation will provide assistance and advise those seeking to design or modify national or regional auditing programs. Finally the paper reviews the potential future for the ACDS. Discussion: The raw number of audits and outcomes indicate that the ACDS has met the MoU auditing requirements. The reasons for the ACDS’ success are highly dependent on: attracting quality staff who can respond with agility to changing situations, a high level of communication with the professional community, and a high level of engagement by the community. The Australian Clinical Dosimetry Service is a joint initiative between the Department of Health and Ageing and the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency. THE EFFECT OF PATIENT BODY HABITUS AND MODULATION STRENGTH ON RADIATION DOSE AND IMAGE QUALITY IN CT EXAMINATIONS USING AUTOMATIC TUBE CURRENT MODULATION Antonios E. Papadakis a, Kostas Perisinakis b, John Damilakis b. a University Hospital of Heraklion, Medical Physics Department, Heraklion, Crete, Greece; b University of Crete, Medical School, Medical Physics Department, Heraklion, Crete, Greece Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of patient body habitus and modulation strength on radiation dose and image quality in CT examinations using automatic tube current modulation (ATCM). Materials and methods: Ten physical anthropomorphic phantoms that simulate the average individual as neonate, 1-, 5-, and 10-year-old and adult were employed. The 10-year-old and adult anthropomorphic phantoms were appropriately devised using custom made bolus material to simulate overweight and obese patients. Head, neck, thorax, and abdomen/pelvis helical acquisitions were performed in all phantoms using the standard pediatric and adult examination protocols specified for each 9 anatomical region. Acquisitions were performed using a sixteen-slice CT scanner, which was equipped with an angular and z-axis ATCM system. CT acquisitions were performed at fixed tube current and with the ATCM system activated at three different modulation strength settings i.e. weak, average, and strong. Image noise was measured as the average standard deviation of the Hounsfield unit across regions of interest, which were drawn over uniform tissue equivalent areas. Results: The modulated mAs recorded for neonate compared to 10-yearold increased by 30%, 14%, 6%, and 53% for head, neck, thorax and abdomen/pelvis, respectively, (P<0.05). Fixed tube current and ATCMactivated acquisitions provided images of similar noise at a significant reduction of the modulated mAs with the exception of the 10-year-old phantom. In pediatric and adult phantoms, the modulated mAs ranged from 44 and 53 for weak to 117 and 93 for strong modulation strength, respectively. At the same exposure parameters image noise increased with body size (P<0.05). Discussion: The ATCM system investigated herein can effectively reduce patient radiation dose in adult individuals regardless their body habitus. However, ATCM may increase patient radiation dose in trunk CT examinations of children older than 5-year-old. Care should be taken when implementing ATCM protocols to ensure that image quality is maintained. AUTOMATIC QUANTIFICATION OF CONTRAST ENHANCED ULTRASOUND LIVER IMAGING Elias Gatos a, Stavros Tsantis a,b, Aikaterini Skouroliakou c, Ioannis Theotokas d, Pavlos S. Zoumpoulis d, George C. Kagadis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, GR 26504, Rion; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, GR 12210, Egaleo; c Department of Energy Technology Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, GR 12210, Egaleo; d Diagnostic Echotomography SA, 317C Kifissias Ave., GR 14561, Kifissia Background: Ultrasound contrast agent imaging (CEUS) has overcome the major limitation of classic Liver B-Mode and Doppler Ultrasound, and provided the ability to depict the parenchyma microvasculature. The enhancement pattern of Focal Liver lesions (FLLs) can be studied and evaluated in real time throughout all vascular phases (arterial, portal venous, late and postvascular phases). FLL characterization is currently performed either by means of visual inspection or by built-in software packages that provide low quality time-intensity curves without quantitative assessment. A new automatic method is proposed that initially detects an FLL and then provides time-intensity curves towards its characterization. Materials and methods: Twelve (12) CEUS image series of 12 patients with FLLs disease have been subjected for quantification into the proposed algorithm. A specifically designed detection algorithm was implemented to detect the FLL across frames and extract its contour. This particular lesion region represents the region of interest on CEUS images, from which the enhancement pattern and its type can be derived. The algorithm is based on unsupervised segmentation, utilizing the Markov Random Field model (MRF) and Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) employing the ‘Mexican Hat’ wavelet filter. The proposed algorithm employs textural and multi-scale wavelet coefficient information provided by CWT analysis. Wavelet analysis produces the initial clusters into the MRF procedure to minimize the number of iteration steps and to enhance the clustering speed. Results: Compared with manual segmentation by an expert physician, the lesion detected had an average overlap value of 0.92±0.02 for all CEUS videos included in the study. Following the lesion detection procedure time-intensity curves are computed and plotted from lesion and reference areas (Figure). In addition, several parameters are computed such as Area Under the Curve, Mean Transit Time, Perfusion Index, Rise Time and Time to Peak to strengthen the evaluation procedure. Discussion: A new promising tool has been implemented towards FLL detection and time Intensity curves analysis in CEUS data. After lesion detection, the degree and phase of lesion enhancement relative to the parenchyma is computed and visualized to evaluate the lesion character. 10 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Its main characteristics are robustness, fast and automatic execution that could be easily adapted to a user friendly interface. Figure:(a) User Initialization of Lesion and Parenchyma area. (b)Lesion detection at t¼5 sec(c) Lesion detection at t¼8 sec, (d) Lesion detection at t¼12 sec, (e) Lesion detection at t¼15 sec, (f) Time curve ananysis for lesion characterization. IAEA ACTIVITIES IN IMAGING MEDICAL PHYSICS H. Delis, G.L. Poli, A. Meghzifene. Dosimetry and Medical Radiation Physics Section, Division of Human Health, Department of Nuclear Sciences and Applications, International Atomic Energy Agency The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has been working on strengthening the medical physics capacity throughout the world since the early sixties. Taking into account the acute need for medical physics support in radiotherapy in the past, the IAEA has focussed its support to that field. In diagnostic imaging, the role of the medical physicist has been long limited to quality control and radiation safety. This has changed significantly in the past year, especially in some well-developed health care systems, and the clinically qualified medical physicist (CQMP) is a member of the multidisciplinary health care team working towards the best outcome of the patient diagnosis or treatment. The definition of the medical physicist working in a clinical environment is clearly stated in the International Basic Safety Standards [1], and the roles and responsibilities of the CQMP are explicitly described [2]. However, worldwide harmonization is far from being achieved and the IAEA has been working towards this direction. Additional guidelines aim to further promote this harmonization in the education and training requirements of the CQMP [3-6]. The IAEA represents one of the main resources for the medical physicists, and often, especially in developing countries the only one. For this reason, additional work is done in producing guidelines to support the CQMP in the clinical environment. Specifically for Nuclear Medicine and Diagnostic Radiology, several publications have been produced to support the CQMP with quality assurance and dosimetry tasks [7]. Furthermore, more targeted training activities are implemented under the support of the Department of Technical Cooperation, in the form of fellowships and national or regional training courses. These activities aim to train medical physicists not only to work in a clinical environment, but also to act as future trainers. This train-the-trainers mechanism has been recently enriched with the doctoral coordinated research project (CRP) [8] on “Advances in medical imaging techniques”. In the framework of this CRP, medical physicists are involved in advanced research at the PhD level, gaining the knowledge and competence to support advanced imaging modalities at their institution, or other institutions at a national or regional level. References [1] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Radiation Protection and Safety of Radiation Sources: International Basic Safety Standards d Interim Edition, IAEA Safety Standards Series No. GSR Part 3 (Interim), IAEA, Vienna (2011). [2] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Roles and Responsibilities, and Education and Training Requirements for Clinically Qualified Medical Physicists, Human Health Series No. 25, IAEA, Vienna (2013). [3] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Clinical Training of Medical Physicists Specializing in Radiation Oncology, Training Course Series No. 37, IAEA, Vienna (2010). [4] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Clinical Training of Medical Physicists Specializing in Diagnostic Radiology, Training Course Series No. 47, IAEA, Vienna (2011). [5] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Clinical Training of Medical Physicists Specializing in Nuclear Medicine, Training Course Series No. 50, IAEA, Vienna (2011). [6] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Postgraduate Medical Physics Academic Programmes, Training Course Series No. 56, IAEA, Vienna (2014). [7] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Human Health Campus, Medical Radiation Physics, http://nucleus.iaea.org/HHW/MedicalPhysics/ index.html [8] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Coordinated Research Activities, http://cra.iaea.org/cra/index.html PRACTICAL WAY FOR AWARENESS OF PATIENT DOSE CONVERSION OF CTDI-DLP TO EFFECTIVE DOSE ESTIMATION IN CT: Gokce Kaan Atac a, Tolga Oncu b, Tolga Inal c, Aydın Parmaksiz b, Figen Bulgurcu b, Emine Bulur b. a Ufuk University, Medical School, Dept. of €y Radiology, Konya Road No:86-88 Balgat, 06570, Ankara, Turkey; b Sarayko Nuclear Research and Training Center, 27 Atom Street, 06983 Kazan, Ankara, Turkey; c Ankara University, Physics Engineering Department, Ankara, Turkey Background: Computed Tomography has the biggest part of contribution to radiation from medical sources. By developing a practical tool; to estimate patient effective doses (ED) in Computed Tomography (CT) examinations through a new developed software which uses age and sex specific dose conversion coefficients and CT specific dose data, to enable medical exposure more understandable by comparing with the regional background radiation. Materials and methods: Effective dose calculation software for CT examinations was developed based on Excel structure. EDs of 100 patients underwent chest and abdomen-pelvis CT examinations were retrospectively calculated by using software and ImPACT CT Scan software to evaluate the performance. Results: Mean ED for chest and abdominal examinations was calculated as 5,7 mSv and 13,8 mSv for female patients and 5,8 mSv and 16,4 mSv for male patients respectively with new method. The results of dose calculations performed with the developed software were found to be quite close to the results of ImPACT CT scan software for abdomen and chest examinations of female patients but male patients. The ratio between average effective dose and local background radiation were between 1 to 22 for chest and 3 to 63 for abdominal examinations. Discussion: The new software helped to calculate the EDs with some deviations comparing to the standard method. Comparison to the local background radiation show very large range of ratios between different cities. A practical tool for calculating EDs for CT examinations was developed which helps especially physicians to calculate EDs simply. It is observed that even for similar exposure protocols, EDs may show difference between anatomical regions. IMPACT OF BREAST TOMOSYNTHESIS AND FULL FIELD DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY ON HOSPITAL PERSONNEL, MAMMOGRAPHY WORKFLOW, AND IMAGING INFRASTRUCTURE A. Gkolfinopoulou, A. Gkremos, Ch. Preppa, M. Kallergi. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Greece Background: Digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) and full field digital mammography (FFDM) are the state-of-the-art in breast imaging. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of DBT and FFDM on personnel, workflow, and data management infrastructure. Materials & methods: A breast imaging center of a major hospital was reviewed for 6 months. The center operated a DBT and FFDM system (Selenia Dimensions, Hologic Inc., USA). Representative FFDM and DBT images of patients were recorded and analyzed. Personnel were Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) interviewed and workflow monitored. Existing digital data management infrastructure was reviewed and assessed relative to the needs of DBT and FFDM. Data analysis included descriptive statistics and qualitative evaluation of (a) image display, (b) image transfer, (c) image storage, (d) personnel training, (e) mammography workflow including radiologists’ reading times, and (f) PACS system. All image analysis was done with the Fiji processing package. Results: A standard DBT examination of a 5 cm compressed breast generates 80 images and, on average, 136 MB of data. In contrast, a screening 4-view FFDM examination yields only 22 MB. Image display requires dedicated workstations and user interfaces to facilitate the radiologists’ workflow that is burdened by a 20-fold increase in the number of images due to DBT with significantly slower reading times (2-3 times slower than FFDM). The DBT data can be handled best (stored and transferred in both Secondary Capture Tomo Object (SCTO) and DICOM formats) by the latest generation of PACS systems that could raise the implementation cost significantly. Technologists and radiologists are required to undergo initial training so that they can competently and efficiently operate in both modes. Ongoing training, per international standards, is necessary for operating at full functionality. Discussion: The transition from film to fully digital mammography was a difficult process but it was adopted due to the latter’s benefits on diagnosis and workflow. DBT adds to the clinical benefits of FFDM but challenges further the people involved in its implementation and the informatics infrastructure. However, there are solutions, costly as they may be, that could create an optimum clinical environment with significant short and long-term benefits to all. PERFORMANCE EVALUATION AND DOSIMETRY OF AN ANGIOGRAPHY SYSTEM USING A NEW MULTISENSOR MEASUREMENT SYSTEM Borr as Caridad a, Castellanos Esperanza b. a Radiological Physics and Health Services, Washington DC, United States; b Hospital Universitario San Ignacio, , Colombia Universidad Javeriana, Bogota Background: The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the usefulness and limitations of a new commercial instrument that uses both ionization chambers and solid-state sensors for diagnostic radiology equipment performance evaluation and dosimetry measurements on an angiography system equipped with a flat-panel image receptor. Materials and methods: The measurements were carried out on an Allura XPer FD Philips of a hospital in Bogota, Colombia. Prior to their application, the ion chambers and solid-state multisensors were checked for reproducibility, accuracy and linearity. Results of tube potential, examination duration, pulse count and pulse width, as well as the calculated air-kerma at the interventional reference point, were compared with the values displayed by the Allura monitors for various clinical protocols using fluoro and cine modes at several phantom thicknesses and found to agree within manufacturer’s specifications. Results: Reproducibility, accuracy and linearity of detectors were found to be within tolerances adequate for diagnostic radiology. The automatic exposure control of the angio system, tested by measuring variables such as tube potential, filtration, tube current and pulse width vs. phantom thickness for various clinical protocols and patient habitus, was found to be excellent. The small size of the multisensors made the measurement task easy. Air-kerma and/or air-kerma rate values at the patient entrance with their corresponding half-value-layers for the most common angiographic procedures, together with an assessment of image quality using a contrastdetail test tool, were determined, and typical patient doses were estimated. Highlights of the results for both adult and pediatric patients will be presented. Maximum patient air-kerma rates did not exceed the limits established by the Colombian Radiation Protection Regulations. Discussion: The new measuring instrument was found to be an excellent tool for patient radiation protection optimization and quality control tests. It can acquire in very short times clinically relevant dosimetry information on sophisticated angiography systems that have many variables. This is mainly due to the fact that several sensors can be used simultaneously and that data can be acquired using pre-defined templates and exported to Excel files for trend analysis. Of particular interest is the possibility of analyzing the waveforms under different conditions. Examples will be shown and discussed. 11 SHOULD WE BE CONCERNED ABOUT THE POPULATION DOSE FROM COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY SCANS IN SHIRAZ, IRAN? S.M.J. Mortazavi a, b, M. Nouri b, M. Haghani b, A. Bahador c, A. HashemiAsl c. a The Center for Research on Protection against Ionizing and Nonionizing Radiation, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; b Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; c Vice Chancellery for Health , Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Background: Recent explosion in the use of high dose diagnostic radiological procedures such as CT scans and nuclear imaging tests has raised concerns about the increased cancer risk associated with the use of these technologies. Therefore, now there is a debate over the balance between the benefits of early diagnosis of cancer and the risk of induced malignancies. In the United States it has been reported that the average radiation dose from medical imaging has been increased more than six times but there is no published data on such an increase in Iran. Despite the very small risk of radiation induced malignancy from CT scans, the widespread use of this diagnostic technology may lead to a significant risk at the population level. Aims: As in developing countries the uses and risks of computed tomography scans have not been adequately characterized, this study aimed at answering the question whether we should be concerned about the population dose from computed tomography Scans in Shiraz, Iran? Materials and methods: Information about the number of CT scans, scan types and radiation doses was obtained from Namazi, Chamran and Faghihi hospitals as the three largest hospitals in Shiraz city. Furthermore, data about radiation doses from CT scans as well as scanning parameters were collected for each hospital. Results: In 2006, 48505 CT scans were performed in these three largest hospitals. In 2011, 2012 and 2013 the number of CT scans were 86494, 84899 and 72337, respectively. Although in Chamran hospital, the number of CT scans has grown from 7629 in 2006 to 27136 in 2012 (356% increase), the overall growth rate is about 150%. Conclusion: In spite of a 20-fold increase in the number of CT scans performed in the US (1980-2006) and a 12-fold increase in the UK, this number has increased 1.5 times over the past 8 years in 3 largest hospitals of Shiraz, Iran. As most of the increased medical exposures in the industrialized countries are due to CT scans and nuclear imaging, similar studies should be performed on nuclear medicine tests and the proportion of total radiation exposures which comes from these tests. A MANUALLY-ACTUATED MRI COMPATIBLE ROBOTIC MANIPULATOR FOR IMAGE-GUIDED INTERVENTIONS Christoforos Keroglou b, Andrew Eftychios G. Christoforou a, Webb c, Nikolaos V. Tsekos d, Ioannis Seimenis e. a KIOS Research Center for Intelligent Systems and Networks, University of Cyprus, Cyprus; b Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Cyprus, Cyprus; c C.J. Gorter Center for High Field MRI, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands; d Medical Robotics Laboratory, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA; e Med. Physics Lab, Medical School, Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece Background: Performance of image-guided interventions under direct MRI guidance is highly desirable, but a main obstacle has been the limited accessibility to the patient inside the scanner’s gantry. The employment of robotic manipulators has been proposed to overcome this limitation. Such manipulators are required to be MRI compatible considering construction materials, actuation and sensing. Moreover, they are required to have an appropriate kinematic structure and be able to operate in a confined space inside the scanner. Methods: A novel MRI compatible manipulation system which is manually actuated has been designed and developed. It is endowed with five degrees-of-freedom and was constructed of plastic materials. It is a generalpurpose manipulator, i.e., not scanner, anatomy, or application specific. The kinematic structure and the dimensions were selected based on a 12 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) systematic space analysis. Different end-tools can be attached to the manipulator to allow performing a variety of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions, including image-guided biopsies, aspirations and drug delivery. Appropriate preoperative planning tools have been developed to facilitate needle-targeting tasks. Guidance using intraoperative images is facilitated by MRI visible markers attached to the end-tool. Results: Systematic MRI compatibility testing inside a 3T scanner has shown that the presence and operation of the manipulator had no effect on the SNR of GRE images. Accuracy testing using appropriate phantoms revealed a needle-targeting accuracy of 5mm. Experimental phantom studies were carried out simulating various clinical applications including MRI-guided biopsy and drug delivery. The system was also shown highly effective while involved in MRI-guided arthrography which was simulated using an appropriate ex vivo phantom. Discussion: The developed MRI compatible manipulator could be suitable for various clinical interventions inside closed-type cylindrical scanners. Compared to other proposed manipulators, it is manuallyactuated resulting in simplicity and lower cost. It also features a distinct kinematic structure and an intuitive operation. By employing different end-tools, the manipulator is expected to facilitate various clinical applications through the effective combination of direct MR imaging and robotic manipulation. Acknowledgements: This study was supported by the European Regional Development Fund and the Republic of Cyprus through the Research Promotion Foundation (Grant No. TEXNOLOGIA/MHX/0308(BIE)/05). THE DEVELOPMENT OF AN EASILY ADOPTED HEAD AND ABDOMEN DWI QUALITY CONTROL PHANTOM AND TEST DIFFERENT REGRESSION ALGORITHMS FOR PRECISE APPARENT DIFFUSION COEFFICIENT (ADC) MEASUREMENTS T.G. Maris a, T. Boursianis a, G. Kalaitzakis a, E. Pappas b, G. Manikis c, K. Marias c, A. Karantanas d. a Department of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece; b Department of Medical Radiological Technologists, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece; c Institute of Computer Science, Foundation for Research and TechnologyeHellas (FORTH), Heraklion, Crete, Greece; d Department of Radiology, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece Purpose: The aim of this study is to develop an easily adopted head and abdomen DWI quality control phantom and test different regression algorithms for precise Apparent Diffusion Coefficient (ADC) measurements. Materials and methods: Twelve test tubes with different sucrose solution concentrations, simulating ADC values obtained from different head and abdominal organs/lesions, embedded in a plastic water tank served as a diffusion phantom. This was repeatedly scanned for over a 1 year period with a multislice single shot SE EPI DWI sequence and 10 b values (0 to 1500). ADC maps were constructed using : (a) a Vendor Specific (VS), (b) a Conventional Linear (CL), (c) a weighted linear (WL) and (d) a Non Linear (NL) regression fitting models utilizing three sets of b values with 2, 4 and 10 points respectively. ADC value precision figures (ADC-ROI-CV) and long term time (LTT-CV) reproducibility figures expressed by coefficient of variation (CV %) measurements were performed on each test tube with each fitting model. The diffusion phantom was scanned with clinical DWI sequences for oncologic head and abdominal imaging, namely SE EPI and Inversion Recovery (IR) EPI sequences. Results: ADC values of all test tube contents were in agreement with nominal values. ADC measurements performed with 10 point method showed better precision (mean ADC-ROI-CV ¼ 2 %) and LTT-CV (4.2%) as compared to 2- and 4 point methods. Post-hoc pairwise comparisons showed better discrimination when algorithms WL an NL were used (p<0.01), mean ADC-ROICV¼3.6 %. SE EPI DWI sequence performed excellently while IR EPI showed big discrepancies and was rendered inadequate for quantitative analysis. Conclusion: Phantom imaged with WL and NL algorithms enforced with the 10-point method proved to be an excellent means for precise measurement of head and abdominal ADC values and allowed testing reliability of clinical DWI sequences. Keywords: Diffusion Weighted Imaging, Apparent Diffusion Coefficient CLASSIFICATION OF CERVICAL INTRAEPITHELIAL NEOPLASIA BASED ON HISTOPATHOLOGICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS AND PATTERN RECOGNITION METHODS Christos D. Konstandinou a, Glotsos Dimitris b, Kostopoulos Spiros b, Pappa Eleftherios Lavdas d, Dionisis Cavouras b, George C. Dimitra c, Sakellaropoulos e. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Greece; b Medical Image and Signal Processing Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, 12210, Egaleo, Athens, Greece; c Pathology Laboratory, Iaso Thessalias Hospital, Larisa, Greece; d Department of Radiology, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, 12210, Egaleo, Athens, Greece; e Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Greece Background: Computer Science (B.Sc.), Bioinformatics (M.Sc.), PhD Student (Medical Informatics) Cervical dysplasia is a precancerous condition, where the cells of the cervical surface grow abnormally. If not treated cervical dysplasia could lead to cervical cancer that is among the most common malignancy in women. The Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) is the most frequent sexually transmitted virus worldwide and has been recognized as one of the most important causative factors for developing of Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia (CIN). The aim of the present study is the development of a pattern recognition system (PRS) for the discrimination between mild dysplasia (CIN I) and moderate and severe dysplasia (CIN II & CIN III). The clinical material comprised biopsies of patients diagnosed with stage I, stage II and stage III CIN. Images were digitized from the original material using a Leica DM2500 digital light microscopy imaging system. Textural features, multi-resolution (based on wavelet analysis) and fractals-based features were computed for each one of the digitized images in order to constitute the input data of the PRS, which was designed and implemented for predicting the stage of CIN. The PR system was structured using a variety of classifiers such as the Probabilistic Neural Network (PNN), the Support Vector Machine and the Nearest Neighbor (NN) classifier. The PRS was trained using the leave one out method and the exhaustive search for combinations up to four features. The PNN accomplished the best accuracy with 88.23% using four features combination (kurtosis-is a first order statistic which measures distribution’s asymmetry by indicating the degree of flatness near its center, the maximum value of Horizontal detail coefficients of wavelet analysis, the mean value of vertical detail coefficients of wavelet analysis and the standard deviation (shows the values’ variation from average) of diagonal detail coefficients of wavelet analysis). Preliminary results are quite promising implying that image analysis features may be utilized as a valuable descriptor for computer-assisted diagnosis in staging of CIN. Keywords: Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia (CIN), Cervical cancer, Pattern recognition LOW BIRTH WEIGHT IN BABIES BORN TO MOTHERS FROM HIGH LEVEL NATURAL RADIATION AREAS OF RAMSAR, IRAN S. Taeb a, S.M.J. Mortazavi b, c, H. Mozdarani d, S.A.R. Mortazavi e, A. Soleymani f, M. Haghani c, A. Soofi e. a Master Student of Radiobiology, Radiology Department, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; b Professor of Medical Physics, Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences; c Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation Protection Research Center (INIRPRC), Shiraz University of Medical Sciences; d Professor of Medical Genetics, School of Medical Sciences, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran; e Medical Student, School of Medical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences Shiraz, Iran; f PhD Student of Epidemiology, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Background: Human beings live in an environment laden with different types of stressors such as ionizing and non-ionizing radiation. Ramsar, a city in northern Iran, has some areas where some of the highest levels of natural radiation, as compared to other inhabited areas, are recorded all over the world. In some areas of Ramsar, residents receive an annual radiation dose from background radiation that is about 13 times higher than Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) the 20 mSv/y as a dose limit for radiation workers. It has been previously indicated that the risk of low birth weight (LBW) is enhanced due to maternal medical exposures during pregnancy Objectives: The main aim of this study was to find out whether there is a relationship between long term exposure to background radiation levels above the normal amount and the risk of low birth weight. Materials and methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted in high background radiation areas (HBRAs) of Ramsar and neighboring areas with normal levels of background radiation (NBRAs). An interview was conducted using a questionnaire administered to 320 women from HBRAs and 280 women from NBRAs by an expert radiation biologist. Screening and stratified random sampling were used for selection of the subjects (vaginal or caesarian). Results: The mean birth weight of the newborns to mothers from HBRAs was 2820.3 ± 654.2 g. and that of the newborns to the mothers from NBRAs was 2925.2 ± 543.2 g. The difference between the mean weight of the newborns of the mothers from HBRAs and NBRAs was statistically significant (P¼0.034). Conclusions: In this study, it was revealed that the birth weight may be associated with the level of background radiation in the mothers’ living area before and during pregnancy. However, the results of the present study question the reports given by previous studies revealing that pregnant mothers exposure to ionizing radiation enhanced the occurrence of low birth weight. Keywords: Ionizing radiation, Non-ionizing radiation, Pregnancy, Low birth weight, Term labor RADIATION DOSE IN ENDOSCOPIC RETROGRADE CHOLANGIOPANCREATOGRAPHY: DOES THE OPERATOR EXPERIENCE REALLY MATTER? V. Tsapaki a, K. Paraskeva a, A. Giannakopoulos a, S. Papasavvas a, N. Mathou a, P. Aggelogiannopoulou a, S. Triantopoulou a, H. Al Malki a, I. Tsalafoutas b, Ch. Triantopoulou a, J.A. Karagiannis a. a Konstantopoulio General Hospital of Nea Ionia, Athens, Greece; b “Agios Savvas” General Hospital, Athens, Greece Background: Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) is the gold standard technique for treating the disorders of the billiary and pancreatic ducts . During ERCP, a side viewing endoscope passes through the mouth, esophagus and stomach into the duodenum and the papilla of Vater is cannulated using fluoroscopy as a guidance. During fluoroscopic guidance, the position of the endoscope and its relationship within the duodenum is .verified in real time. Therefore, extensive use of X-ray fluoroscopy and a large number of radiographs are possible. It is also a highly technical and complex technique that greatly depends on the endoscopist’s experience. The quality and success of ERCP as well as limitation of various clinical complications depend on the training of the endoscopist. The aim of the study was to compare patient’s radiation exposure during ERCP, in relation to the endoscopist’s experience. Materials and methods: All ERCPs were performed using a conventional radiology X-ray machine (Philips Essenta) with a Kerma Area Product (KAP) meter installed in the X-ray tube.. The meter was calibrated according to the method summarized in the ‘national protocol for patient dose measurements in diagnostic radiology’ developed by the National Radiological Protection Board (NRPB). In each ERCP, KAP in Gycm2, fluoroscopy time (FT) in min and total number of X-ray films (F) were recorded . All ERCP procedures were done under sedation and with a fixed set-up for the patient. The X-ray system was controlled by the radiographer according to endoscopist’s instructions. The ERCPs were performed by a high volume endoscopist ( HVE) (more than 200 ERCP/year for 10 years) and a low volume endoscopist (LVE) in its first year after finishing basic ERCP training Results: A total number of 239 patients were included in the study, 56 of which were performed by LVE and 183 by HVE. Median KAP was significantly lower for the patients done by the HVE ( 11,42 Gy.cm2 (range: 0,81-175,93 Gy.cm2) vs 23,14 Gy.cm2 (range: 1,20-198,02 Gy.cm2). 13 Similarly, FT was shorter for the HVE (Median T: 3,5 min) versus LVE (Median T: 2,3 min). For both operators, radiation dose was correlated with number of films taken (f), (LVE): 0,59 and HVE: 0,64. Conclusion: Our study shows that ERCP patient radiation dose is significantly higher for a low volume cases endoscopist. It is therefore essential to draw the attention of the ERCP practitioners, especially the beginners, to the radiation their patients receive compared to high volume endoscopists. COMPARISON OF ENTRANCE SURFACE DOSE OF FOUR ROUTINE CT EXAMINATIONS: HELICAL SCAN VERSUS WIDE VOLUME SCAN MODES Ying-Lan Liao a, Yan-Shi Chen b, Hui-Yu Tsai b, c, d. a Department of Biomedical Engineering and Environmental Sciences, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu 300, Taiwan; b Department of Medical Imaging and Radiological Sciences, College of Medicine, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan 333, Taiwan; c Institute for Radiological Research, Chang Gung University / Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Taoyuan 333, Taiwan; d Healthy Aging Research Center, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan 333, Taiwan Background: Computed tomography (CT) plays an important role in diagnostic radiology for radiologists because of excellent image quality within a very short acquisition time. A 320-detector row CT scanner has a collimation width up to 160 mm and a specific scan mode called wide volume scan mode based on axial scan mode was developed. The total scan length of a patient is adjusted automatically into several scan ranges equally. Then the patient will be scanned like a step and shoot procedure to acquire the imaging data. However, the mechanism of the wide volume scan mode together with the automatic tube current modulation (ATCM) technique remains unclear. The purpose of our study was to assess the surface dose distribution during wide volume scan mode of four adult CT examinations and compare it with those of helical scan modes. Materials and methods: An averaged-sized anthropomorphic phantom was scanned with four adult CT examinations (head, chest, abdomen, and chest-abdomen-pelvis (CAP)) of a 320 detector-row CT scanner (Aquilion ONE, Toshiba, Japan) (Table 1). The ATCM technique (SureExposure 3D, Toshiba, Japan) was used during the wide volume scan mode and helical scan mode. The radiochromic film strips (Gafchromic XR-QA2, ISP, USA) were used to measure the entrance surface dose. The values of effective tube current time product (Eff. mAs) of each z-axis position were recorded. Results: The Eff. mAs of wide volume scan mode is lower than that of helical scan but the surface dose from over-lapping between volumes ranges from 20% to 65% higher than other region. The contribution of overlapping dose is proportional to the number of volumes of the wide volume scan mode. Discussion: We have assessed the radiation dose distribution of four adult routine protocols with wide volume scan mode in a 320 detectorrow CT scanner and compared it with those of helical scan mode. The over-lapping dose that locates in radiosensitive organ region such as thyroid, breast, or gonads will increase the radiation risk burden to a patient. Figure 1-14: (a) Anterior-to-posterior (AP) and (b) lateral (LAT) surface doses comparison between helical scan and wide volume scan modes of (1) head, (2) chest, (3) abdomen, and (4) chest-abdomen-pelvis (CAP) CT examinations. 14 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Table 1 Scan parameters of adult routine CT examinations Head Scan mode Helical NT (mm)2 Volume number Tube voltage (kVp) Tube rotation time (s) SureExposure3D Min-Max mA Effective mAs AIDR3D3 Pitch 320.5 – 120 0.75 Off DFOV4 kernel Scan range (mm) Slice (mm) Interval (mm) CTDIvol (mGy)5 DLP (mGy cm)5 1 2 3 4 5 232 On HP 27 PF 0.844 220 (S) FC68 170 5.0 5.0 50.5 946.6 Chest Wide volume Helical 2 120 0.75 Off 800.5 – 120 0.5 HQ 232 On – 220 (S) FC68 192 5.0 5.0 49.6 1070.6 – On HP65 PF 0.813 320 (M) FC18 385 5.0 5.0 22.7 983.6 CAP1 Abdomen Wide volume Helical 4 120 0.5 HQ 800.5 – 120 0.5 HQ – On – 320 (M) FC08 424 5.0 5.0 10.78 514.8 – On HP65 PF 0.813 320 (M) FC18 460 5.0 5.0 11.2 576.3 Wide volume Helical Wide volume 5 120 0.5 HQ 800.5 – 120 0.5 HQ 8 120 0.5 HQ – On – 320 (M) FC08 460 5.0 5.0 13.55 713.5 – On HP65 PF 0.813 320 (M) FC18 680 5.0 5.0 11.6 839.2 – On – 320 (M) FC08 736 5.0 5.0 14.35 1150.1 Chest to Pelvis Number of detector, T: detector thickness Adaptive Iterative Dose Reduction in Three-Dimensional Display Field of View Volume Computed Tomography Dose Index and Dose-Length Product displayed on the console CUMULATIVE RADIOGENIC CANCER RISKS ASSOCIATED WITH A LUNG CANCER SCREENING PROGRAM EMPLOYING LOW-DOSE 256-SLICE CT constitutes only a minute fraction of the intrinsic high cancer risk associated with such a population. Ioannis Seimenis a, b, Kostas Perisinakis c, Antonis Tzedakis d, John Damilakis c. a Med. Physics Lab, Medical School, Democritus University of Thrace, Alexandroupolis, Greece; b Medical Diagnostic Center ‘Ayios Therissos’, Nicosia, Cyprus; c Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece; d Department of Medical Physics, University Hospital of Heraklion, Heraklion, Greece EFFECTIVE DOSE ESTIMATE AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SIZESPECIFIC DOSE ESTIMATE INDEX IN MULTIPLE MYELOMA PATIENTS EXAMINED BY LOW DOSE MDCT PROTOCOL Background: Lung cancer screening (LCS) with annual chest low-dose CT (LDCT) has been recently recommended for individuals aged 55-80 years at high risk of lung cancer. This study aims at determining the radiation burden and the lifetime attributable risk (LAR) of radiation-induced cancer in individuals undergoing 256-slice LDTC for LCS purposes. Methods: Chest 256-slice LDCT exposures were simulated on mathematical anthropomorphic phantoms of varying body mass index (BMI) using Monte Carlo methods. Normalized and absolute organ doses, as well as effective doses (ED), were estimated. Organ-specific and total cancer LARs were estimated using published age- and sex-specific risk factors. Cumulative LARs from repeated annual LDCT studies were estimated. Total LARs were compared to corresponding nominal lifetime intrinsic risks of cancer (LIRs). Lung cancer LAR was benchmarked against the intrinsic lung cancer risk associated with the screening population. Results: Lung and breast (females) are the organs receiving the highest doses from chest LDCT. Organ-based ED estimates were 0.76mSv and 0.53mSv for females and males of normal BMI, respectively. Absorbed organ doses and ED decrease considerably with BMI. A single chest LDCT exposure at 55 years is associated with 2.0 and 4.8 new cancer incidents per 105 average-sized males and females, respectively. The cumulative LAR of radiogenic cancer from repeated annual LDCT studies between the ages of 55 and 80 years was estimated to incur a relative increase in the LIR of being diagnosed with cancer by less than 0.3% and 0.1% in females and males, respectively. For average-sized males and females, repeated annual LDCT exposures lead to 25 and 59, respectively, new lung cancer cases per 105 LCS program participants. Discussion: Estimated radiation burden and theoretical radiogenic cancer risks associated with repeated annual 256-slice LDCT chest exposures may alleviate radiation-related concerns regarding the implementation of a LCS program. Provided a modern technology scanner and a carefully considered low-dose protocol are employed, total radiation-induced cancer risk seems to minimally aggravate the lifetime intrinsic cancer risk for the screening population. Furthermore, the radiogenic lung cancer risk M. Michalitsi a, A. Boultadaki b, J. Floros a, M. Rouchota a, M. Argyrou a, A. Valassi a, I. Baka a, B. Letsas a, S. Synefia a, M. Andreou a, c, B. Koutoulides b, M. Lyra a. a Radiation Physics Unit, 1st Radiology Dep., University of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Computed Tomography Unit, 1st Radiology Dep., University of Athens, Athens, Greece; c Medical Physics Department, University of Athens, Athens, Greece BKG: Low-dose whole-body MDCT protocol in the diagnosis of Multiple Myeloma (MM) has been established as an alternative to conventional Xray imaging. CT diagnostic examination for suspected Multiple Myeloma is usually performed by using a whole body protocol. Size-Specific Dose Estimate (SSDE) is a recently proposed dose index to quantify the dose received by a patient during a scan, by also taking into account the patient’s size. To estimate the patient dose from Low Dose MDCT protocol, Effective Dose (ED) and SSDE index were calculated. Materials and methods: CT scans were performed on a Philips CT Brilliance 16 scanner, using a helical whole body low dose protocol. Two different methods for evaluating the dose delivered during the CT scan, in a group of 60 patients examined for Multiple-Myeloma (MM), are considered. The first method is based on the DLP, which is converted to ED. The conversion is based on the data published by Huda et al (2008). The second method is by calculating the SSDE index, determined by multiplying the Volume CT Index (CTDIvol) of the scanner for a reference phantom of 16 or 32 cm and the size dependent conversion factors introduced by the AAPM Report 204. A correction factor was applied both to the ED and the SSDE values to take into account the differentiation in dose due to irradiating both head and trunk with a whole body CT protocol. Results: Data were collected in Evorad RIS-PACS Workstation 2.1 and transferred in SPSS-19 software for statistical evaluation. The patient dose received during a CT scan in MM examinations was evaluated for a wide range of effective body diameters. It was found that the SSDEs present a decreasing trend in relation to patient body weight, whereas EDs do not correlate to patient body size. A comparison of ED and SSDE values, with values using Sadruddin’s web calculators (based on Huda W&He W,2012) gave same order results. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Discussion: ED provides a reliable estimate of radiation amount delivered but does not take into account the patient’s size. SSDE provides a dose index based on the CTDIvol and also takes into account the patient’s size and provide a specific dose estimate for each patient. References: Huda et al, Converting DLP to Effective Dose at CT, Radiology: Vol. 248: No3, pp995-1003. Huda W,He W. Estimating cancer risks to adults undergoing body CT examinations. RPD 2012; 150:168-79 QUANTITATIVE PERFORMANCE EVALUATION SCHEMES IN FOLLOW-UP LUNG MDCT OF REGISTRATION Georgios Vlachopoulos, Spyros Skiadopoulos, Anna Karahaliou, Lena Costaridou. Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras, Greece Background: Multi-Detector Computed Tomography is the modality of choice for quantification and follow-up monitoring of Interstitial Lung Disease (ILD). ILD monitoring and response to therapy quantification involves comparison of quantified disease extent between scans obtained at different time instances (follow-up scans). A critical image analysis step, prior to disease extent quantification, is lung field registration due to alterations in lung field radiological appearance (i.e. disease progression), as well as elastic nature of lung tissue. This study investigates the effect of registration components (i.e. transform, optimizer and cost function) on registration accuracy of ILD affected lung fields. Materials and Methods: A set of 48 registration schemes was generated using 3 transforms (rigid, affine and 3rd order B-Spline), 4 optimizers (Standard Gradient Decent, Random Step Gradient Decent, Finite Difference Gradient Decent and Adaptive Stochastic Gradient Decent) and 4 cost functions (Sum of Square Differences, Mutual Information, Normalized Mutual Information and Normalized Correlation Coefficient). In order to avoid intrinsic variations caused by disease progression, the approach of artificially generating follow-up data, based on 5 clinical follow-up ILD affected volumes, was adopted. The above registration schemes were applied on this follow-up data set. Performance evaluation of the registration schemes was achieved by means of the Euclidean distance metric between corresponding points of original and registered data in (a) ILD affected volumes (dILD) and (b) normal lung parenchyma (dnormal), and by means of Lung Volume Overlap Error (LVOE). A non-parametric statistical test was performed (Wilcoxon signed-ranks test) to investigate existence of statistically significant differences among registration schemes’ performance. Results: Registration schemes including the Adaptive Stochastic Gradient Decent optimizer yielded statistically significant higher performance (pvalue<0.05) as compared to all registration schemes considered, in terms of dILD (0.23±0.06), dnormal (0.21±0.05) and LVOE (10.95%±2.50%). There was no statistically significant difference (p>0.05) in registration schemes’ performance with respect to transform and cost function components. Discussion: Results have demonstrated that the optimizer accounts for a crucial component, affecting significantly registration performance. Registration schemes including the Adaptive Stochastic Gradient Decent optimizer suggest an increased potential in accurate lung fields registration and ILD quantification. A METHOD FOR QUANTIFYING METAL ARTIFACTS IN MRI Ioannis Vrachnis a, George Vlachopoulos a, Anna Karahaliou a, Thomas Marris b, Lena Costaridou a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras, Greece; b Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Crete, Iraklion, Crete, Greece Background: Metal implants are a common source of artifacts in MRI, due to susceptibility effects, resulting in local distortions of the magnetic field. Previously proposed methods for quantification of MRI artifacts, employ observer-depended methods. The current study proposes an algorithmic approach for artifact quantification in MRI, tested in a phantom-based study. 15 Materials and Methods: A stainless steel head, used in total hip arthroplasty, was embedded in water and imaged at 1.5 Tesla with turbo spin echo pulse sequences at three bandwidths (210, 295 and 405 Hz/pixel). The proposed method was applied on selected coronal slices at the vicinity of the implant. The method is based on the fact that distortions responsible for signal voids and pile ups, are both manifested as abrupt alterations of image gradient. Prior to image gradient calculation, a denoising step is considered to eliminate spurious noise effect introduced in high bandwidth acquisitions. Image gradient magnitude is then calculated, followed by an automatic cross entropy thresholding method. Finally, the artifact extent is quantified in terms of image area percentage. A non-parametric statistical test was performed (Kruskal Wallis Test) to investigate existence of statistically significant differences among artifact extent in three different bandwidth acquisitions. Results: Statistical analysis confirmed that high bandwidth acquisitions yielded statistically significant lower artifacts as compared to medium and low bandwidth acquisitions (p-value¼0.032<0.05). Discussion: The proposed artifact quantification method is based on the physics of artifact generation, assuming that image gradients capture the distortions of the magnetic field. Results have demonstrated that the proposed method accounts for a promising technique for identification and quantification of MRI artifacts introduced by metal implants. This method is observer independent and thus repeatable, and could be used as a part of a standardization procedure. STEREOTACTIC RADIOSURGERY/RADIOTHERAPY PRE-TREATMENT PLAN VERIFICATION USING CALIBRATION-FREE GAFCHROMIC EBT2 FILMS Pappas Evangelos. Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece Purpose: Stereotactic Radiosurgery/Radiotherapy (SRS/SRT) Quality Assurance (QA) and Plan-Verification is a challengin task. EBT2 Gafchromic films have been proved to be a useful tool for this purpose. However, their dose-response is depended on a number of parameters such as scanning mode, ambient light effect, post-irradiation coloration, orientation of scanning and film storage temperature. The aim of this work is to investigate the validity and accuracy of the use of calibration-free EBT2 films for SRS QA and plan verification purposes overcoming the above mentioned problems that affect the films calibration curve and therefore the filmcalibration-based 2D dose measurements. Materials and Methods: The following experimental and data-analysis steps were followed: 1 e EBT2 films irradiation and scanning for calibration purposes. The studied dose-range was up to 1200 cGy. The film calibration curve and the dose-region wherein the films exhibit a linear dose-response were derived. 2 e EBT2 films irradiation using a selected SRS plan. The delivered doses were within the linear dose-response region 3 e Use of the film calibration data and the SRS-irradiated-film in order to derive 2D relative dose distribution. 4 e Derivation of 2D relative dose distribution without the use of film calibration data. The linearity of dose-response was used for this purpose. 5 e Comparison of the 2D relative dose distributions derived from the steps 3 and 4 against the corresponding Treatment Planning System (TPS) calculated 2D dose distribution. Results: A EBT2-film linear dose-response was observed in the dose-range of 0-400 cGy. Within this dose range the relative changes of the net-signal from film scanning equals to the relative change of dose. The 2D relative dose distributions derived using the steps 3, 4 and TPS were practically identical. A gamma-index analysis (2 mm,2%) revealed a satisfying agreement between each couple of these 2D data-sets (gamma<1 for ~96% of the pixels). Conclusions: EBT2 films used following the presented calibration-free methododoly, can become a very useful tool for a valid and easy SRS QA and plan verification process overcoming the problems related with the film-response sensitivity to a number of well-known factors that affect the film-calibration curve. 16 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) A SEMI-EMPIRICAL MODEL OF IN-FIELD AND OUT-OF-FIELD BREMSSTRAHLUNG DOSE DISTRIBUTION IN HIGH ENERGY ELECTRONS BEAMS USED IN EXTERNAL RADIOTHERAPY M. Mohamad Alabdoaburas a, b, c, D. Lefkopoulos b, J.Vu Bezin a, b, c, J.P. Mege b, A. Veres d, F. De Vathaire a, b,c, I. Diallo a, b, c. a Inserm, CESP Centre for research in epidemiology and population health, U1018, radiation epidemiology team, Villejuif, 94807, France; b Institut Gustave Roussy, e Paris-Sud, Orsay, 91405, France; Villejuif, 94805, France; c Universit d Equal-Estro Laboratory, Villejuif, 94805, France Introduction: A better understanding of the dose distribution effects in normal tissues becomes essential to know how best to exploit modern technologies in radiotherapy. Bremsstrahlung dose component became important when scattering dual-foils and scrapers applicator are used compared to scanned electron beam and cone applicator. Several works have been reported for analyzing bremmstrahlung dose component inside the irradiation field. The aim of this work to develop a semi-empirical model for estimating the bremsstrahlung dose distribution at any point in the patient in-field and out-of-field. Materials and methods: The bremsstrahlung dose component in electrons beams arises from four main sources: scattering dual-foils, jaws, applicator’s scrapers and insert of cerrobend, we neglected bremsstrahlung generating in the patient. Our model consists in two main parts: in the first part, we calculated the angular energetic fluence distribution for every bremsstrahlung photon source, by using an existing model based on multi-scattering theorem. In the second part, we calculated the relative number of irradiated pixel by primary electrons beam in every bremsstrahlung photon source. All programmings were executed by Matlab. All detailed information about the geometry, material composition, and dimensions of each component have been provided by manufacturer. The most of data about the electrons interactions with matters based on ICRU1984 data. Measurements of bremsstrahlung dose component are achieved via thermoluminescent dosimeters powder TLD-700, from 0cm to 70cm from the beam central axis, at depth of 10cm in water phantom for Varian 2300C/D operated at 6,12,9 and18MeV. Results: We evidenced that out-of-field bremsstrahlung dose issuing essentially from applicator’s scrapers, while out-of-field bremsstrahlung dose generating in scattering dual-foils is neglected. In-field bremsstrahlung dose comes essentially from scattering dual-foils which represents 70%-80% of total in-field bremsstrahlung dose. Our modelling results have shown very good agreement between calculated and measured values infield and out-of-field. The average difference between calculated and measured values is less than 10%, which stills small in absolute term. Conclusion/perspective: Our approach can be used to provide good representation of bremsstrahlung dose distributions in all healthy tissues for any applicator size and type and for any electron beam energy used in high-energy electron beam therapy. The calculating time is relatively short. To take account total peripheral dose out-of-field, an additional model is under developing to estimate out-of-field scattered electrons dose component. Key words: Electron beam-therapy; Out-of-field dose; Bremsstrahlung component. disease. Reference points for measurements were predetermined on the first CT scan indicating positions of neck region and enlarged nodes. Surface dose was then measured by TLD and Mosfet at the specified points during treatment sessions. The measurements were repeated twice weekly for each patient and normalized to that of week one. Results The consecutive CT scans revealed continuous reduction in volume of CTV1 which reduced by 15.7±6% by the end of treatment (figure 1). The significant change in CTV1 volume was in week 2, 3 and 4 in comparison of each week with the preceding week (34.5cm3, 8.7cm3,14.7cm3 respectively) (p¼0.002, 0.01, 0.02 respectively) (Table1). The TLD and MOSFET measurements revealed average increase in surface dose up to 123.5±10% and 130.5±5% respectively (figure2). A significant correlation was found between CTV1 reduction in volume and increase in surface dose (Pearson correlation coefficient ¼ -0.913, p¼0.015). Conclusion Significant reduction in volume of CTV1 reflects the shrinkage of the neck region. Surface dose in the neck region was highly influenced by the noticed shrinkage. These increments in dose can be explained due to the resulting air gap between patient skin and the thermoplastic mask and also the increased probability of tangential segments/subfields in the IMRT treatment. Adaptive protocols and defining superficial regions as OAR during optimization process can minimize surface dose increase. Keywords: Surface dose, IMRT, weight loss, Anatomical variation. Figure 1. Clinical target volume relative changes normalized to initial volume of week0 over treatment weeks among patients with head-and-neck cancer (Pn). INVESTIGATION OF SURFACE DOSE VARIATION DUE TO NECK SHRINKAGE IN IMRT TREATMENT FOR HEAD AND NECK CANCER PATIENTS M. Abd Al Moez a, H. Al Zawam b. a Department of Medical Physics, Cairo University Hospital, Cairo, Egypt; b Department of Clinical Oncology, Cairo University Hospital, Cairo, Egypt Purpose IMRT plans are generated using data obtained from a single CT scan which don’t reflect the tissue changes during the treatment course. This in turn could alter the dose in the surface and superficial regions which becomes more important when using the inverse planning algorithm for IMRT. Thus the aim of this study was quantifying the magnitude of neck shrinkage and the corresponding dosimetric variations in the superficial region during IMRT treatment weeks. Method A single observer performed all the delineation procedures for fifteen patients of H&N cancer. For all patients CT scans were acquired by the end of week 2, 3, 4 and5 of treatment following the planning CT. on each CT scan CTV1 was defined as neck regions at high risk for microscopic Figure 2. Neck surface dose variation during treatment weeks normalized to week one.Ă Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Table 1 Absolute and relative mean volume changes and statistical parameters CTV1 throughout the treatment course. weekly comparison mean absolute difference±S.D* (cm3) maximum difference (cm3) minimum difference (cm3) Percent reduction (%) p- value** week 0 and week 2 week 2 and week 3 week 3 and week 4 week 4 and week 5 34.5±30 128.00 3.00 8.2 0.002 8.7±4.7 18.80 2.00 2.7 0.01 14.7±10 33.00 1.20 4.2 0.02 8.6±6.9 25.40 1.20 2.4 0.12 * S.D ¼ standard deviation. ** Results is significant if p<0.05 DEVELOPMENT OF A WATER CALORIMETER AS THE ABSORBED DOSETO-WATER PRIMARY STANDARD FOR CHINA K. Wang a, S. Jin a, X. Yang a, J. Zhang a, M. McEwen b, C. Cojocaru b, C. Ross b. a National Institute of Metrology (NIM), China; b National Research Council of Canada (NRC), Canada In collaboration with the National Research Council Canada (NRC), the National Institute of Metrology, China (NIM) is developing a new primary standard for absorbed dose to water at radiotherapy dose levels. The standard is based on a water calorimeter and is designed to operate in Co60 and megavoltage photon beams from a linear accelerator. The main features of the calorimeter are as follows: i) operation at 4 ºC to eliminate the problems associated with convection in water phantoms at room temperature; ii) a low-noise temperature measurement circuit able to resolve temperature differences at the mK level; iii) capability to investigate different water purities and determine the heat defect due to dissolved gases; iv) potential extension to determination of absorbed dose in high-energy electron beams and HDR brachytherapy; v) determination of absorbed dose to water with a standard uncertainty of better than 0.4 %. Commissioning of the calorimeter involved a comparison with the present NIM standard of absorbed dose and a comparison with the NRC primary standard water calorimeter. Other investigations carried out included: the effect of environmental changes on the temperature control; repeatability of the system over the course of several weeks; stability of thermistor calibrations to determine the radiation-induced temperature rise; capability of the linac to deliver consistent doses (suitable for primary standards measurements) over the course of a day and determination of correction factors for beam uniformity for a range of detector geometries. A full uncertainty analysis indicates that the target uncertainty specification can be achieved. This new standard will significantly reduce the uncertainty of ion chamber calibrations for Chinese radiotherapy centres and open up new areas of research for the NIM. ADVANCED RADIATION TECHNIQUES: STEREOTACTIC BODY RADIATION THERAPY (SBRT) IN EARLY STAGE INOPERABLE LUNG CANCER DISEASE D. Katsochi, S. Kosmidis, A. Fotopoulou, G. Kollias, C. Paraskevopoulou, P. Kosmidis. Radiation Therapy Center of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Center of Athens, HYGEIA Purpose/Objectives: To present stereotactic body radiation therapy as a highly conformal treatment, in compare to conventional radiation therapy, that allows dose escalation and reduced treatment volumes, as a non invasive alternative to operation in early lung cancer disease. Preliminary data of Clinical experience in Radiation Oncology Department of DTCA HYGEIA. Materials/Methods: Between May 2009 and March 2014, 15 patients with pulmonary tumors, medically inoperable, were treated with SBRT using daily image guidance (cone beam CT) for patient positioning and target localization. Computed tomography (CT scan) and PET computed tomography (FDG/PET) were used for target delineation and planning. Median 17 prescription dose was 36 Gy in 3 fractions in 9 pts or 30Gy in 5 fractions for 3 pts with poor pulmonary function. Results:All patients completed treatment. Median follow up was 13 months (range 3-20). All patients achieved tumor local control, 12pts with complete tumor regression and 3pts with minimal residual tumor in witch remains stable at follow up. None patient presented blood toxicity or pulmonary toxicity (pneumonitis) except for two patients who were treated with corticosteroids. Conclusions:Image guided SBRT in selected patients is a feasible, safe, and effective treatment for medically inoperable early stage lung cancer. EARLY AND SAVE TUMOR RESPONSE USING CONCOMITANT BOOST RADIOTHERAPY TECHNIQUE IMAGE GUIDED D. Katsochi, C. Paraskevopoulou, S. Kosmidis, A. Fotopoulou, G. Kollias, P. Kosmidis. Radiation Therapy Center of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Center of Athens, Hygeia Purpose/Objectives: Local control of disease is often one of the main objectives in patients with advanced unresectable head and neck, lung, cervical and brain tumors. The introduction of image guided radiotherapy offers the opportunity to safely apply a supplementary dose to the macroscopic disease. This accelerated radiotherapy course, known as concomitant boost, has the advantage of increasing the total dose delivered and tumor response without increasing the number of fractions. Materials/Methods: From May 2009 to March 2014, 127 patients were treated with concomitant boost technique. The distribution of primary tumors was 73 patients with lung cancer, 35 patients with head and neck cancer,11 patients with brain tumours and 6 patients with cervical cancer. patients received chemotherapy during radiation therapy. Patients were treated using the conformal or VMAT technique. Planning target volume (PTV) was treated daily with 1.8 Gy for 5 to 6 weeks to a total dose of 45-54 Gy, while the dose to the Gross Tumor Volume (GTV) was boosted up to 5565 Gy depending on the anatomic region. Organs at risk were irradiated to safe limits. In 74% of the patients we readapted the treatment plan due to local tumor regression using image guidance data (CBCT). Results: All patients completed the treatment plan with no major toxicity. Follow up was scheduled at the end of the treatment, three and nine months after. All patients achieved local tumor control, 78 patients with complete tumor response, 39 patients with partial response and 10 with stable disease. Conclusions: Concomitant boost in combination Image Guided Radiotherapy is a feasible, safe and effective treatment for patients with unresectable carcinomas. Results are encouraging and promising regarding early locoregional disease control. THE POTENTIAL IMPACT OF DATAMINING AND RAPID LEARNING IN RADIOTHERAPY: A LUNG CANCER SURVIVAL DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEM IN ROUTINE CLINICAL PRACTICE D.I. Thwaites a, A. Dekker b, L. Holloway c, S. Vinod c, G. Delaney c, G. Goozee c, M. Bailey d, A. Miller d. a Institute of Medical Physics, School of Physics, University of Sydney, Australia; b Radiation Oncology, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, The Netherlands; c Radiation Oncology, Liverpool Cancer Therapy Centre, Liverpool (Sydney), NSW, Australia; d Radiation Oncology, Illawarra Cancer Care Centre, Wollongong, NSW, Australia Large amounts of data are collected on radiotherapy (RT) patients and treatments. This resource could provide clinical evidence to help future decisions. A collaborative project has begun between Australian RT centres and MAASTRO to evaluate the feasibility and impact of datamining of routine clinical RT data and the use of rapid learning tools in routine practice. The initial pilot was for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients in the Liverpool Hospital Cancer Centre. An open-source rapid learning system was installed. From local data sources, various parameters were extracted for all lung cancer patients, without quality review: histology, gender, age, ECOG status, lung function (FEV1), lymph node status, tumour volume, dose and survival. Missing data were imputed using Bayesian methods. The DSS was applied to predict two-year overall survival (S2Y) in stage I-IIIB NSCLC patients treated with curative (>45Gy) or palliative RT. 18 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Of the 3919 patient datasets identified, 225 were eligible for inclusion in the curative, and 238 in the palliative, cohort. Exclusions were due to ineligible histology or stage or missing dose, tumour volume or survival data. The DSS successfully predicted a good prognosis group in the curative cohort with significantly higher survival than a medium/poor prognosis group (S2Y, 69% vs. 27/30%, p<0.001). No survival difference was found for palliatively treated patients (S2Y good/medium/poor prognosis group: 18%/16%/16%). Stage was less discriminatory in identifying prognostic groups (S2Y 47% for Stage I-II; 36% for Stage IIIA-IIIB, p¼0.061) with most good prognosis patients having higher stage disease. In the good prognosis group S2Y was 65% in curatively and 18% in palliatively treated patients. The rapid learning system was feasible to deploy in a routine clinical environment and the quality of routinely collected clinical data (without specific quality review) was sufficient to validate a DSS. Using patient and tumour information, the DSS can identify prognostic groups, providing an evidence-based potential to change clinical decisions. The approach is extendable to other treatment sites (eg head-and-neck) and to more cancer centres as the collaboration expands. The model predictions can be prospectively tested. The methods could potentially inform decisions between treatment technologies and support ‘personalised medicine’ approaches. CALCULATION OF BEAM QUALITY CORRECTION FACTORS FOR EBT3 RADIOCHROMIC FILM M. La rraga-Gutie rrez a, b. a Departamento de Física, Univerisidad Jose noma Metropolitana, Unidad Iztapalapa, San Rafael Atlixco 186, Col. Auto Vicentina, Iztapalapa, C.P. 09340, M exico, D.F., M exico; b Laboratorio de Física M edica, Instituto Nacional de Neurología y Neurocirugía, Insurgentes sur 3877, Col. La Fama, Tlalpan, C.P. 14269, M exico, D.F., M exico The new proposed formalism for the dosimetry of small and non-standard fields (Alfonso et.al, 2008). requires the accurate Monte Carlo calculation of beam quality correction factors (kQ) for a specific combination of radiation detector and radiation source. The direct measurement of these correction factors demands the use of a detector whose response is independent of the radiation energy. The EBT radiochromic film family is a good candidate to determine experimentally kQ values, because its components are tissue equivalence (carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, etc.). However, a Monte Carlo analysis is required before establishing a methodology to measure kQ by using this type of radiochromic film. The purpose of this work is to calculate kQ values for the EBT3 radiochromic film by using Monte Carlo simulations. For that purpose, a Monte Carlo model of a Novalis (BrainLab, Germany) linear accelerator was carefully validated with measurements performed with stereotactic diode (SFD, IBA-Dosimetry, Germany). The EBT3 radiochromic film was modeled according with the manufacturer specifications (ISP Corp., USA). The absorbed dose to water and to the film active layer were calculated by using the user code DOSRZnrc. The kQ values were determined for the following square field sizes at 1.5 cm depth in water: 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 3.0 and 10.0 cm. It was found that the calculated kQ values lie between 0.991 and 1.007 with an overall statistical uncertainty of 1.3%. Comparing these results with kQ of silicon diode and diamond detectors, it can be observed that the response of the EBT3 film is energy independent within its statistical uncertainties for the field sizes and radiation source studied in this work. The next step is to improve the uncertainties associated to radiochromic film measurements and to validate this results experimentally. This work was funded by the grant CONACYT-SALUD-2012-01-181822. delivery. One important benefit of the introduction of IGRT in the clinic has been the transition to Stereotactic Ablative radiotherapy (SABR-SBRT). Typically, the coverage of the IGRT/SABR has been for a single-technology and comparison between various single vendor technologies, for example, MVCBCT by Siemens, against kVCBCT by Elekta and Varian or MVCT by Tomotherapy. The clinical reality many times is far from single-vendor technology. Many medium and small size clinics upgrade their delivery systems (linacs) for IGRT and SABR by add-ons coming from multiple vendors1. As an example, a Siemens linac with Brainlab Exactrac IG system and third party treatment planning system, all put together to provide IGRT and SABR programs within the clinical environment. Users find themselves in that case up against issues that are not necessarily addressed by a didactic or training course like those offered by a closed single-vendor IGRT/SBRT systems, common examples being: a Novalis TX with i-plan or Tomotherapy or Cyberknife. This presentation will outline the main issues and give a step-by-step method for clinical implementation of all the components in order to achieve the final goal. 1 http://vimeo.com/75802709 2 D. Mihailidis, J. Mallah, M. Plants, G. Kagadis. “Influence of MLC Width on Intensity Modulated Plans” Med. Phys. 38, (2011) 3805. IMPROVEMENT OF THE PENUMBRA FOR SMALL RADIOSURGICAL FIELDS USING FLATTENING FILTER FREE LOW MEGAVOLTAGE BEAMS Mehran Yarahmadi a, Hassan A. Nedaie b, Otto A. Sauer c. a Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences, Sanandaj, Iran; b Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran; c Klinik und Poliklinik für Strahlentherapie, University of Würzburg, Josef-Schneider-Straße 11, 97080 Würzburg, Germany Background: In stereotactic radiosurgery, sharp beam edges have clear advantages to spare normal tissues. In general, the dose gradient is a limiting factor in minimizing dose to nearby critical structures for clinical cases. Therefore the penumbral width should be diminished. Methods: A Varian Clinac 2100 linear accelerator equipped with in-house designed radiosurgical collimator was modeled using the EGSnrc/ BEAMnrc Monte Carlo code and compared with the measurements. The 0.015 cm3 PinPoint chamber was used to measure the 6 MV photon beam characteristics and to validate Monte Carlo calculations. Additional to the standard (STD) linac, a flattening filter free (FFF) linac was simulated. Percent depth doses, beam profiles and output factors were calculated for small field sizes with diameter of 5, 10, 20 and 30mm with DOSXYZnrc. The mean energy and photon fluence at the water surface were calculated withBEAMDPfor both FFF linac and STD linacs. Results: The penumbra width (80%-20%) was decreased by 0.5, 0.3, 0.2 and 0.2mm for field sizes of 5, 10, 20 and 30mm respectively when removing the FF. The fluence of photons at the surface increased up to 3.6 times and the mean energy decreased by a factor of 0.69 when removing the FF. The penumbra width (80%-20%) decreased by 17% when a 2MeVmonoenergetic electron pencil beam incident on the target is used instead of 6.2 MeV. Conclusions: It was found that the penumbra of small field sizes is decreased by removing the FF. Likewise using low megavoltage photons reduced the beam penumbra maintaining adequate penetration and skin sparing. BENCHMARK EXPERIMENT TO VERIFY RADIATION TRANSPORT CALCULATIONS FOR DOSIMETRY IN RADIATION THERAPY CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT OF STEREOTACTIC ABLATIVE BODY RADIOTHERAPY (SABR-SBRT) WITH NON-DEDICATED MULTIVENDOR TECHNOLOGIES F. Renner a, R.-P. Kapsch a, A. Schüller a, Ch. Makowski a. Technische Bundesanstalt Braunschweig, Bundesallee Braunschweig, Germany Dimitris Mihailidis, Michael Harmon, Lewis Whaley, Lloyd Farinash, Brian Plants, Prem Raja. Charleston Radiation Therapy and West Virginia University, USA Radiation transport calculations based on the Monte Carlo (MC) method are regarded as the most accurate technique for solving complex problems of radiation transport. Therefore, they have great potential to realise more exact dose calculations for treatment planning in radiation therapy. However, there is a lack of information on how correct the results of MC calculations are on an absolute basis. A practical verification of the calculations can be performed by direct comparison with a benchmark experiment also considering the related uncertainties. At the national metrology institute of Germany, the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), such a benchmark experiment was performed. This experiment had parallels to clinical radiation therapy, among Image guided stereotactic radiotherapy (IGRT) is a treatment modality that combines a variety of new technologies from imaging, to treatment planning and treatment delivery. It has been the primary method of treatment for several cranial and extra cranial tumors, where accurate patient immobilization and setup, tumor delineation, complex treatment planning and pre-treatment imaging, are necessary for accurate treatment a Physikalisch100, 38116 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 19 IMPACT TO TOTAL SCATTER FACTORS OF THE DOSIMETER ON THE CALCULATED DOSE DISTRIBUTION IN STEREOTACTIC RADIOSURGERY Materials and Methods: PSM are derivative-free optimization algorithms that require few function evaluations to progress and converge and have the ability to better avoid local entrapment making them a suitable approach for the resolution of the noncoplanar BAO problem. Locally advanced head and neck clinical cases were selected to test this approach. The planning target volumes included the primary tumor, the high and low risk lymphnodes. Organs-at-risk included the parotids, the brainstem, and the spinal cord. For each case, a setup with five equidistant beams was chosen and the resulting treatment plan using a multicriteria optimization approach was then compared with the coplanar and noncoplanar plans using the optimal beam setup obtained by PSM. Results: For the clinical cases retrospectively tested, the use of noncoplanar directions in our tailored approach showed a positive influence on the quality of the solution found. For the same target coverage, the noncoplanar treatment plans obtained an average reduction of the parotid's mean dose irradiation in 4.2 Gy compared to the equidistant treatment plans while the coplanar treatment plans only obtained a 2.7 Gy average decrease. Conclusions: PSM has shown ability to avoid local entrapment and efficiency on the number of function evaluations even using noncoplanar directions, which is a major advantage compared to other global heuristics where the continuous solution space is confined to a discrete subset, often only considering coplanar irradiation angles to achieve clinically acceptable computation times. rraga-Gutie rrez a. a Laboratorio de Física ~ o a, J.M. La O.A. García-Gardun Medica, Instituto Nacional de Neurología y Neurocirugía, Insurgentes sur 3877, C.P. 14269, M exico, D.F., M exico DOSIMETRIC ANALYSIS OF PATIENTS WITH IMPLANTED CARDIAC DEVICES UNDERGOING RADIOTHERAPY. ADDITIONAL PROPOSED PRECAUTIONS TO THE LAST UPDATED GUIDELINES Physical and technical challenges exist in the dosimetry of small-fields which are wide highlighted in the literature. However, the literature did not report the impact of the dosimeter in the calculated dose distribution. The goal of this work was to assess the impact of relative measurements of: off axis ratios, tissue maximum ratios and especially total scatter factor (TSF) on the calculated dose distribution. Six detectors were employed to characterize circular collimated beams generated with a dedicated linear accelerator: three diodes, one ionization chamber and two radiochromic films. The relative measurements were incorporated in the treatment planning system (TPS) in order to compare and analyze the calculated dose distributions (DD). The major discrepancies were in the TSF that showed that all the radiation detectors had a good agreement within their statistical uncertainties with the exception of the CC01 and EBT2 film. The calculated DD were normalized with respect to the TSF and analyzed by gamma index test by using a different calculation grid size. The DD did not show any important difference when a gamma criteria of 3/3% was used. According with the results presented in this work, we consider that all detectors were excellent for the relative dosimetry of small photon beams for plan evaluation. But it is necessary to consider the TSF, because the later is involved in the calculation of the monitor units which is not reflected on the calculated dose distribution by TPS and may impact the delivered dose to the patient. pez Guadalupe Martín Martín a, Rocío Bermudez Luna a, Alfonso Lo sar Rodríguez Rodríguez a, Mª Victoria de Torres ndez a, Ce Ferna Olombrada b. a Medical Physics Department. Radiation Therapy Service. Hospital Universitario de Fuenlabrada, Madrid (Spain); b Radiation Oncology Department. . Radiation Therapy Service. Hospital Universitario de Fuenlabrada, Madrid (Spain) other things, with respect to the radiation applied, the materials used and the manner of dose detection. The result of the experiment was a mean absorbed dose per incident particle which could be compared to the result of an MC calculation on an absolute basis. A special radiation source is necessary to evaluate the mean absorbed dose per incident particle in an experiment, since the number of source particles is usually not known for radiation sources. An accurate characterisation of the source is also important to define a realistic radiation source for the calculation. A radiation source which meets these requirements is operated by PTB. The experimental part of the beamline at PTB‘s research linear accelerator is equipped with several devices for the characterisation of the electron beam. There are beam current monitors to evaluate the number of electrons, a magnetic spectrometer to obtain information on the spectral fluence of the electron beam and beam profile monitors to measure geometric characteristics of the beam. The benchmark experiment was modelled in a widely used MC software tool for radiation transport calculations, too. A good agreement was found for the result of the benchmark experiment and the corresponding result of the MC calculation. The related uncertainties were less than 1 % in both cases. The results of the work exemplify evidence of the absolute correctness of dosimetric quantities calculated with the MC method in the application field of radiation therapy. NONCOPLANAR BEAM ANGLE OPTIMIZATION IN IMRT TREATMENT PLANNING USING DERIVATIVE-FREE ALGORITHMS H. Rocha a, J. Dias b, B. Ferreira c, M.C. Lopes d. a INESC-Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal; b FEUC, Coimbra, Portugal; c I3N, Aveiro, Portugal;; d IPOC-FG EPE, Coimbra, Portugal Purpose/Objective: The planning of radiation therapy treatments requires decisions regarding the angles used for radiation incidence. The beam angle optimization (BAO) problem consists in finding the optimal number and incidence directions of the irradiation beams. The selection of appropriate radiation incidence directions is important for the quality of the treatment. However, the possibility of improving the quality of treatment plans by an optimized selection of the beam incidences is seldom done in clinical practice. Adding the possibility for noncoplanar incidences is even more rarely used. Nevertheless, the advantage of noncoplanar beams is well known. We present the benefits of using pattern search methods (PSM) for the optimization of the highly non-convex noncoplanar BAO problem. Aims: There is few literature available regarding radiotherapy in patients with Cardiac Implantable Electronic Devices (CIEDs). Official guidelines have not been updated since 1994 and CIEDs manufacturing technology, as well as radiotherapy techniques, have considerably changed since then. An updated practical guideline was developed in The Netherlands to take these changes and the patient’s perspective into account (1). The aims of this work are to describe the implementation of this new protocol in our Institution, and to propose additional precautions regarding some imaging techniques not described in detail within this guideline. Materials and methods: Between 2013 and 2014, fifteen patients with CIEDs of different primary sites were treated in our institution. A treatment plan optimally covering the target area and maximally sparing the CIED was generated for all patients. Dose to the CIED was assessed and patients were classified according to their risk as recommended by the Dutch guideline. Patients were evaluated before, during and after radiotherapy by a cardiologist. Results: Our patient focus group consisted of 7, 7 and 1 patients categorised into low, medium and high risk groups, respectively. The median age was 71 (range 54-91) years. There were five men with head and neck primaries, three men with lung primaries, 5 men with pelvic primaries and two women with breast primaries. The prescribed dose ranged from 20 to 78 Gy with a daily dose ranging from 1.8 to 4 Gy. The maximum doses to the CEIDs were 179.1 cGy, 751 cGy and 1270 cGy, for the low, medium and high risk groups, respectively. Radiation therapy was safely delivered in all patients, but in two of them we experienced a CIED malfunction (without any untoward effects for the patients' health), while Cone-Beam acquisition previous to the treatment was taking place. Conclusion: Radiotherapy was safely delivered in a series of fifteen patients with CIEDs following the recommendations of the Netherlands task group. However, we included some additional precautions related to 3D imaging acquisition techniques which are not described in detail in their guideline. References (1) Management of radiation oncology patients with a pacemaker or ICD: a new comprehensive practical guideline in The Netherlands. Dutch Society of Radiotherapy and Oncology (NVRO). Radiat Oncol. 2012 Nov 24;7:198. 20 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) IN VIVO DOSE VERIFICATION OF 3D CONFORMAL TREATMENTS WITH THE USE OF AN A-SI EPID ENERGY DEPENDENCE OF PTW MICRODIAMOND DETECTOR IN RADIOTHERAPY PHOTON AND ELECTRON BEAMS P. Mandourari, C. Antypas, C. Armpilia, J. Floros, P. Sandilos. Medical Physics Unit, 1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion Hospital, University of Athens,Vas. Sophias 76, 115 27 Athens, Greece M. Pimpinella a, A. Stravato a, A.S. Guerra a, V. De Coste a, M. Marinelli b, G. Verona-Rinati b, M.D. Falco c. a ENEA-INMRI, Istituto Nazionale di Metrologia di Roma Tor delle Radiazioni Ionizzanti, Roma, Italy; b INFN - Universita Vergata, Dipartimento di Ingegneria Industriale, Roma, Italy; c Tor Vergata University General Hospital, Department of Diagnostic Imaging Molecular Imaging Interventional Radiology and Radiotherapy, Roma, Italy Background: The aim of this work is to propose an easily applicable in vivo verification method using an a-Si flat panel. Materials and Methods: The dosimetric characteristics of the EPID were determined. The methodology to calculate the dose along the central axis of the photon beam in a homogeneous phantom or a patient is described. The method was validated with point dose measurements in a homogeneous solid water phantom of various thicknesses using an ionization chamber. Once the method was validated in the phantom, it was applied on ten prostate patients with 3D conformal treatment plans. The EPID in vivo reconstructed doses were compared to the doses given by the treatment planning system (TPS). Results: The phantom validation measurements revealed very good agreement between EPID reconstructed mid-plane doses and ionization chamber measured mid-plane doses (mean error¼-1.7%, min¼-2.9%, max¼1.1%). In vivo measurements in prostate patients revealed very good agreement between EPID reconstructed mid-plane doses and treatment planning calculated mid-plane doses (mean error¼0.85%, min¼-3.66%, max¼6.59%). Discussion: All the results are less than 5% which is the tolerance level in classic in vivo dosimetry. Therefore, the presented EPID dosimetry method is accurate. It can be applied easily to all types of flat panels without the use of any sophisticated software. Furthermore, it is contactless and the EPID images are in disposition immediately after patient irradiation. The proposed method use of EPID dosimetry is intended to be used in more complex treatment techniques. IN VIVO DOSE VERIFICATION OF 3D CONFORMAL TREATMENTS WITH THE USE OF RADIOCHROMIC EBT2 FILMS P. Mandourari, C. Antypas, C. Armpilia, J. Floros, M. Rouchota, P. Sandilos. Medical Physics Unit, 1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion Hospital, University of Athens Vas. Sophias 76, 115 27 Athens, Greece Background: The aim of this work is to propose an easily applicable in vivo verification method using radiochromic EBT2 films. Materials and Methods: Radiochromic EBT2 films were evaluated for in vivo dosimetry of 3D conformal treatments. The EBT2 film calibration was determined in the dose range of 20cGy e 500cGy. The ESTRO recommendations for in vivo dosimetry were used to calculate the midplane dose inside a phantom or a patient. The method was validated in a homogeneous solid water phantom of various thicknesses along the central axis of the photon beam at the midplane depth using an ionization chamber. After validation, the method was applied on ten prostate patients treated with 3D conformal plans. In vivo EBT2 reconstructed doses were compared to the doses calculated by the treatment planning system (TPS). Results: The phantom validation measurements revealed very good agreement between EBT2 reconstructed mid-plane doses and ionization chamber measured mid-plane doses (mean error¼-3.8%, min¼-4.8%, max¼-2.1%). In vivo measurements in prostate patients revealed very good agreement between EBT2 reconstructed mid-plane doses and treatment planning calculated mid-plane doses (mean error¼-0.16%, min¼-1.67%, max¼2.32%). Discussion: All the results are less than 5% which is the tolerance level in classic in vivo dosimetry. EBT2 radiochromic films can be accurately used for in vivo dosimetry of prostate patients with 3D conformal plans. The presented in vivo dosimetry with EBT2 radiochromic films is intended to be used for validation of other dosimetry techniques in more complex treatments. Aim of this work is to investigate, by Monte Carlo simulations and by experiment, the energy dependence of the new synthetic diamond detector, microDiamond type 60019 (PTW, Freiburg, Germany), in megavoltage photon and electron radiotherapy beams. Monte Carlo simulations are performed using the EGSnrc software package. The microDiamond is modelled in detail according to the geometrical and material data provided by the manufacturer. The detector irradiation at the reference depth in a water phantom is simulated and the response in terms of absorbed dose to water is determined as a function of beam quality. The detector response is calculated as the ratio of absorbed dose in the detector sensitive volume (about 0.004 mm3) to absorbed dose in the same volume of water by means of the egs_chamber user-code included in the EGSnrc package. Photon beams in the range from 6 MV to 15 MV (TPR20,10 from 0.67 to 0.76) and electron beams from 6 MeV to 18 MeV (R50 from 2.6 to 8 g/cm2) are considered. Measurements are performed in clinical photon and electron beams produced by an Elekta Precise linear accelerator. The accelerator output is determined following the IAEA TRS 398 dosimetry protocol and using a Farmer-type ionization chamber in photon beams and a PTW Roos® planeparallel chamber in electron beams. Both ionization chambers are calibrated in terms of absorbed dose to water in a reference 60Co beam. The ratios of diamond detector signal to the delivered absorbed dose to water obtained in reference conditions are analysed to evaluate the microDiamond energy dependence. Measurement results show that the diamond detector response per unit of absorbed dose to water slightly increases (up to about 2%) from 60Co to clinical beam qualities. Both Monte Carlo and experimental results indicate that variations in the microDiamond response are within ±1% over the beam quality range of accelerator beams considered in this work. OUT-OF-FIELD DOSE MEASUREMENTS FOR RADIOTHERAPY OF BRAIN TUMOURS IN PAEDIATRIC PATIENTS L. Stolarczyk a, M. Majer b, N. Adamek c, E. Gora d, D. Kabat d, Z. c b, R. Harrison e. a Institute of Kne zevi c b, M. Liszka a, P. Olko a, S. Miljani Nuclear Physics PAN, Radzikowskiego 152, 31-342 Krakow, Poland; b RuCer Boskovic Institute, Bijenicka c. 54, 10 000 Zagreb, Croatia; c Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science AGH, Krakow, Poland; d Maria Sklodowska-Curie Memorial Institute of Oncology, Garncarska 11, 31 115 Krakow, Poland; e University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle, UK It has been known for many years that out-of-field radiation doses to normal tissues may be associated with an increased risk of secondary cancers. Paediatric patients are of particular concern due to their possible longer life expectancy and higher organ radiosensitivities compared with adult patients and higher organ doses because of their smaller body size. The motivation of EURADOS Working group 9 (WG 9) is to assess unwanted, non-target patient doses in radiotherapy. The purpose of this phantom study was to measure out-of-field organ doses using 5 and 10 year-old anthropomorphic phantoms for modern techniques of radiotherapy. The treatment of a spherical brain tumor with a diameter of 6 cm was simulated with 6 MV photon beams for Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy (IMRT) and 3D Conformal Radiotherapy (3D CRT). Radiophotoluminescent (RPL) and thermoluminescent (TL) dosimeters placed in 20 organs were used for dose measurements. For both techniques organ doses decreased with distance from the target volume. 5 year-old phantom doses were on average 30% and 60% higher than doses for the 10 year-old phantom for IMRT and 3D CRT respectively. For example, for IMRT, doses measured with RPL dosimeters (Figure 1) ranged Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) from approximately 32% of the given tumor dose for eyes and dropped rapidly to 0.3% for thyroid and to 0.02% for testes in the case of 10 year-old phantom. For the 5 year-old phantom, doses ranged from approximately 43% of the given tumor dose for eyes and 0.4% for thyroid to 0.035% for testes. Radiation risks of cancer incidence for seven organs (thyroid, lung, breast, liver, stomach, bladder and prostate) in the form of the lifetime attributable risk (LAR) were estimated using BEIR VII model. For IMRT, the highest risk per single fraction (2 Gy in tumour) was estimated for 5 year-old girls (50 and 34 cancers per 105 patients for breast and thyroid respectively). The highest organ risk in the case of boys was for lungs (11 cancers per 105 5 year old patients). 21 The following dosimeters were used: thermoluminescent (TLD-700, MTS7, MTS-6 and MTS-N), radiophotoluminescent (GD-352M and GD302-M) and CR-39 track detectors. The results obtained within the irradiated volume show good agreement between prescribed and measured dose with RPLs (94.6Gy ± 2.4%). In Figure 1 preliminary results for TLDs and RPLs are shown for measurements outside the radiation field (beyond the range of proton beam). For photons, doses decrease from 22 mGy and 18 mGy at distance aproximately 13 cm from the inner surface of phantom, to 1 mGy and 0.5 mGy at distance aproximately 56 cm for MTS-7 and GD-352M respectively. Higher doses for TLDs compared with RPLs are observed due to higher sensitivity of TLDs to secondary neutrons in comparison to RPLs. A systematic decrease of the geequivalent neutron dose (Dn) with distance is observed. Dn is defined as the TL signal induced by neutrons in MTS-6 expressed in terms of the g-ray dose producing an identical TL signal. Dn varied from 130 mGy at 13 cm from the inner surface of the phantom to 2 mGy at 56 cm. The detailed analysis of results combined with future Monte Carlo calculations will give valuable information about doses from scattered radiation distant from the target volume. Figure 1. Organ doses (per 2 Gy in target volume) for IMRT measured with RPLsĂ COMPARISON OF PASSIVE DOSIMETERS FOR SECONDARY RADIATION MEASUREMENTS IN SCANNING PROTON RADIOTHERAPY Kne zevi c b, N. Adamek c, C. Algranati d, I. Ambrozova e, C. L. Stolarczyk a, Z. Domingo f, V. Dufek g, J. Farah h, F. Fellin d, M. Klodowska a, J. Kubancak e, M. c b, O. Ploc e, M. RomeroLiszka a, M. Majer b, V. Mares i, S. Miljani sito f, K. Schinner i, M. Schwarz d, S. Trinkl i, F. Trompier h, M. Expo Wielunski i, R. Harrison j, P. Olko a. a Institute of Nuclear Physics PAN, Radzikowskiego 152, 31-342 Krakow, Poland; b RuCer Boskovic Institute, Bijenicka c. 54, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia; c Faculty of Physics and Applied Computer Science AGH, Krakow, Poland; d Medical Physics Department, Trento Proton Therapy Center, Via Al Desert 14, 38123 Trento, Italy; e Department of Radiation Dosimetry, Nuclear Physics Institute, CZ-250 68 z, Czech Republic; f Departament de Física, Universitat Auto noma de Re Barcelona, E-08193 Bellaterra, Spain; g National Radiation Protection Institute, Bartoskova 28, 140 00 Prague, Czech Republic; h Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety, Human Health Division, BP17, 92260 Fontenay-aux-Roses; France; i Helmholtz Zentrum München, €dter Landstraße 1, 85764 Institute of Radiation Protection, Ingolsta Neuherberg, Germany; j University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear NE1 7RU, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom Proton therapy is used increasingly in cancer treatment because of the possibility of sparing healthy tissue close to the target volume. However, the interactions of protons with matter result in the production of secondary radiation comprised mostly of neutrons and gamma radiation. Unwanted doses, deposited distantly from the target volume, may lead to an increasing probability of late effects of radiotherapy including the generation of secondary cancers. The EURADOS WG9 measurement campaign is designed to investigate the secondary radiation generated by a scanning proton beam. Experiments were carried out in the IBA (230 MeV) active-scanning proton beam therapy facility in Trento, Italy. A volume of 10 x 10 x 10 cm3 inside the water phantom (60 x 30 x 30 cm3) was irradiated uniformly to a dose of 100 Gy. Depth dose distributions along the beam axis and profiles at various depths were measured. Fig 1. The decrease of secondary radiation doses with lateral distance from the field edge (at 18.5 cm from the inner surface of the phantom) measured with different passive dosimeters in water phantom. A COMPARISON OF DOSIMETRIC PROPERTIES OF THREE SOLID STATE DOSIMETRY SYSTEMS FOR DOSIMETRY AUDIT IN RADIOTHERAPY P. Grochowska a, J. Izewska a, H. Mizuno a, J.F. Aguirre b, G. Azangwe a, P. Bera a, A. Meghzifene a. a International Atomic Energy Agency, Dosimetry and Medical Radiation Physics Section, Vienna, Austria; b U.T.M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Radiation Physics, Houston, USA Background: The purpose of this study is to investigate and compare characteristics of three solid state dosimetry systems in order to determine working parameters and corrections needed for remote dosimetry audits of high energy photon and electron beams. The following systems were investigated: a thermo luminescent dosimetry (TLD) system (TLD-100, PCL3 reader), an optically stimulated luminescent dosimetry (OSLD) system (nanoDots, microStar reader) and a radiophoto luminescent dosimetry (RPLD) system (GD 302M, FGD-1000 reader). Materials and Methods: Prior to performing tests, the read-out procedure for each dosimetry system was optimized to achieve the best reproducibility of the measured signal. For OSLDs and RPLDs corrections for sensitivity of individual dosimeters were determined. Numerous tests were performed in order to describe the dosimetric characteristics: reproducibility, signal depletion (RPLD, OSLD), dose response non-linearity, fading effect and energy dependence. Results: All three systems tested show adequate reproducibility of about 1% for a group of dosimeters irradiated and read several times. Signal loss for OSLDs and RPLDs during repeatable read-out is minimal and can be neglected during the standard reading procedure. Correction for dose response non-linearity is needed in 1.5 e 2.5 Gy range for OSLDs and TLDs, 22 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) whereas for RPLDs the response is linear with dose. Fading effect was checked and results show that for TLDs and OSLDs signal stabilizes in around 10 and 2 days after irradiation, respectively. For RPLDs, when the preheating treatment is applied, the signal stabilizes and there is no further change. Energy corrections for a range of photon beams (6 - 18 MV) and electron beams (6 - 20 MeV) relative to a Co-60 beam, are of the order of 3- 5% for all three detectors for highest beam energies. Discussion: All three systems, especially TLD and RPLD systems need very careful handling procedures in order to achieve good reproducibility. The advantage of RPLDs and OSLDs is that the reading process can be repeated if necessary. RPLD does not need a non-linearity and fading corrections. Assuming that all corrections are properly applied, all three systems can be used for dosimetry audit in radiotherapy. DOSE CALCULATION ACCURACY AT PRESENCE OF DENTAL IMPLANTS ON UNCORRECTED AND METAL ARTIFACT REDUCED COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY DATA Manuel Maerz, Pia Mittermair, Oliver Koelbl, Barbara Dobler. Department of Radiotherapy, RegensburgUniversity Medical Center, Germany Background: Dose calculation in modern treatment planning is based on Computed Tomography (CT) data of the patient. Metallic dental implants cause severe streaking artifacts, which inhibit the correct representation of shape and density of the metal and the surrounding tissue.We will present the influence of dental implants, metal artifacts and the benefit of the metal artifact reduction algorithm IFS (iterative frequency split) on dose calculation accuracy depending on treatment technique and dose calculation algorithm. Materials and Methods: The study is conducted on cylindrical phantoms consisting of water equivalent material surrounding dental implant materialand other heterogeneities (e.g. air, muscle) in various geometric arrangements. Computed Tomography images of the phantoms are generated and corrected using the IFS algorithm. Several plans are irradiated to the phantoms equipped with Gafchromic EBT 3 films: five beams IMRT (Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy), nine beams IMRT und dual arc VMAT (Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy). The measured dose distributions are compared to calculations on corrected and uncorrected CT data using the dose calculation algorithms Pencil Beam and Collapsed Cone, implemented in Oncentra External Beam v.4.3 and the Monte Carlo simulation XVMC. The Pencil Beam and XVMC algorithms report dose to water, whereas Collapsed Cone reports dose to media. To compare film measurements to Collapsed Cone calculations the film measurements which are calibrated to dose to water are rescaled to dose to media. Inaccuracies caused by artifacts or not adequately corrected CT images and inaccuracies caused by incorrect modeled transmission of radiation through metal implants are separated. Results: Depending on the dose calculation algorithm and the treatment technique artifacts lead to inaccuracies in dose calculation that can be reduced by application of the IFS algorithms. The accuracy of the calculation on the IFS corrected data and the improvement with respect to the uncorrected data depends on the dose calculation algorithm and the composition of material in the phantom. Conclusion: Metal artifact reduction leads to an improvement in accuracy of dose calculations. The application of a metal artifact reduction algorithm is recommended to reduce dose uncertainties. Acknowledgments:The work was supported by the Wilhelm Sander Foundation. TEST, VALIDATION AND UPGRADE OF THE MD ANDERSON ANALYTICAL MODEL PREDICTING SECONDARY NEUTRON RADIATION IN PROTON THERAPY FACILITIES rault c, F. J. Farah a, A. Bonfrate a, A. De Oliveira b, S. Delacroix b, J. He Martinetti a, S. Piau d, F. Trompier a, I. Vabre d, I. Clairand a. a Institute for Radiological Protection and Nuclear Safety (IRSN), Human Health Division, 31 ave de la Division Leclerc, 92260 Fontenay-aux-Roses; France; b Institut Curie e Centre de Protonth erapie d’Orsay (ICPO), Campus universitaire ^timent 101, 91898 Orsay, France; c Centre Antoine Lacassagne (CAL) ba Cyclotron biom edical, 227 avenue de la Lanterne, 06200 Nice, France; d Institut de Physique Nucl eaire d’Orsay (IPNO), Service de dosim etrie, ^timent 104, 91406 Orsay, France Campus universitaire ba Purpose: This study follows the MD Anderson approach* to build an analytical model predicting leakage neutrons within the local 75 MeV ocular proton therapy facility. Its main goal is to test, validate and upgrade the model to clinically relevant configurations. Methods: Using Monte Carlo (MC) calculations, neutron ambient dose equivalents, H*(10), were simulated at different positions inside the treatment room while considering a closed final collimator and pristine Bragg peak delivery as per the MD Anderson method. Using this data, a facility specific analytical model was developed and tested. Starting from H*(10) values at isocentre, this model attempts to reproduce the neutron decrease with axial and lateral distance to isocentre while separately accounting for the contribution of intranuclear cascade, evaporation, epithermal and thermal neutrons. To validate the model, simulated H*(10) values were considered as well as experimental measurements previously unavailable at MD Anderson. The model was also expended in the vertical direction to enable a full 3D mapping of H*(10) inside the treatment room. Results: The work first proved that it is possible to build ones’ own analytical model following the MD Anderson approach which however requires a MC model of the local proton therapy facility. Validation showed that the analytical model efficiently reproduced simulated H*(10) values with a maximum difference below 10%. In addition, it succeeded in predicting measured H*(10) values with differences <40%. The highest differences were found at the closest and farthest positions from isocenter where the analytical model failed to faithfully reproduce the high variations in neutron fluence and energy. The differences remain however acceptable when taking into account the non negligible measurement/ simulation uncertainties and considering the end use of this model, i.e. radiation protection. Finally, the model was successfully extended to predict neutrons in the vertical direction with respect to the beam line as patients are in the upright seated position during ocular treatments (differences <20% on simulations and <45% on measurements). Conclusion: Analytical models represent a promising solution that substitutes for time-consuming MC calculations. Further studies remain necessary to upgrade the model and account for beam modulation, collimation and patient-induced neutron fluctuations. rez-Andújar A, Zhang R and Newhauser W. Monte Carlo and analytical *Pe model predictions of leakage neutron exposures from passively scattered proton therapy. Med. Phys. 40, 1714-25 (2013) DOSE PERTURBATION CLOSE TO HIGH Z MATERIALS IN MV FIELDS John Kalef-Ezra, Konstantina Karava. Medical University of Ioannina, Ioannina 45110, Greece Physics Department, Background: Inhomegeneities in the human body result in electron disequilibrium close to the interfaces. The purpose of this study was the assessment of the dose perturbation in tissues of low atomic number, Z, before an interface with a high Z / high density medium during irradiations with MV beams. Methods and Materials: Dose measurements in PMMA were carried out using H810 and MD-55 radiochromic films close to aluminum, copper and lead interfaces irradiated with either 60Co gamma rays or 6 MV X-rays. Results: The dose enhancement in PMMA due to the presence of the high Z inhomogeneity increases with increasing Z of the inhomogeneity (~Z1/2) and its thickness up to an energy-dependent saturation thickness and decreases with increasing distance from the interface. For example 17%, 37% and 109% dose increases were found at 4 mm distance from adequately thick Al, Cu and Pb layers irradiated with 6 MV X-rays, dropping to about 5%, 6% and 7% at 7 mm distance, respectively. Higher dose increases were found at the 4 mm distance from the interfaces of the three media irradiated with 60Co beams, 23%, 56% and 138%, respectively, dropping to 2%, 5% and 9% at 2.3 mm distance from the interface. On the other hand, the dose enhancement decreases with increasing irradiation angle. Both the field size and the depth of the inhomogeneity (studied only at depths larger than the one that corresponds to the maximum build-up) have marginal effect on the dose perturbation in radiation fields of large size. Empirical equations were derived, which correlate with the irradiation conditions the dose perturbation in soft tissues at short distances from high Z inhomogeneities, such as cortical bone, implanted devices and contrast media. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Conclusions: The empirically obtained equations could improve dose assessment in low Z tissues close to high Z media present in the patient’s body. TOTAL SKIN ELECTRON BEAM IRRADIATION IN GREECE: IN-VIVO DOSIMETRY Patatoukas George a, Dilvoi Maria a, Diamantopoulos Stefanos b, Platoni Kalliopi a, Kouloulias Vassilios c, Georgakopoulos Ioannis c, Tsioumas Ioannis c, Efstathopoulos Efstathios a. a Medical Physics Unit, 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece; b Medical Physics Department, Radiation Oncology Division, ‘Metropolitan’ Hospital, Neo Faliro, Piraeus, Greece; c Radiation Therapy Unit, 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece Background: Total Skin Electron Beam (TSEB) irradiation is considered as the treatment of choice for cutaneous T-cell lymphoma internationally, for either curative purposes or palliative care. The application of this external radiation therapy technique in Greece takes place at the Radiation Therapy Unit of the 2nd Department of Radiology of University of Athens at University General Hospital ”Attikon”, from 2011. So far, nine patients have received therapy, using the ”Six-dual-field” technique adopted by our department. In this work we present and analyze the first set of the in-vivo dosimetric results. Materials and Methods: TSEB therapy was developed on a linear accelerator VARIAN Clinac 2100C, to create a uniform and sufficiently large field (z200 cm 80 cm) at SSD¼380 cm, two symmetrical 6 MeV electron beams are combined with 17.5 tilts concerning the horizontal direction. An immobilization system was constructed to support patient during treatment and to modulate the composite electron field. Irradiation procedure demands a standing patient that takes, in total, six treatment positions. In accordance to our protocol procedure, for each patient a number of TLDs were positioned at various points on the patient’s skin by the medical physics team, in order to measure, calculate and verify the absorbed dose at specifically selected points which appear to be relevant with the overall dose distribution. Mean, maximum and minimum patient skin dose was calculated and recorded for each patient Results: Patient dosimetry showed a very good agreement eon averagewith the expected mean dose of 2 Gy as mean patient dose. Furthermore, minimum and maximum values were at the level of 1.4 and 3.3 Gy. Spatial variations of the dose distribution can provide essential insights on the patient irradiation conditions and can assist vitally in the dosimetric optimization of the applied clinical protocol. Discussion: The above results lead us to conclude that TSEB treatment using ”Six-dual-field” technique has been implement with safety and successfully in our department’s clinical therapeutic protocol. COMPARISON OF TANGENTIAL FIELDS WITH AND WITHOUT WEDGE IN WHOLE BREAST 3D CONFORMAL RADIOTHERAPY M. Chatzimarkou a, A. Makridou a, I. Grigoriadis a, E. Kamperis b, K. Mponiou b, M. Kotzasarlidou a, M. Charalambidou b. a Medical Physics Department, Theagenio Cancer Hospital, Greece; b Radiation Oncology Department, Theagenio Cancer Hospital, Greece Background: To compare two distinct treatment planning methods in breast cancer patients in the context of 3D conformal radiotherapy. The competing methods consisted of two 6MV tangential fields with or without wedges (max wedge factor: 0.3), supplanted in both cases by one to three 15MV fields-in-a-field (FIFs). Materials and methods: In total, 60 radiotherapy plans were designed, two for each of the 30 patients. Dose distribution calculation was performed with the analytical anisotropic algorithm (version 8917) in Eclipse TPS. Dose was adjusted so that both plans shared the same maximum which did not exceed 107% of the prescribed dose. The dosimetric constraints to surrounding organs at risk were consistently respected. The optimization of each plan was left to medical physicist’s discretion. Treatment was performed in an Elekta SL15 equipped with MLC with a 60o universal wedge and a nominal dose rate 400MU/min. Statistical analysis was done with SPSS 20. A general linear model was utilized to analyze the variance 23 between the different techniques. Mean dose(%), minimum dose(%), duration of treatment session and count of MUs comprised the measure factors, while age, cancer site (right-left), T stage in TNM staging system and CTV were covariates in our model. Results: Analysis revealed a statistically significant difference across all measured factors between the two groups, except for minimum dose. In non-wedged plans mean dose was increased by 0.57% (0.38-0.76%, p<0.001), duration of treatment was reduced by 45 seconds (42-48, p<0.001) and MUs by 143 (131-154, p<0.001) corresponding to 22 seconds reduction of beam-on time. There was a trend (p¼0.07) towards less pronounced differences between the two methods with increasing CTV. Discussion: The use of FIFs instead of wedges in breast 3D-CRT plans was marginally better in terms of mean dose, while significantly reduced treatment time and MUs in our case (Elekta SL15, universal wedge). Considering the ramifications in radiation protection, such as less radiation leakage, less beam-on time, less overall treatment time, along with the reduced machine load and stress on replaceable components of the linear accelerator (e.g., electron gun, magnetron, klystron, dose monitors), the use of FIFs is a viable alternative to the current standard. Keywords: Breast cancer, Radiotherapy, Linear accelerator, Radiation protection. QUALITY METRICS IN ELECTRONIC PORTAL IMAGING DEVICES M. Tzomakas a, A. Episkopakis b, c, N. Kalyvas b, I. Kandarakis b, G. Panayiotakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras 26500, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Agiou Spyridonos, 122 10, Egaleo, Athens, Greece; c ELEKTA, Agiou Konstantinou 17 , P.C. 15124 Amarousio, Attikis Background: Earlier investigations on EPID image quality evaluation have published data on quality metrics such as MTF, DQE , CNR and SNR. However in these studies the effect of different energy was not systematically estimated. Objective: In this work various image quality metrics were experimentally estimated in order to assess the quality of images obtained in Electronic Portal Imaging Devices (EPID) at different energies, and various values of monitor units(MU) and dose rates. Materials & Methods: A large number of images of the QC3 test phantom were obtained and evaluated for different LINAC (Elekta iViewGT) energies, MUs and dose rates in order to calculate and extract graphs, using MATLAB programming, of Modulation Transfer Function (MTF), Noise Power Spectrum (NPS), Normalised Noise Power Spectrum (NNPS), Detective Quantum Efficiency (DQE), Contrast to Noise Ratio (CNR) and Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR). MTF estimation was based on the Square Wave method using the corresponding region of the phantom. Results: MTF curves were found to be only slightly affected by energy and dose rate, being slightly better at higher dose rates and higher energy. Both NNPS and NPS graphs were found with irregular shape at low MUs and energies and smoother at higher both MUs and energies. The DQE graphs had little differences among the two energies and MUs. On the other hand both CNR and SNR curves were clearly higher at 6 MV and lower at 18 MV. Conclusion: It was found that the spatial frequency dependent metrics (MTF, DQE), which are related to detector performance, showed a tendency to increase when the energy, the dose rate and MUs were increased. However, the contrast to noise ratio was found considerably lower at high energy. EVALUATION OF A NOVEL SYNTHETIC SINGLE CRYSTAL DIAMOND DEVICE FOR IN-VIVO DOSIMETRY Marco Marinelli a, F. Pompili a, G. Prestopino a, G. Verona-Rinati a, M.D. Falco b, M. Pimpinella c. a INFNeDipartimento di Ingegneria Industriale, di Roma ‘Tor Vergata’, Italy; b Tor Vergata University General Universita Hospital, Viale Oxford 81, 00133 Rome, Italy; c ENEA-INMRI, Istituto Nazionale di Metrologia delle Radiazioni Ionizzanti, Roma, Italy Background: In-vivo dosimetry (IVD) has been widely recognized as an essential quality assurance (QA) instrument to be promoted in all 24 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) radiotherapy departments to detect errors in dose delivery and to provide an overall check of the whole dosimetry procedure and patient setup. Moreover, in several European countries IVD has become mandatory. A variety of detectors, including thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLD), silicon diodes and metal oxide silicon field-effect transistors (MOSFETs) are currently available for in-vivo dosimetry. These dosimeters are affected by serious drawbacks, such as long readout time and signal fading (TLDs), strong temperature, angular, dose and dose rate dependence, lack of radiation hardness, energy dependence (diodes and MOSFETs). Materials and Methods: A novel detector based on a synthetic single crystal diamond was evaluated for in-vivo dosimetry application. The device prototype was designed as a cable-free portable dosimeter to be operated offline. A basic dosimetric characterization was performed under irradiation with a Co-60 reference gamma beam and a 6 MV clinical photon beam from an Elekta Precise linear accelerator. The main features relevant to IVD application were investigated: preirradiation procedure and repeatability, linearity with dose (0.2 to 7 Gy), dose rate dependence (1 to 5 Gy/min), angular (0 to 360 ) and temperature dependence (20 to 40 C). Results: A negligible preirradiation procedure was found, with a maximum deviation form average reading below 1%. Deviations below 0.5% were found for linearity with dose and dose rate dependence analysis. Fading effect was negligible, with a decrease of diamond detector response below 3% for delays separating irradiation and readout up to 30 minutes. A deviation of 4% of diamond response, measured in the Co-60 beam, between 0 and ±180 irradiation direction was found. Finally, a temperature dependence of about 5% was measured in the investigated temperature range. Discussion: The tested diamond prototype showed good dosimetric features for off-line IVD applications. Such results, together with the high radiation hardness of diamond and its tissue-equivalence, are very promising for the realization of an energy independent high performance diamond based in-vivo dosimeter. A QA PROCEDURE FOR BRACHYTHERAPY TPS EMPLOYING MODEL BASED DOSE CALCULATIONS, BASED ON MONTE CARLO SIMULATION AND END USER ORIENTED TOOLS V. Peppa, E. Pappas, E. Pantelis, P. Papagiannis. Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 115 27 Athens, Greece Background: Model-based dose calculation algorithms (MBDCA) have been recently introduced as an option besides TG43 in 192Ir HDR brachytherapy treatment planning systems (TPS). The complexity of these algorithms challenges quality assurance (QA) programs requiring verification of dose delivery in patient-specific conditions. The aim of this study is to develop a user oriented QA procedure for TPS employing MBDCAs. Materials-Methods: Mathematical phantoms resembling patient geometries, as well as a computational model of a water sphere were constructed. These virtual phantoms were converted to DICOM-CT image series to facilitate their import to two commercially available systems(BrachyVision v.10.0.33 and OncentraBrachy v.4.4). HDR 192Ir sources were selected from the TPS source libraries to perform treatment plans. A catheter with a single source dwell position was located at the center of the water sphere, as well as 5 and 10 cm eccentrically. Two plans were created for patient phantoms, one with a multiple source dwell configuration and one where this was replaced by one dwell position at the centroid of the source distribution. In all cases, dosimetric calculations were performed using the model based dose calculation algorithm of the TPS. Monte Carlo (MC) simulation was performed to obtain reference dose distributions using BrachyGuide, a brachytherapy dedicated software tool prepared in-house for the automatic preparation of MCNP input files from treatment plans exported in DICOM-RT format. A dedicated custom software suite was also used for the comparison of reference MC data and corresponding TPS results in terms of colormap representation of percentage differences, Dose Volume Histograms and plan quality indices. Results: Comparisons of MC and TPS results showed a good agreement in the majority of points. Considerable differences were also observed and explained by MBDCA assumptions and optimization settings. These results have to be taken into account in MBDCA commissioning procedures. Discussion: The QA procedure and software tools presented herein may serve as a basis for developing future standards toward providing a quality management of MBDCA-based treatment planning systems. Acknowledgement: Research co-financed by the EU ESF and Greek national funds.NSRF operational Program “Education and Lifelong Learning Investing in knowledge society”, Aristeia I STEREOTACTIC FRAME INDUCED GEOMETRIC DISTORTIONS IN MR IMAGES EMPLOYED IN GAMMA KNIFE RADIOSURGERY APPLICATIONS E. Pappas a, A. Moutsatsos a, P. Karaiskos a, b, E. Pantelis a, E. Georgiou a, M. Torrens b, I. Seimenis c. a Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 11527 Athens, Greece; b Gamma Knife Department, Hygeia Hospital, Kifisias Avenue and 4 Erythrou Stavrou, Marousi, 15123 Athens, Greece; c Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, Democritus University of Thrace, 2nd building of Preclinical Section, University Campus, 68100 Alexandroupolis, Greece Purpose: To asses geometric uncertainties present in MR images necessitated for target localization and delineation in Gamma Knife radiosurgery. Specifically, this work focuses on the geometric distortions induced by eddy currents associated with the Ti-based Leksell stereotactic frame used for patient immobilization. Materials and Methods: A plexiglass phantom -recently developed by our group- was utilized. It encompasses 947 3mm-diameter holes interspersed in the 3D space which serve as control points for distortion detection and evaluation. Control point distribution pattern ensures that the entire stereotactic space is monitored. The phantom accurately fits the Leksell localization box and stereotactic frame, but can also be fixed without the latter. The reversed read gradient technique, along with a reference CT scan, were employed to evaluate geometric distortions in the phantom imaged at 1.5T with clinicallyused gradient echo pulse sequences (axial 3D-T1w and coronal balancedT2w). An in-house, semi-automatic MATLAB software was developed to assist control point localization and distortion evaluation. Derived 2D distortion maps were compared with corresponding ones deduced without the frame. Results: MRI-related distortions without the presence of the frame were limited to 1mm. Contrarily, severe frame-induced distortion was detected in regions neighboring the frame base. In T1w images, this distortion exceeded 5mm in a 20mm radial distance from the frame. Distortion decreased rapidly with the distance from the frame and obliterated at about 70mm. The control point disposition was always directed towards the frame center and did not change sign relatively to the read gradient polarity. Slightly larger distortion was detected with the frequency encoding direction being perpendicular to the most proximal side of the frame base. In coronal balanced-T2w images, the frame evidently distorted the nearside fiducials. Conclusion: Geometric inaccuracies induced by the Leksell stereotactic frame should be considered in GK radiosurgery applications with targets lying in the vicinity of the frame base. Total distortion inherent in MR images might reach inacceptable levels in extracranial cases, such as cervical spine, head and neck tumours (applicable in Perfexion model), where the target is close to the frame base. SYNTHETIC SINGLE CRYSTAL DIAMOND DIODE INCLINICAL DOSIMETRY OF HIGH DOSE PER PULSE ELECTRON BEAMS FOR INTRAOPERATIVE RADIATION THERAPY (IORT) Marco Marinelli a, G. Verona-Rinati a, M.D. Falco b, M. Pimpinella c, S. De Stefano d, A. Ciccotelli d, G. Felici d, F. Marangoni d. a INFNeDepartment of Industrial Engineering, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”, Italy; b Tor Vergata University General Hospital, Roma, Italy; c ENEA-INMRI, Istituto Nazionale di Metrologia delle Radiazioni Ionizzanti, Roma, Italy; d S.I.T. Sordina IORT Technologies spa, Italy Background: Accurate clinical dosimetry of electron beams produced by special linear accelerators dedicated to intraoperative radiation therapy (IORT) is challenging due to the presence of very high dose per pulse (1-10 cGy per pulse) with respect to conventional accelerators (<0.1 cGy per pulse). This high dose rate can affect the dose determination by means of dosimeters currently used for absolute and relative dosimetry (e.g. ionization chambers). In addition, due to the high dose gradients of electron beams, small volume dosimeters are needed. Recently, the PTW microDiamond type 60019 has been Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) proven to be a suitable device for a very wide radiation quality range such as photons, electrons and protons both for small and large irradiation fields. Materials and methods: In this work,a dosimetric characterization of a microDiamond prototype was performed under irradiation by electron beams produced by a Novac IORT accelerator (S.I.T. - Sordina IORT Technologies) in the 4 e 9 MeV energy range with dose rate from 1 to 8 cGy per pulse. The device performances were analysed in terms of linearity of the dose response, dose-per-pulse dependency, energy dependence, spatial resolution and capability to measure output factors (OFs). Results: A linear dose response, independent of dose per pulse was found. Percentage depth dose curves were in agreement with the ones obtained with a plane-parallel ionization chamber (PTW Advanced Markus chamber 34045) previously characterized for measurements in high dose per pulse electron beams. From beam profile measurements, a spatial resolution comparable to the one of a PTW silicon diode (Diode E 60017), was observed. The tested device has shown negligible energy dependence and good capability for accurate OFs determination. Conclusions: The performed dosimetric tests evidenced that the synthetic single crystal diamond diode is suitable for accurate relative dosimetry in high dose per pulse IORT electron beams. PLAN EVALUATION USING DOSE-VOLUME TREATMENT OF LOCALLY ADVANCED NSCLC METRICS FOR THE A. Miliadou a, G. Koukourakis a, P. Georgolopoulou b, C. Tripolitis a,b, K. Kourinou a,b, S. Betsou b. a Radiation Oncology Department, Greece; b Medical Physics Department, “St. Savvas” G. Anticancer Hospital of Athens, Greece Purpose: A major component of plan evaluation is the inspection of dosevolume metrics so that clinical parameters, including burden of organs at risk (OAR) and fractionation scheme, can be determined. Sources of uncertainty for the dose-volume metrics calculated by the planning software have been identified and determined to be software and user dependent. In this work we investigate the magnitude of such uncertainties and their clinical implications for the hypofractionated treatment of locally advanced non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Method: Using the dose-volume-histogram (DVH) calculation tool in the department’s treatment planning system we examined the dose-volume metrics in 3D treatment plans of 20 consecutive lung cancer patients. Parameters influencing the uncertainty of metrics such as D 95% for PTV coverage, Dmax for the spinal cord, V20 and V5 for lung, V60 and V55 for the esophagus and V40 for the heart, were examined for the specific treatment plans. The effect on spinal cord, heart, lungs and esophagus was quantified. Results: Delineation variability, dose algorithm and the dose grid used in the calculation of the metrics have the largest effect on DVH uncertainty. Uncertainties become more important with decreasing structure volume. Isodose selection for prescription determination needs to take into account the effect on OARs given the corresponding individual uncertainty of the organ’s metrics. Intending for hypofractionated treatments, plan evaluation lead to determination of a fractional dose in the range 2 - 2.75 Gy. Conclusions: Variations in structure delineation and dose calculation parameters are major factors of DVH uncertainty and hence of dose-volume metrics used to evaluate, approve and prescribe a given treatment plan. Including dose-volume metrics in plan evaluation is an essential step for the safe implementation of hypofractionated radiotherapy in NSCLC. EVALUATING THE ACCURACY OF VOLUMETRIC MODULATED ARC THERAPY (VMAT) TREATMENTS DELIVERY A. Scaggion, A. Negri, M. Paiusco, A. Roggio, M.A. Rossato, F. Simonato. Medical Physics Department Istituto Oncologico Veneto IOV via Gattamelata n.64 35128, Padova, Italy Background: The delivery of a Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) is affected by both random and sistematic errors arising from the multileaf collimator (MLC) system motion, the gantry rotation and dose delivery unit operation. In this study accuracy and reproducibility of VMAT 25 treatments delivery are extensively investigated through the analysis of both clinical cases and accademic tests. Materials and methods: A large collection of Log files generated by a Varian Unique Linac equipped with a 120-leaf (MLC) allowed to obtain an accurate representation of the machine delivery and to perform a detailed characterization of errors affecting it. Approximately 60 different clinical plans, relative to different oncological disease, were chosen to represent the working domain of the Linac. The relation between Linac delivery conditions and delivery errors was explored using different complexity metrics and defining a delivery error score. Results: The Linac was found to be generally accurate with errors bounded to 3-4% within the clinical domain of operation. The dose delivery unit was found to err randomly, whereas the gantry rotation errors and the leaves movement errors increase respectively with gantry acceleration and leaves speed. The overall delivery error was estimated combining into a unique percentage score, VMAT Delivery Error Score (VDES), the errors coming from all the possible sources of error. The VDES is related to the complexity degree of the planned VMAT treatments and changes with the region to be treated. A list of academic test was performed to strongly stress the machine so to allow the investigation of the link between plan complexity and delivery error. Only when the machine closely approaches its mechanical limits errors may become so large to affect the accuracy of the treatment. Discussion: A large set of VMAT treatment plan deliveries are investigated and compared to verify the accuracy of a Unique Linac. Within the clinical operational domain, Unique operations are shown to be highly reproducible and generally accurate. Attention must be posed when the machine approaches its mechanical limits, in those cases the delivery errors may become significant. FETAL DOSE MEASUREMENT ON A PREGNANT PATIENT UNDERGOING SINGLE FRACTION CYBERKNIFE RADIOSURGERY Christos Antypas a, Evaggelos Pantelis a, Liana Sideri a, Katerina Leonidas Lekas a, Pantaleo Romanelli b, Argyris Salvara a, Tzouras a, Nikolaos Salvaras a. a Medical Physics Department, CyberKnife and Tomotherapy Clinic, Iatropolis, Chalandri, Athens, Greece; b CyberKnife Center, CDI, Milano, Italy Background: Pregnancy during stereotactic radiosurgery treatments is extremely rare in clinical practice. We present fetal dose measurements on a pregnant patient during single fraction CyberKnife radiosurgery for a grade III anaplastic glioma. Materials and methods: A 26 year’s old woman in the 5th month of pregnancy diagnosed with a grade III anaplastic glioma was presented in our clinic for treatment operation. Taking into account the clinical situation of the case (stage of pregnancy, tumor progression and time required for conventional radiotherapy) it was decided the patient to be treated with single fraction CyberKnife radiosurgery. The position of the embryo was determined with ultrasound prior treatment. CT and MR images of the patient were acquired and a treatment plan was created in the Multiplan treatment planning system. Two fixed collimators were used (10mm, 15mm) to irradiate the tumor with 226 beams (151/10mm, 75/15mm) and 18086MUs (12085MU/10mm, 6001MU/15mm). A dose of 14Gy was prescribed at the 80% isodose line covering the 95% of the tumor (14859mm3). Before delivery, the treatment was simulated in an anthropomorphic phantom. Radiation dose to the embryo was estimated using EBT3 radiochromic films and a Farmer ionization chamber. Dose measurements were made at a distance of 60cm from the tumor center and 3 different depths below the phantom surface. Results: EBT3 film measurements revealed fetal dose to be 4.4cGy at 4.5cm depth, 2.8cGy at 10cm depth and 4.0cGy at 14cm depth. Point dose measurement with Farmer chamber at 4.5cm depth agreed very well with the EBT3 measurement, measuring 4.4cGy at 4.5cm depth. Discussion: It was concluded that the dose to be delivered to the unshielded embryo during the single fraction radiosurgery treatment with CyberKnife was less than 5cGy. According to our results, there was no risk for any deterministic effect to the embryo while the radiogenic cancer risk to the live-born embryo was less than 5% compared to the normal incidence. The treatment was finally delivered successfully and few moths later the patient gave birth to a healthy child. 26 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) EVALUATION OF A PHANTOM RELATED GAMMA INDEX THRESHOLD FOR VMAT QA , M. A. Negri, A. Scaggion, M.A. Rossato, D. Canonico, R. Zandona Paiusco. Veneto Institute of Oncology IOV-IRCCS, Medical Physics Department, Via Gattamelata 64, 35128 Padova, Italy Background: VMAT pre-treatment QA are usually performed comparing measured and calculated dose distribution in phantom by means of gamma index (GI) metric. This procedure is based on the assumption that the differences between measured and calculated dose distribution in any phantom reflect those in patient. The aim of this study was to assess the relation between gamma index passing rate (GP%) evaluated for different phantoms geometry and patients. A phantom related GP% acceptance level is established based on a new strategy that takes into account the acceptance level defined for patients Materials and methods: 30 H&N cancer patient were selected. The data contained in the MLC and the gantry log files provided by the Varian Linac were used to create RTPLAN DICOM files simulating the delivered plan. Mathematical phantoms were created reproducing geometries of the widely available QA systems such as planar systems, cylindrical surface systems and a3D cylindrical measurement systems. Both planned and delivered plans dose distribution were calculated in patients and in phantoms. Mean GI and GP% correlations between phantoms as well as between phantoms and patients were investigated. ROC analysis was applied to define the GP% thresholds for different phantoms based on the patients acceptance level. Results: The study shows that the results of the gamma analysis strongly depends on the geometry of the dosimeter used for the pre-treatment verification. In case of planar geometries the inaccuracies detected with the phantom do not absolutely reflect those occurring in patients. Moreover the GI map changes with the measurements depth. Conversely, in volumetric and cylindrical 2D geometry, the above mentioned correlations are fully confirmed. Finally the ROC analysis showed that the GP% on different phantom have a different meaning in term of dose differences on patient. Discussion: The analysis strengthens that planar dosimetric system is not adequately representative of dose differences in patient. Our finding clearly shows that the choice of the phantom deeply influences the GI values. A general criterion for the acceptance of a treatment plan, as usually done, can not be used. Our study supplies a method to get the optimal geometry related GI threshold. FIRST RESULTS OF PERFORMING 3D EPID-BASED IN-VIVO DOSIMETRY FOR PROSTATE TREATED BY RAPIDARC E. Villaggi, A.U.S.L. Piacenza Purpose. To investigate the feasibility of using electronic portal imaging device (EPID) transit dosimetry and to analyze 3D in-vivo dose-volume histograms (DVHs) in prostate cases treated by volumetric modulated arc techniques (VMAT). Methods and materials: Eleven patients were prospectively enorolled on a in-vivo quality assurance protocol in which dosimetric EPID images were acquired during first VMAT treatment fraction. Portal Dose Images were acquired on a Varian aSi1000 EPID attached to a Varian ClinacCD linear. Treatments were delivered using the linear accelerator’s 6 MV x-ray beam and a Varian 120 Dynamic MultiLeaf Collimator. The Varian Eclipse treatment planning system was used to planning RapidArc prostate treatments in a single arc delivery. Transit dosimetry calculations were performed using Dosimetry Check software (Math Resolutions LLC). Pretreatment patient-specific quality assurance was previously performed using local 3% 3 mm gamma criterion to detect technical sources of systematic error. 2D and 3D dose distributions, point doses, gamma distributions (with 5% 3mm criterion) and DVH statistics were compared. Results: Absolute differences of Reference Point doses between in vivo dosimetry and Eclipse calculation averaged 2,6%. Volume and area in sagittal, axial and coronal plane through the isocenter with gamma < 1 are reported in table 1, where statistics is relative to ten patients. Planned DVH parameters were compared with in-vivo results: median dose (D50), near- maximum dose (D2) and near-minimum dose (D98) in PTV, as recommended in ICRU Report 83. OAR significant values were also compared. One case was excluded from statistics because very poor match was observed between prediction and measurement during the transit dosimetry session. Further investigation attributed this to internal anatomic changes and a replanning was constructed. Conclusion: EPID-based in vivo dosimetry could play an important role in the total chain of verification procedures in a radiotherapy department, through clinical parameters given by 3DVH in terms of PTV coverage and OAR overdoses[1]. More research is needed to assess optimal values for alert criteria for 3D verification of VMAT treatments of various treatment sites[2]. References: [1] Sean L. Berry et al, Initial Clinical Experience Performing Patient Treatment Verification With an Electronic Portal Imaging Device Transit Dosimeter, Int J Radiation Oncol Biol Phys, Vol. 88, No 1, pp. 204-209, 2014 [2] Ben Mijnheer et al, In vivo dosimetry in external beam radiotherapy, Medical Physics 40 (7), 2013 Table 1 Summary of EPID transit dosimetry results. Gamma-distribution Isocenter Point Dose (Difference) PTV Doses(Measured minus Calculated) Rectum Doses(Measured minus Calculated) Bladder(Measured minus Calculated) VolumeGamma < 1 Threshold 10% VolumeGamma < 1No threshold 1-percentile AreaGamma < 1 transversal plane AreaGamma < 1coronal plane AreaGamma < 1sagittal plane Mean Dose DnearMIN (D2) DnearMAX(D98) Median Dose (D50) Mean Dose V75Gy V70Gy V60Gy MeanDose Average (range)% Standard Dviation 82.9(75.7 - 89.2) 3.6% 96.4(94.4 - 98.1) 1.2% 1.6(1.3 - 2.3) 89.1(74.2 - 98.7) 0.3 6.8% 96.6(89.0 - 100) 3.8% 96.6(92.8 - 99.9) 2.2% 2.6(-1.5 - +5.8) 2.4% 2.3(-1.1 - +4.8) 3.9(0.4 - +5 .6) -2.2(-9.2 - +3.8) 2.8(-0.9 - +4.8) 2.3(-2.6 - +7.3) 2.3(-0.3 - +10.1) 1.3(0.0 - +6.8) 2.3(-0.2 - +6.3) -6.3(-8.4 - -3.2) 1.7% 1.7% 3.4% 1.7% 3.1% 3.0% 2.0% 1.8% 2.0% MLC POSITIONAL ACCURACY EVALUATION THROUGH THE PICKET FENCE TEST ON EBT2 FILMS AND A 3D DOSIMETRIC PHANTOM Maritina Rouchota, Ioannis Floros, Christina Armpilia, Maria Lyra, Christos Antypas. 1st Department of Radiology, Medical Physics Unit, Aretaieion Hospital, University of Athens, Greece Background: The accuracy of MLC positions during radiotherapy is substantial as even small positional deviations can translate in considerable dose delivery errors. This becomes crucial when radiosensitive organs are located near the treated volume and especially during IMRT, where dose gradients can become steep. A test commonly conducted to measure the positional accuracy of the MLCs is the picket fence test. Materials and Methods: Two alterations of the picket test fence test were performed for the MLC positional inspection. The first alteration was performed on a radiochromic film, consisting of a series of step-and-shoot measurements, creating narrow bands at specified intervals. The width of the narrow bands in the resulting image is checked for discrepancies. The second alteration was performed on the Delta4 diode array phantom, according to a DICOM RT plan created in the Delta4 software. Leaves make a series of major stops, at each stop three measurements are considered around the diodes. The gap width and the MLC dispositions are calculated through the software and compared to the actual values. Gravity effects that cause sag and backlash in the MLC carriage and support assemblies Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) were also investigated with the Delta4PT phantom by performing the test in oblique gantry angles. Results: Results obtained through the two methods showed very good agreement as far as significant dispositions are concerned. For slight inaccuracies Delta4PT provided accurate numerical results. As far as gravity effects are concerned a very slight diversification was observed for an oblique gantry setup. Discussion: EBT2 films provide a relatively fast, qualitative visual inspection of the significant leaf dispositions. When slight inaccuracies need to be revealed or precise numerical results for each leaf position are needed, Delta4PT provides the desired accuracy. In treatment modalities where a higher accuracy is required in the delivered dose distribution, such as in IMRT, a 3D dosimetric phantom is recommended for the MLC positional inspection. VERIFICATION OF THE SIEMENS VIRTUAL WEDGE BASED ON g INDEX Ioannis Floros, Maritina Rouchota, Christina Armpilia, Maria Fakinou, Zoi Kostakopoulou, Raphaela Avgousti, Maria Lyra, Christos Antypas. 1st Department of Radiology, Medical Physics Unit, Aretaieion Hospital, University of Athens, Greece Background: Virtual Wedges are used in radiotherapy treatment to create wedge-shaped dose distributions by gradually opening the collimator jaw and either varying the dose rate or the collimator jaw speed. The common methods to evaluate their clinical application are based either on point measurements with an ionization chamber or on two dimensional (2D) measurements with films or diode arrays. We present a novel method to assess their application through the g-index calculation of the 3D dose distribution. Materials and Methods: The measurements were carried out on a 6 MV Siemens Oncor linear accelerator. Oncentra Treatment Planning System (TPS) was used for the beam configuration, which was applied on a 3D array phantom (Delta4PT, Scandidos). All measurements were performed in isocentric conditions with the isocenter positioned at the center of the phantom and a gantry angle of zero degrees. The dose distribution for wedge angles of 15, 30, 45 and 60 degrees, as well as for different field sizes, generated through the TPS, was compared to the distribution measured with the phantom through the g-index. The average g-index for the two wedge orientations was considered for each wedge angle. The stability of the g-index with increasing levels of monitor units (MU) was also investigated for all wedge angles. Results: The verification of the wedged dose distribution for all tested wedge angles and field sizes provided results of g-index values greater than 97%. As far as increasing levels of monitor units are concerned, no specific trend was observed for the g-index values. Discussion: The Delta4PT provides an accurate alternative method to evaluate the implementation of the virtual wedges by verifying the dose distribution through g-index. Through the assessment of the g-index for increasing level of MUs the ability of the linac to deliver accurate beam doses was also evaluated. 27 introduced by each implementation step during the whole procedure [1]. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of the anoxic and atmospheric manufacturing conditions on the dosimetric characteristics of normoxic Nvinylpyrrolidone polymer gels. Materials and Methods: Two batches of 200mL N-vinylpyrrolidone polymer gels were produced, containing 5% w/v gelatin, 8% w/v N-vinylpyrrolidone, 4% w/v N,N’-methylenebisacrylamide and 5 mM THPC [2,3]. The first one, VIPARN2V was produced inside an Argon glove box and the second one, VIPET2V inside a laminar flow hood (atmospheric conditions). The dosimeters were irradiated one day after their manufacture with doses ranging from 0.5 up to 60 Gy. All polymer gels were repeatedly scanned utilizing a 1.5T whole body MR Imager one day, one week, two weeks and one month post-irradiation. A 2D multi-slice- multi echo spin echo sequence was utilized for the acquisition of the base MR imaging data. Quantitative MRI techniques revealed the calculated T2 and the dose maps were produced. Results: Both batches of gels exhibited a linear R2-dose response in the range of 1 up to 30 Gy. A linear fit (R2 (D) ¼aD+R20) was applied to R2-dose data for the estimation of the dose sensitivity (a) and of the offset value (R20) for the time period of one month post-irradiation (Figure 1, 2). It was revealed that the dose sensitivity of VIPARN2V remained greater for this period. Also, the offset (R20) values of VIPET2V were constantly increased rapidly as compared to VIPARN2V offset values. Conclusion: The impact of the manufacturing conditions on the dosimetric characteristics of VIPARN2V and VIPET2V gels was revealed through their differences on the dose sensitivity and the offset values for the time period of one month post-irradiation. It has been proven that the minimization of oxygen contamination during manufacturing, improved the dosimetric characteristics of the same composition polymer gels. Figure 1. Ă A PRELIMINARY STUDY: THE IMPACT OF MANUFACTURING CONDITIONS ON THE DOSIMETRIC CHARACTERISTICS OF N-VINYLPYRROLIDONE BASED POLYMER GELS M.-V. Papoutsaki a, b, E. Pappas c, A.E. Papadakis d, C. Varveris e, J. Damilakis b, T.G. Maris b. a CRUK and EPSRC Cancer Imaging Centre, Division of Radiotherapy and Imaging, Institute of Cancer Research, 15 Cotswold Road, Sutton, Surrey, SM2 5NG, UK; b Department of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Medical School, Stavrakia 71110, Crete, Greece; c Department of Medical Radiological Technologists, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Egaleo, 12210, Athens, Greece; d Department of Medical Physics, University Hospital of Heraklion, Stavrakia, 71110, Crete, Greece; e Department of Radiation Therapy, University of Crete, Medical School, Stavrakia, 71110, Crete, Greece Background: The unique characteristics of the polymer gel dosimeters are essentially their 3D recording ability of the irradiation dose and their tissue equivalence. However, their use in clinical practice is limited. This is related to their complexity in manufacture as well as the errors, which are Figure 2. Ă 28 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) CHARACTERIZATION OF SECONDARY RADIATION IN ION BEAM THERAPY USING SYNCHRONIZED TIMEPIX DETECTORS WITH A MIXED PIXEL OPERATION MASK mez c, B. Hartmann b, M. Martisikova b, S. I. Caicedo a, C. Granja a, B. Go Pospisil a. a Institute of Experimental and Applied Physics, Czech Technical University in Prague, Horska 3a/22, CZ 12800 Prague 2, Czech Republic; b DKFZ, German Cancer Research Center. Im NeuenheimerFeld 280, 69121 Heidelberg, Germany; c Departamento de Física, Universidad de Los Andes, , D.C., Colombia Carrera 1 # 18A-12, Bogota Ion beam therapy is a highly precise and selective radiotherapy technique where energetic beams of heavy charged particles (e.g. protons andcarbon ions, with energies of hundreds of MeV per nucleon) are used to treat malignant tumors in oncology patients. The interaction of radiotherapeutic ion beams with matter produces energeticsecondary particles which affect theircharacteristic highly localized energy deposition [1] [2]. A complete characterization of these processes, including visualization of theirspatial distribution is highly desired to validate and improve the quality of the treatment. This work is part of an effort to characterize and visualize primary and secondary radiation in Hadron Therapy procedures with high energy and spatial (micrometric) resolution, a wide dynamic range, precise tracking and enhanced particle resolving power made possible by the hybrid silicon pixelated detector Timepix [3]. Ahodoscope of four synchronizedebut independent- Timepixdeviceswith different orientations (Figure 1) was built. Such device allowed to measure the energy deposition of secondary particles and to determine their origin along the beam path usingtracks generated by them in each sensor (analog to those seen when using a nuclear emulsion, as shown in Figure 2). All experiments were carried out at the Heidelberg Ion Therapy Center, in Germany [4]. These measurements were done simultaneouslyusing a mixed operation mask: one out of every nine pixels was measuring each particle’s time of arrival,while the other eight were measuring its energy deposition. The performance of the mixed operation mask for particle tracking was compared to results from detectors measuring only the time of arrival to evaluate its limitations. Secondary fragments were tracked in each sensor and characterized using pattern recognition algorithms (Figure 3). Afterwards, these tracks were correlated with coincident events in other detectors as a proof-of-principle for synchronized and multi-layered energy deposition measurements (Figure 4). The results from this study provide insight on the capabilities of synchronized Timepix detectors for futurearrays of multiple secondary radiation monitors in ion beam therapy. [1] D. Schulz-Ertner, et al, Semin Radiation Oncology, no.16, pp. 249e259, 2006. [2] K. Gunzert-Marx, H. Iwase, D. Schardt, and R. Simon, New Journal of Physics, no. 10, p. 075003, 2008. [3] X. Llopart, et al., Nuclear Instruments and Methods A, Vol. 581, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2007.08.079. [4] T. Haberer, J. Debus, H. Eickhoff, O. Jakel, D. Schulz-Ertner, and U. Weber, “The HeidelbergIon Therapy Center,” Radiotherapy and Oncology, Suppl. 2, no. 73, pp. S186eS190,2004. Figure 2. Example of tracks generated by secondary particles in each detection layer of the hodoscope. First and second detectors were perpendicular to the incident radiation, third and fourth were tilted 60 and 80 degrees, respectively. Figure 3. Characterization of particles arriving to a single detector based on the geometric properties of their tracks and deposited energy. (Right) Size and energy distribution of correlated events in two of the hodoscope detection layers. Figure 1. (A): A Timepix detector. (B): Layout of a Timepix-based hodoscope of four synchronized layers with different tilts (0, 60 and 80 degrees), reference numbers identify the sensor. (C): Setup of the hodoscope to identify secondary particles emerging from the interaction of a carbon beam with two small PMMA cubes. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Figure 4. Cluster size (Number of pixels from each particle hit) vs. energy distribution of correlated events in two of the hodoscope detection layers. ELECTRON BEAM DOSE DISTRIBUTION ANALYSIS FOR IRREGULAR FIELDS IN TREATMENT OF SUPERFICIAL TUMORS: A MONTE CARLO STUDY M.B. Tavakoli, P. Shokrani, K. Bamneshin. Department of Medical Physics and Medical Engineering, School of Medicine, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran Introduction: In superficial treatments with electron beam, irregular fields are usually produced by using lead shields which are placed either at the end of the applicator or on the surface of the patient body. For these fields the amount of scatter and therefore the dosimetric parameters such as PDD, profiles and output factor may change with respect to the regular fields. The objective of this research was to investigate the effect of shielding on electron field using Monte-Carlo method. Materials and methods: DOSXYZnrc code were used for simulating Nepton 10PC linac head and BEAMnrc code for simulating irregular fields obtained from 1515cm2, 2020cm2, 2525cm2 to calculate dosimetric parameters of percentage depth dose (PDD), dose profiles and output factors for different field configurations. A total number of 60 irregular fields were investigated. The calculated results were compared with equivalent field methods. To evaluate the accuracy of calculation, the calculated results of PDD were compared with the measured results obtained with a Scanditronix p-type silicon diode in a phantom. Results and conclusion: The study, showed that maximum changes for 90% depth dose of 6MeV electron is 2.2mm. Maximum change in output factor for the mentioned energy when maximum shielding was applied is 6.3%. The results also showed that using equivalent square field method is not an appropriated method for dose calculation when irregular field is used especially when PDD is considered. The percentage of error increases with increasing percentage of the shielding. Keywords: Dosimetry, irregular fields, Linear accelerator, percentage depth dose, FEASIBILITY AND DOSIMETRIC CHARACTERIZATION CONVERGENT BEAM TELETHERAPY DEVICE OF SINGLE Rodolfo G. Figueroa a, Mauro Valente b. a Physics Department, Universidad de La Frontera, Temuco Chile; b CONYCET, Fa.M.A.F. Universidad Nacional de rdoba, Co rdoba, Argentina Co Background: Currently X-photons teletherapy utilizes divergent beams, which implies a non-negligible irradiation of healthy tissues. A convergent beam would allow a greater radiation focalization. This work aimed to determine feasibility and characteristics of a new type of radiation therapy based on the application of a convergent beam of photons, using a device capable of generating a convergent X-ray beam of energies. We named this technique RTHC. 29 Materials and Methods: An analytical method was developed to determine dosimetric characteristics of an ideal convergent X photon beam in a hypothetical water phantom. Then, using Monte Carlo (MC) code, PENELOPE, an ideal convergent beam was applied to a water phantom using a specially adapted geometry; results were compared with those of the analytical method. MC simulations were performed in a vacuum, using a more realistic geometry. These simulations were performed for a largesize thin spherical anodic target (30 cm radius). Thus, the electrons perpendicularly impact upon various points of the cap (RTHC condition, convergent beam radiotherapy), mainly at the focal point in the water phantom center. The X radiation (bremsstrahlung) is generated toward the focus. A spherical collimator coaxial to the cap, with many holes, allows a clean convergent X-ray beam output. On the other hand, magnitudes of the electric / magnetic fields necessary for a clinical use electron beam (0.1 to 20 MeV) are determined using electromagnetism equations with relativistic corrections. Results: In-depth dose peaks similar in shape to hadron therapy were shown. This remarks that in-depth dose peaks are generated at the focus point/isocenter. The electric and magnetic fields needed to control the deflection of the electron beams in the RTHC geometry were calculated. Discussion: Results are consistent with those obtained with PENELOPE code. Peak-focus is independent of the X photon beam energy, though its intensity is not. Aperture angle at each impact point depends on the energy beam, the atomic Z number and the target thickness. Electric and magnetic fields necessary to control the X-ray beam are highly feasible by means of a specially designed electric/magnetic device. Electric fields are much more difficult to achieve than magnetic ones, especially at high energies. In conclusion, is possible to generate a device with the abovementioned characteristics (Pat.Pending-CoverayTM) POLIMER GAFCHROMIC EBT3 FILM FOR ELECTRON DOSIMETRY OF BETATRON BEAM Evgeniia Sukhikh a, b, Leonid Sukhikh b, Evgeniy Malikov b. a Research Institute for Oncology, Kooperativnyy st., 5, Tomsk, 634050, Russia; b National Research Tomsk Polytechnic University, Lenin ave., 30, Tomsk, 634050, Russia Keywords: radiation therapy, Gafchromic EBT3 polymer films, cylindrical and plane-parallel ionization chamber, a linear accelerator, betatron, X-ray tube Background: Intraoperative radiotherapy is a treatment modality for a locally advanced tumor of the abdomen, pelvis and breast, which involves the use of large single dose of radiation delivered to the tumor or bed of tumor and areas of potential regional spread during the surgical operation. The modality is based on electron beams of MeV energies due to particular dose distribution in the tissue-equivalent environment [1,2]. Nowadays, most of the clinics worldwide carry on the IORT procedure using the electron sources based on the compact linear accelerators. However, in Russia historically several clinics have been using the sources based on betatrons. The main advantages of the betatrons are the possibility to change the beam energy in a wide range with small steps (e.g. 2-6 MeV with spacing 0.5 MeV), low energy spread of the beam and the relatively low cost of a device (typically $ 200 000). These days our team develops new generation of betatrons with extracted electron beam for IORT and skin cancer treatment. Materials and Methods: The investigation of 3D dose distributions generated by new prototype of IORT source based on betatron was carried out in the energy range 2-6 MeV with 500 keV steps. The dose distributions were measured using plane-parallel and cylindrical ionization chambers and Unidose-E electrometer [3-5] and radiochromic films Gafchromic EBT-3 [6-9]. The films were calibrated using 10 MeV electron beam of Electa Axcess accelerator and 2 MeV beam of our betatron. . All measurements were performed in tissue-equivalent phantom with zero air gap. Results: The results of radiochromic film calibration are shown in Fig.1. The calibration was carried out for both red and green channels of the film. Basing on obtained calibration the measurements of absolute dose distributions were carried out. Fig. 2 shows the 2D distribution of the absolute 30 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) absorbed dose in the phantom obtained for 2 MeV electron energy of betatron. Discussion: The results obtained show that the betatron with extracted electron beam could be considered as a suitable source for development of IORT complex. However more efforts should be invested in the development of appropriate system of the radiation field formation. Figure. 1. Calibration dependencies for the electron beam. White diamonds stays for the red channel and 10 MeV beam, black diamonds e red channel, 2 MeV beam, white hexes e green channel, 10 MeV beam, gray hexes e green channel, 2 MeV Figure. 2. The depth distribution of absorbed dose on the betatron beam 2 MeVĂ 1. L. I. Musabaeva, E. L. Choyzonov, “Intraoperative electron and gamma distance - therapy of malignant tumors”, NTL, Tomsk (in Russian) 2006. 2. C. Ronsivalle, L. Picardi, A. Vignati, A. Tata and M. Benassi, “Accelerators development for intraoperative radiation therapy”, Proceedings of the 2001 Particle Accelerator Conference. Chicago, 2001. - Р. 24-94 3. B. J. Gerbi, J. A. Antolak, F. Ch. Deibel, and et al., “Recommendations for clinical electron beam dosimetry: Supplement to the recommendations of Task Group 25”. Med. Phys. vol. 36, No. 7, pp. 3239-3279, 2009. 4. Khan F.M., Doppke K.P., Hogstrom K.R. and et al., “Clinical electron-beam dosimetry: Report of AAPM Radiation Therapy Committee Task Group No. 25”, Med. Phys, vol. 18, No. l, pp. 73109, 1991 5. Peter R. A., Peter J. B., Coursey B. M., W. F. Hanson M., “AAPM’s TG-51 protocol for clinical reference dosimetry of high e energy photon and electron beams”, Medical Physics, vol. 26, No. 9 - pp. 1847-1870, 1999. 6. Azam N., Charles R. B., Bert M. and et al., “Radiochromic film dosimetry: Recommendations of AAPM Radiation Therapy Committee Task Group 55”, Medical Physics. vol. 25, No. 11, pp. 2093-2115, 1998 7. Slobodan D., Nada T., Zhiyu P., Jan S., and et al., “Absorption spectroscopy of EBT model gafchromic™ film”, Medical Physics, vol. 34, No. 1, pp. 112 - 118, 2007 8. Gafchromic EBT3 radiochromicdosimetry film - electronic resource http://www.gotopeo.com/en/extra/529-peopresenteert-de-nieuwe-generatie-isp-gafchromic-ebt3 9. E.S. Sukhikh, P.V. Filatov, E.L. Malikov, “Calibration of polymer film Gafchromic EBT3 using electron and photon beams”, MedicinskayaFizika, vol. 2, No. 58, pp. 50-60, 2013, in Russian. Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Physica Medica journal homepage: http://www.physicamedica.com e-Posters IN VIVO DOSIMETRY AS A PART OF QUALITY ASSURANCE PROGRAM FOR BREAST CANCER IRRADIATION Laza Rutonjski, Borislava Petrovi c, Milutin Baucal, Milan Teodorovi c, Ozren Cudi c, Borko Basaric. Institute of oncology of Vojvodina, Sremska Kamenica, Serbia Purpose: The study was aimed to check treatment accuracy and definition of action levels during implementation of in vivo dosimetry as a part of quality assurance program. Treatment accuracy was quantified as the ratio of the measured dose at accelerator and the expected dose from the treatment planning system (TPS). The study sampled 3D conformal breast patients with two isocentric tangential half-field technique with at least two fields. Action levels in breast irradiation with and without bolus were also defined and checked. Materials and methods: Irradiation of breast patients in 3D conformal therapy involved 6 MV energy, and at least two tangential fields. Fractionation scheme of five sessions per week of 2 or 2.67 Gy per fraction up to a total dose of 50 or 40Gy, respectively. All correction factors as per ESTRO booklet 5 recommendation were determined. The entrance dose was measured at offaxis distance of 3 to 5cm from isocenter at medial tangential field during first treatment. During initial implementation, action level was set to be 5% for all breasts treatment, with or without bolus. Results: In this study, 167 patients with tangential half-fields were irradiated over a 10-month period. The total number of patient set-up procedures analyzed was 183, with second measurement included, giving a distribution of treatment accuracy with mean deviation from expected entrance dose of 1.43% and a standard deviation of 2.83%(1SD), for all patients. Standard deviation from expected entrance dose for patients without bolus was 1.18% and a standard deviation of 2.81%(1SD), and for patients with bolus, 1.33% and 3.04%(1SD), respectively. 8.3% of all measurements exceeded the 5% tolerance with 3% exceeding a 7% level. The causes of these errors were identified and appropriate action taken where necessary. Conclusions: In our experience, systematic in vivo dosimetry proved to be a vary useful tool for quality assurance of a patient plan and treatment, both in detecting systematic errors and for estimating the accuracy of treatment delivery. Action levels in breast irradiation with tangential field technique was accordingly lowered to 3.5% (30% lower than initial 5%) for all treatment, with or without bolus. Larger standard deviation was noticed for bolused patients due to more difficult diode positioning and measurement. References €o € f, H. Nystro € m, C. 1. D.P. Huyskens, R. Bogaerts, J. Verstraete, M. Lo Fiorino, S. Broggi, N. Jornet, M. Ribas, D.I. Thwaites. Practical guidelines for the implementation of in vivo dosimetry with diodes in external radiotherapy with photon beams (entrance dose). ESTRO BOOKLET No. 5 2. J. Van Dam and G. Marinello METHODS FOR IN VIVO DOSIMETRY IN EXTERNAL RADIOTHERAPY. ESTRO BOOKLET No. 1 3. Luca Cozzi, Antonella Fogliata-Cozzi. Quality assurance in radiation oncology. A study of feasibility and impact on action levels of an in vivo dosimetry program during breast cancer irradiation. Radiotherapy and Oncology 47 (1998) 29e36 4. S. Heukelom, J. H. Lanson, G. van Tienhoven and B. J. Mijnheer. In vivo dosimetry during tangential breast treatment. Radiotherapy and Oncology, 22 (1991) 269-279 5. J C Millwater, A C Macleod, D I Thwaites. In vivo semiconductor dosimetry as a part of routine quality assurance. The British Journal of Radiology, 71 (1998), 61-668 6. R.Appleyard, K. Ball, F.E. Hughes,W. Kilby, S. Lassen, R. Nicholls,V. Rabett, J. Sage, M. Smith, E.Thomson. Systematic in vivo dosimetry for quality assurance using diodes. Part 1: Experiences and results of the implementation of entrance dose measurements. Journal of Radiotherapy in Practice 2003, 3, 185e196 7. R.Appleyard, K. Ball, F.E. Hughes,W. Kilby, S. Lassen, R. Nicholls,V. Rabett, J. Sage, M. Smith, E.Thomson. Systematic in vivo dosimetry for quality assurance using diodes 2:Assessing radiotherapy techniques and developing an appropriate action protocol. Journal of Radiotherapy in Practice 2005, 4, 143-154 DOSE CONSTRAINTS OPTIMIZATION AND ESTIMATION IN DIAGNOSTIC MEDICAL DEPARTMENTS USING IONIZING RADIATION Hanna Piwowarska-Bilska a, Monika Nowak b, Maria H. Listewnik a, Piotr Zorga a, Jacek Iwanowski a, Anna Walecka b, Bozena Birkenfeld a. a Department of Nuclear Medicine, Pomeranian Medical University, Szczecin, Poland; b Department of Diagnostic Imaging and Interventional Radiology, Pomeranian Medical University, Szczecin, Poland Introduction: The concept of dose constraints is one that has been discussed extensively during the development of ICRP Publication 103, and continues to elicit concern. The practical use and implementation of dose constraints in radiological protection in the medical profession is difficult because of a lack of recommendations of specific levels of constraints for different occupational groups. This study aims to estimate local dose constraints for workers in conventional nuclear medicine and radiology departments. Materials and methods: The dose constraints for staff in conventional nuclear medicine and radiology departments were estimated on the basis of doses received in the last 3 to 4 years by different groups of workers. Overall, 127 annual doses of the employees of the Department of Nuclear Medicine and Department of Diagnostic Imaging and Interventional Radiology, registered in periods 2008-2011 and 2009-2011, respectively, were analyzed statistically. Doses records were grouped according to the occupational category (nuclear medicine and radiology) and the occupational group (medical doctors, technicians, nurses). For estimation of dose constraints values per occupational group, the dose level below which the 75% of annual doses were respectively included (upper third quartile), as well as the average doses and dominant values achieved by each group during the periods under consideration, was calculated. Results: For the determination of dose constraints, annual doses below the method detection limit have been excluded from the analysis: 14 (~19%) for nuclear medicine and 23 (~26%) for radiology. During the analyzed periods, there was no incidence of a dose exceeding the annual dose limit of 20 mSv in both departments. The highest exposure was observed for nuclear medicine nurses and technicians. For both these groups the dose constraint was estimated at 2.5 mSv/year. The dose constraint was set at 1 2 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) mSv/year for nuclear medicine physicians as well as all workers of the radiology department. Conclusions: 1. Local dose constraints can be estimated on the basis of workers’ dose records for the last 3-4 years using simple statistical analysis. 2. The level of dose constraints should be adjusted to the local conditions of radiation protection of workplaces and tasks performed by various professional groups. THERMOLUMINESCENCE AND ELECTRONIC DOSIMETRY FOR 511 KEV PHOTONS effect on the output factor. A nominal field of 1x1 cm2 has an output factor 5.7% lower than the 1.1x1.1cm2 and 10.5% than the 1.2X1.2cm2 radiological field. We conclude that special care must be taken for small fields. An adequate algorithm modelling the beam source should be used. The source parameters should be fine-tuned for accurate dose calculations. Furthermore, careful quality control of the Linac’s mechanical components should be carried out. Keywords: Small fields, Dosimetry, External radiotherapy K. Dalianis, K. Gogos, R. Efthimiadou, I. Andreou, V. Prassopoulos. Hygeia S.A. PET/CT Department, Athens, Greece INVESTIGATING COLUMNAR SCINTILLATORS THROUGH ANALYTICAL MODELING. A SEMIEMPIRICAL APPROACH Aim: The most commonly used radio nuclide in PET/CT departments is 18F-FDG. The 18 F-FDG PET/CT applications have been continuously increasing for diagnostic procedures. Although such an increase is a positive trend for the benefit of patients, the associated risk of radiation exposure of staff needs to be properly evaluated. Our aim is to compare the estimated doses from TLDs dosimeters with the electronic dosimeters regarding 511 kev annihilation photons following the ALARA principle. Method: In order to estimate the doses from external exposure, all 7 members of the staff (2 nurses, 2 medical physicists, 2 technologists, 1 secretary) had TLD badges worn at the upper pocket of their overall and digital dosimeters at their upper side pocket. Results: The dose estimated from the TLDs is evaluated monthly and is compared with the dose assessed by the electronic dosimeter. The results reveal a difference between the electronic dosimeters and the TLDs from 0,2% to 1,3%, with the dose being overestimated when assessed by TLDs. The main reason for the differences is that the dosimeters have been used for different time periods. When both TLD and electronic dosimeters have been correctly measured then the TLD is considered to show the correct value of the absorbed dose and the dose is overestimated only by a small percentage of 0.37% when measured with TLDs. Conclusion: TLDs are considered to be trustworthy in assessing the absorbed dose. However the use of electronic dosimeters cannot be ignored in the daily practice as they measure radiation exposure on a real time basis and provide immediate dose rate readings. N. Kalyvas, C. Michail, G. Fountos, I. Valais, I. Kandarakis, D. Cavouras. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Greece ADJUSTING SOURCE MODELLING PARAMETERS FOR ACCURATE DOSE CALCULATIONS WITH THE ONCENTRA MASTERPLAN TREATMENT PLANNING SYSTEM FOR SMALL FIELDS WITH DIMENSIONS OF LESS THAN 5X5CM2 Malatar Georgia a, S. Papatheodorou a, V. Anastasis b. a University Hospital Patras, Greece; b University of Patras, Greece The dosimetry of small fields in photon radiotherapy is a challenging issue. The goal of this work is to establish a reliable method to measure the absolute dose in small fields and to verify the TPS calculations, such as output factors, PDDs and profiles for small fields less than 5X5cm2. The output factors for collimator settings from 5x5cm2 down to 1X1cm2 were measured in a water tank at the reference depth of 10cm, at SSD¼100cm, with the PinPoint chamber and a calibrated MOSFET dosimeter. Output factors and dose profiles have been measured on an Elekta Synergy Linac with a 6MV photon beam. They have also been calculated using the Oncentra Masterplan version 4.3. We have found out that it is not easy to determine source-size parameters, for the TPS, which yield acceptable results for the entire range of field sizes (from 40x40 cm2 to 2x2cm2). Therefore, we have created a new “virtual” Linac in the TPS beam library dedicated to small field clinical applications. For this Linac the source-size parameters have been fine-tuned such that the calculated profiles match the measured data for small fields only. With this approach the discrepancies between measured and calculated doses have been diminished considerably. The comparisons between measured and calculated PDDs and dose profiles have been evaluated using the methodology of the g-composite criterion. For fields less than 2X2cm2 the output factor drops rapidly with field size. Small errors in the filed size due to jaw misplacements have a dominant X-ray digital imaging systems often employ scintillator materials as part of the radiation detector (indirect detection). Recently CsI:Tl columnar phosphor is used extensively as an X-ray converter due to its higher spatial resolution compared to granular phosphors like Gd2O2S:Tb. The efficiency and the imaging performance of CsI:Tl has been already studied either experimentally or by Monte Carlo simulation. The aim of this work is to provide a semi empirical analytical model for determining CsI:Tl optical photon propagation related parameters like photon attenuation per elementary thickness and spread to the output. Hence the calculation of Detective Quantum Efficiency (DQE) of CsI:Tl for different column thicknesses (50mm up to 300mm) was achieved. The developed model considers the absorption of X-rays in the scintillator, the production of optical photons, the propagation and the reflections of the optical photons to the input and output interfaces. Finally it acknowledges the spread of the optical photons to the output. The optical photon propagation is studied by considering that the fraction of the optical photons passing through an elementary screen layer is constant. The optical spread to the output is assumed to result in a Gaussian shaped LSF. Published Monte Carlo data for 85 mm, 100 mm and 300 mm CsI:Tl columns were used to fit the analytical model equations. The optical photon fraction transmitted through each layer was found approximately 98.6%. The LSF shape was found to be depended by column thickness. Higher DQE at 0 lp/mm exhibited the 300mm column thickness CsI:Tl, while at 10lp/mm the 50mm column thickness CsI:Tl. It was interesting to notice that at approximately 4lp/mm the DQE curves of all thicknesses were comparable. Keywords: Columnar phosphors, MTF, DQE Acknowledgement: This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “ARISTEIA” project MISCIRLU code 1476 of the “Education & Lifelong Learning” Operational Programme. NEW CHALLENGES IN OPTIMIZATION OF RADIATION-DOSE IN INFANTS HIP-EXAMINATIONS X-RAY PROCEDURES € stur Finbogasson MD, PhD, Britt-Marie Shahla Mobini MSc, Thro € OstlundRadiologic Nurse, Theo Chouliaras MSc, Angela Karambatsakidou € m MSc licentiate. Department of Medical Physics, MSc, Jan Lindstro Karolinska University Hospital, S-171 76 Stockholm Sweden; Department of Pediatric Radiology Astrid Lindgrens at Karolinska University Hospital, S171 76 Stockholm, Sweden The risk of radiation effect is age dependent according to International Commission on Radiological Protection ICRP (2007). Since children have a longer life expectancy than adults, it follows a higher probability of late effects. The variation in sensitivity of different organs and tissue also differ from that of adults (BEIR V 1990). Optimization of radiation dose for pediatric patients is therefore of high priority. A dose survey was performed with the aim to establish the Local Dose Reference level (DRL) for various examination types. The result showed that there is room for further optimization in hipexaminations and the corresponding anatomic specific programs. A Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) policy in the Medical Physicist community and recommendations from the European Guidelines on Quality criteria in Diagnostic Radiographic images in Pediatrics (EUR 16261 EN), state that Automatic Exposure Control (AEC) is of limited value for smaller patients. Instead, exposure charts are recommended for pediatric patients. While this statement is still broadly true, there is a need to systematically confirm the limitation levels of modern X-ray equipment due to the continuous technical development. In practical terms, as the AEC resides fixed in the examination table, the combination of removable detector and AEC is as easy to use as a standalone removable image detector. However, mispositioning the patient was more common for the standalone detector thus resulting in retakes. The AEC exams were assessed by one pediatric radiologist and all exams were found to have good diagnostic quality. Based on the study, we have suggested a novel categorization of patients for a better optimization i) newborn ii) 0-1y iii) 1-5y, iv) 5-10y and v) 1015y. Other influencing parameters as gender based differences are also investigated. This work also contains risk estimations of different techniques while discussions on age banding compared to weight categorization also are included. The results of the current study showed that using AEC on children from 6 months to 1 year of age, corresponding Kerma Area Product (KAP) was reduced by about 60% compared to examinations based solely on exposure charts. 3 evaluation concerning the monitoring of the patient radiation protection in diagnostic radiology and interventional radiology was initiated in 2006. All providers of radiology and medical imaging examinations have to record patient data and relevant information for assessment of doses received by patients from medical exposures to ionizing radiation. Ministry of Health through the National Institute of Public Health Regional Centre for Public Health, centralizes the data of medical exposure to ionizing radiation reported by providers of radiology and medical imaging examinations and elaborates an annual report. The forms for reporting the centralized data contain the exam type, procedure code, total number per exam type and its distributions on age groups and gender groups. Dose information is available in terms of DAP-meter values or entrance surface dose for conventional X-ray procedures and DLP indication for CT procedures. For estimation, we assume that, in one year, the total number of reported procedures per number of reporting units is proportional with the total number of estimated procedures per total number of units in the whole country. In our study, the frequency of X-ray examinations for 2010-2012 years (including the conventional radiology, interventional radiology, computed tomography and dental radiology) and mean effective doze per procedure were estimated. Summary of the mean effective dose (mSv) for X-ray procedure types performed at the national level for Top 20 (defined by RP 154) and for all X-ray based radiology is presented in Table 1. COMPARATIVE STUDY OF IMAGE QUALITY AND ENTRANCE SURFACE DOSE IN TWO RADIOGRAPHIC UNITS: FLAT PANEL DETECTOR VERSUS COMPUTED RADIOGRAPHY SYSTEM Ioannis Antonakos, Zoi Thrapsanioti, Sophie Ioannidou, Efstathios Efstathopoulos. University of Athens, 2nd Department of Radiology, University General Hospital ‘Attikon’, Rimini 1, 124 62 Athens, Greece Aim: The aim of this study is to present a method to assess two radiographic units with different capture technology, in terms of Entrance Surface Dose (ESD) and Image Quality. Materials and methods: Measurements were conducted at the University Hospital “ATTIKON”. Philips Optimus with flat panel detector (FPD) Canon and G.E MPH equipped with a CR Agfa system were compared. A solid state € lndal, Sweden) was detector R100B (Barracuda, RTI Electronics AB, Mo placed over PMMA plates of various thicknesses (2-20 cm) in order to measure ESD. Leeds TOR 18FG test object was placed in the middle of the plates to assess image quality. The measurements simulated conditions of standard protocols of chest PA, abdomen AP, cervical and pelvis AP protocols. In both units, Mean Pixel Values (MPV) were measured at certain Regions of Interest (ROI's) to calculate Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR). A Figure of Merit (FOM) was utilized to evaluate image quality and ESD at the same time. Results: SNR was found to be 60-80% higher in the CR than in the FPD system, depending on the protocols tested. Regarding ESD, it appeared to be 65%-85% higher in the CR system. Respectively, in pediatric protocols SNR was 55%-70% higher in the CR system and ESD was almost 80% higher in the CR than in the FPD system. FOM for all the pediatric and adult protocols tested, apart from pelvis and abdomen protocols, seemed to be higher in the CR than in the FPD system. Conclusions: SNR was found to be higher in CR than in FPD system, indicating better image quality but higher ESD. FOM seems to be a useful objective tool for assessment of image quality and entrance dose simultaneously. Taking the FOM into account, the use of the CR unit is recommended for all the examined protocols except for pelvis and abdomen, in which FPD may be preferred. Clinical evaluation of our results is warranted to precisely determine the role of FOM on optimization of the radiographic technique. THE PATIENT DOSE ESTIMATION FROM MEDICAL EXPOSURE FOR 20102012 YEARS Olga Girjoaba, Alexandra Cucu. National Institute of Public Health, Romania In order to reduce the risk associated with diagnostic medical exposure by optimizing the quality of radiological imaging, a nation-wide Table 1 The mean effective dose (mSv) for X-ray procedures performed in 20102012 years Main results Mean effective dose (mSv) in 2010 Mean effective dose (mSv) in 2011 Mean effective dose (mSv) in 2012 Plain radiography Top 20 Fluoroscopy Top 20 Cardiac angiography CT Examinations Top 20 All Angiography and Interventional radiology SUM all X-ray based radiology ex. Dental Dental SUM all X-ray based radiology 0.33 9.60 4.83 3.20 3.00 0.56 5.23 8.11 8.41 7.42 0.23 1.72 6.91 9.58 9.97 0.49 1.16 0.93 0.28 0.46 0.09 1.04 0.02 0.81 For some X-ray procedure types, we remark significant differences between 20102012 years, concerning the mean effective doze per modality, without important changes in radiological practices in that period. We suspect that the data regarding the dose received by the patients are incomplete and/or incorrectly registered and reported from different causes. Taking into account the new Council Directive 2013/ 59/EURATOM provisions concerning the medical exposure, it is very important to find the best modalities for improvement of patient doses registering and reporting system. EVALUATION OF A SIPM ARRAY COUPLED TO A GD3AL2GA3O12:CE (GAGG:CE) DISCRETE SCINTILLATOR S. David a, M. Georgiou a, b, E. Fysikopoulos a, c, G. Loudos a. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Department of Medical School, University of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece; c School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Athens, Greece Aim: Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPMs) are relatively insensitive to magnetic fields and thus are good candidates for MR combined applications [12]. In this study, we present the results of the SensL ArraySL-4 (4x4 element array of 3x3mm2 SiPMs) photo-detector coupled to a 6x6 GAGG:Ce scintillator array, with 2x2x5mm3 crystal size elements and pitch equal to 2.1mm. Experimental evaluation was carried out with 22Na and 137 Cs radioactive sources in terms of energy resolution and peak to valley ratio. 4 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Methods and Materials: ArraySL-4 is a commercially available, solid-state, 4x4 array detector covering an active area of 13.4mm2. Each pixel has 4774 square microcells connected in parallel, with individual cell side equal to 35um. GAGG:Ce scintillator array used in this study were purchased by Furukawa Co Ltd [3]. The reflector material used in the array is BaSO4 with 0.1mm thickness. GAGG:Ce scintillator is non hygroscopic, has good light yield (46000 ph/MeV) with peak emission at 530nm. Moreover, GAGG:Ce does not contain natural radioactivity, since it does not uses Lu. The density of GAGG:Ce is 6.63 g/cm3, with effective atomic number equal to 54.4 [4-6]. A symmetric resistive voltage division matrix was applied, which reduces the 16 outputs of the array to 4 position signals [6-7]. A Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) Spartan 6 LX150T was used for triggering and signal processing of the signal pulses acquired using a free running sampling technique [8]. Results: A raw image and the horizontal profile of one raw of the 6x6 GAGG:Ce scintillator array produced under 511keV excitation are shown in figure 1. The mean peak to valleys ratio is 40 (std¼8.2). Fig. 1. Raw image of the 6x6 GAGG:Ce scintillator array and a horizontal profile of the central scintillator elements produced under 511keV excitation. Scintillator array is coupled with optical grease (BC-630). Energy spectra obtained with two different radioactive sources from a single 3x3x5mm3 GAGG:Ce scintillator element (red square on raw image) are shown in figure 2. The mean energy resolution for the GAGG:Ce array was calculated equal to 10.5% (std¼0.44) and 9% (std¼0.63) under 511keV and 662keV irradiation using Gaussian fit within a +/-10% energy window centered around the photopeak. could be an interesting application using the aforementioned GAGG/ SIPM array detector. In such a dual SPECT/PET detector module, proper mechanical insert of the collimator, as well as the adjustment of the SiPMs array bias voltage and the gain amplification of the position signals have to be properly controlled to allow transition from PET to SPECT mode. Acknowledgment: This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “Archimedes III: Funding of Research Groups in TEI of Athens” project of the “Education & Lifelong Learning” Operational Program. References: C. Piemonte et al. ”Recent developments on silicon photomultipliers produced at FBK-irst ,” IEEE Nucl. Sci. Symp. Conf. Rec: pp. 2089e2092, 2007. H. S. Yoon et. al. ”Initial results of simultaneous PET/MRI experiments with an MRI-compatible silicon photomultiplier PET scanner,” J.N.M, vol. 53, pp. 608, 2012 Available online at: http://www.furukawakk.co.jp/e_index.htm J. Iwanowska et al. ”Performance of cerium-doped Gd3Al2Ga3O12 (GAGG:Ce) scintillator,” Nucl. Instr. and Meth. Phys. Res. A, vol. 712, pp. 3440, 2013. S. Yamamoto et al. ”Development of an ultrahigh-resolution Si-PM-based dual-head GAGG coincidence imaging system,” Nucl. Instr. and Meth. Phys. Res. A, vol. 703, pp.183-189, 2013. S. David et al. ”Comparison of three Resistor Network Division Circuits for the readout of 4x4 Pixel SiPM Arrays,” Nucl. Instr. Meth. Phys. Res. A, vol. 702, pp. 121e125, 2013. V. Popov et al. ”A novel readout concept for multianode photomultiplier tubes with pad matrix anode layout,” Nucl. Instrum. Meth. A, vol 567, pp. 319, 2006. M. Streun, G. Brandenburg, H. Larue, E. Zimmermann, K. Ziemons and H. Halling, ”Pulse Recording by Free-Running Sampling,” IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. vol.48, pp. 524, 2001. M. Georgiou, S. David, E. Fysikopoulos and G. Loudos ”Development of a SIPM based gamma-ray imager using a Gd3Al2Ga3O12:Ce (GAGG:Ce) scintillator array,” IEEE Nucl. Sci. Symp.& Med. Imag conf. M21-48, Oct 27- Nov 2, Seoul, Korea, 2013. CANCER RADIATION THERAPY: QUO VADIS? Мersini Мakropoulou. Physics Department, School of Applied Mathematical and Physical Sciences, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Fig. 2. Energy spectra of a central scintillator element of the GAGG:Ce array under 22 Na and 137Cs irradiation. Discussion e Conclusion: The acquired raw image of the GAGG:Ce crystal array under 511keV excitation shows a clear visualization of all (6x6) discrete scintillator elements with a mean peak to valley ratio equal to 40. The mean energy resolution was measured equal to 10.5% and 9% respectively under 511keV and 662keV irradiation. Taking into account the results conducted in a previous study of our group [9] under low energy isotopes i.e. 57Co and 99mTc (for SPECT applications) using the same detector module materials, (mean energy resolution equal to 16.1±0.52% at 140keV and 18.1±0.64% at 122.1keV with high peak to valley ratio above to17) a SPECT/PET hybrid detector In oncology, treating cancer with a beam of photons is a well established therapeutic technique, developed over 100 years, and today over 50% of cancer patients will undergo traditional X-ray radiotherapy. However, ionizing radiation therapy is not the only option, as the highenergy photons releasing their energy into cancerous tumor can lead to significant damage to healthy tissues surrounding the tumor. Therefore, in nowadays, advances in ionizing radiation therapy are competitive to non-ionizing ones. For example, photodynamic therapy (PDT) is another type of cancer treatment that uses laser light to destroy tumors. Apart of PDT, laser light can be used to remove cancer or precancerous tumors or to relieve symptoms of cancer, such as bleeding or obstruction. In PDT, a photosensitizer is injected into a patient and distributed all over the patient’s body. After a couple of days, the photosensitizer is accumulated selectively in cancer cells. Laser light is then used to activate the agent and destroy cancer cells, in the presence of cellular oxygen. PDT is a non-invasive or minimally invasive therapeutic procedure (through flexible endoscopes). The use of minimally invasive techniques in the management of patients represents a very interesting treatment option. Moreover, as the major breakthrough in cancer management is the individualized patient treatment, new biophotonic techniques, e.g. photo-activated drug carriers, help the improvement of treatment efficacy and/or normal tissue toxicity. Additionally, recent studies support that lasers could ameliorate cancer proton therapy. It is reported that laser-driven proton acceleration offers a significantly cheaper and relatively convenient approach to generate a beam of protons and experiments in this direction indicate that protons in laser proton therapy (LPT) kill cancer cells as effectively as those from accelerators. Although the biophysical Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) studies for laser-driven ion acceleration are still in their infancy, very promising radiobiological processes are reported, since protons and photons have a parallel destructive effect on the DNA of the targeted tumor cells. In this work we will present the laser-based future objectives for cancer radiation therapy, aiming to address the relevant advances in the ionizing and non-ionizing radiation therapy, i.e. protons and heavy ions therapy, as well as photodynamic targeted and molecular therapies. THE CONTRIBUTION OF DIFFUSION TENSOR IMAGING AND MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY FOR THE DIFFERENTIATION OF BREAST LESIONS AT 3T Ioannis Tsougos a, Patricia Svolos a, Evanthia Kousi e, Evangelos Athanassiou b, Kiriaki Theodorou a, Dimitrios Arvanitis d, Ioannis Fezoulidis c, Katerina Vassiou c,d. a Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Thessaly, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece; b Department of Surgery, Medical School, University of Thessaly, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece; c Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Medical School, University of Thessaly, Biopolis, Larissa, Greece; d Department of Anatomy-HistologyEmbryology, University of Thessaly Medical School, Larissa, Greece; e CR-UK and EPSRC Cancer Imaging Centre, Royal Marsden Hospital, Sutton, Surrey, United Kingdom Background: Conventional breast magnetic resonance imaging (c-MRI) combined with dynamic contrast-enhanced MR mammography (DCEMRM), constitute a powerful diagnostic strategy for screening breast lesions. Nevertheless, the high sensitivity of c-MRI and DCE-MRM comes with low specificity that may lead to ambiguous diagnosis and unnecessary biopsies [1,2]. Molecular MR imaging, such as proton MR spectroscopy (1H-MRS) or diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI)/diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), has shown promise as a complementary tool to improve MR specificity and explore the underlying biological characteristic of tumors, going a step further from c-MRI. Purpose: The purpose of the current study was to investigate whether the combination of 1H-MRS and DTI metrics further contribute to the determination of breast lesion’s aggressiveness. Materials and methods: Fifty-one women with known breast abnormalities from conventional imaging were examined on a 3T MR scanner. DTI was performed during breast MRI, and fractional anisotropy (FA) and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) were measured in the breast lesions and the contralateral normal breast. FA and ADC were compared between malignant lesions, benign lesions, and normal tissue. 1H-MRS was performed after gadolinium administration and choline peak was qualitatively evaluated. Results: In the present study 1H-MRS showed a sensitivity of 93.5%, specificity 80%, and accuracy 88.2%. Choline detection dependence on tumor size was observed. FA was significantly higher in breast carcinomas compared to benign lesions (0.24±0.05 and 0.21±0.04, respectively). Mean ADC value was lower for malignant tumors, however no significant difference was observed. The combination of Cho presence and FA achieved higher levels of accuracy (90.3%) and specificity (84%) in discriminating malignant from benign lesions over Cho presence or FA alone. This correlation between Cho and FA may be explained based on two factors: (a) Cho is associated with active cell proliferation and (b) tumor growth, results in higher cell density, which might cause water molecules to diffuse with a higher degree of directionality, in contrast to benign lesions. Conclusion: In conclusion, applying DTI and 1H-MRS together, adds incremental diagnostic value in the characterization of breast lesions and may sufficiently improve the low specificity of conventional breast MRI. References: 1. Orel SG et al. MR imaging of the breast for the detection, diagnosis, and staging of breast cancer. Radiology 2001; 220: 13e30. 2. Yen Y et al. Dynamic breast MRI with spiral trajectories: 3D versus 2D. J Magn Reson Imaging 2000; 11: 351-9. 5 CHARACTERIZATION OF OCCUPATIONAL EMF EXPOSURE TO MRI SYSTEMS E. Karabetsos a, N. Skamnakis a, G. Gourzoulidis b, P. Sandylos c, Chryssa Paraskevopoulou c, T.G. Maris d, A. Xristodoulou e. a Greek Atomic Energy Commission, Non-Ionizing Radiation Office, Greece; b Physical Agents Determination Department, ΚYАЕ (COHS), Ministry of Labor, Greece; c Ygeia Hospital; d Assistant Professor of Medical Physics, Medical Department, University of Crete, Greece; e General Director of Health & Safety at Workplace, Ministry of Labor, Greece European legislation concerning the protection of workers from exposure to EMF was recently completed by directive 2013/35/ЕU (26.6.2013), the transposition of which to the national legislations should have been concluded by July 2016. This directive is a specific one of the framework directive 89/391/EEC and is part of the overall legislation for Health and Safety of Workers (HSW). MRI systems have played a key role, both to the postponement of the former 2004/40 EMF directive and to the formation of the latest ICNIRP guidelines adopted by the new directive. On the other hand, MRI systems are associated with the exposure of personnel to various frequencies and modulations, arousing peculiar safety issues. It is important to stress out that directive 2013/35/EU excludes, under a prescribed scheme, MRI systems from the application of the exposure limits values (ELVs). In the framework of this derogation, increased surveillance is applied, meaning that the basic issues of HSW are of key importance. In order for this increased surveillance to apply to workers and as part of the risk assessment procedure, the knowledge of the exact occupational exposure levels and scenarios is highly important. Normally the MRI operator does not enter the examination room during the MRI scan, but in some cases this is possible. Measurements of the magnetic and electromagnetic fields were performed during the MRI scans, next to the examination bed and at the operation console. Different MRI systems (1,5 and 3T) have been chosen for measurements in order to access occupational exposure compared to the limit values given by the directive and to the main principles of HSW. Low frequency exposures resulting from the function of the gradients of the MRI system (rectangular pulses at the kHz region), as well as high frequency exposures due to the application of the main RF frequency (pulses in sinx/x envelope at the MHz region), were measured. One of the most important aspects of this work, was associated with the post-processing of the measured EMF signals in order to be comparable to the action level (AL) values of the directive. Keywords: electromagnetic fields, MRI occupational exposure, risk assessment, Health and Safety of Workers. IMPROVEMENT OF DOSE DISTRIBUTION WITH IRREGULAR SURFACE COMPENSATOR IN WHOLE BRAIN RADIOTHERAPY Hideki Fujita, Nao Kuwahata, Hiroyuki Hattori, Hiroshi Kinoshita, Haruyuki Fukuda. Department of Radiation Oncology, Osaka Saiseikai Nakatsu Hospital, Osaka, Japan The aim of this study was to evaluate the dosimetries of whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT) using irregular surface compensator (ISC) compare with conventional radiotherapy. The ISC involves modulation of the beam with the multileaf collimator (MLC), and increases the dose homogeneity to the target volume while decrease the absorbed dose in irradiated tissues outside the targeted tissue. Treatment plans were produced for 10 patients. All treatments were carried out with 10 MV photon energy from a Clinac iX with 120 MLC (Varian Medical Systems, Palo Alto, CA, USA). The prescription dose was 30 Gy in 10 fractions at the isocenter. With Eclipse treatment planning system (Varian Medical Systems), the anisotropic analytical algorithm was used for the dose calculation. The tissue heterogeneity correction was used in all the treatment plans. For ISC, the skin flash tool application was used to extend the optimal fluence. These two treatment plans were compared in terms of does in the planning target volume (PTV), the dose homogeneity index (DHI), the maximum doses, eye and lens doses and the monitor unit (MU) counts 6 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) required for treatment. Average values were evaluated using the Wilcoxon signed rank test. Compared with the conventional WBRT, the ISC significantly reduced the DHI, the maximum dose, the volumes received at 105% of the prescription dose, as well as reducing both eye and lens doses (p < 0.01 for all comparisons). By contrast, the monitor unit counts were increased for ISC technique compared to the conventional WBRT (819 vs. 327, p < 0.01). The ISC technique for WBRT enables significantly better dose distribution in the PTV. As patients who receive WBRT have improved survival, the long-term side effects of radiotherapy become of increasing important. It is expected that with this technique, the risk of late radiotherapy-associated complication will be reduced. The ISC technique has been used in select patients with a long life expectancy at our institution. Key words: Whole brain radiotherapy, Irregular surface compensator, Dose homogeneity index CORRELATION BETWEEN EYE LENS AND THYROID STAFF DOSES IN A CARDIOLOGY CENTRE N. Kollaros a, Z. Thrapsanioti b, I. Mastorakou a, T. Syrigou a, T. Bagiatis a, E. Carinou c. a Onassis Cardiac Surgery Center, Syngrou 356 17674 Kallithea Athens, Greece; b 2nd Department of Radiology, Attikon University Hospital, Greece; c Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC), P. Grigoriou & Neapoleos, Ag. Paraskevi, 15310 Athens, Greece An increased interest has been recently reported on eye lens doses received by the medical personnel of interventional radiology/cardiology suites. According to ICRP recommendations and the new EU Directive, for occupational exposure in planned exposure situations, an equivalent dose limit for the lens of the eye of 20 mSv in a year, averaged over defined periods of 5 years, with no single year exceeding 50 mSv is recommended. In the medical field, interventional radiologists and cardiologists are among the most highly exposed personnel, since they stay close to the patient, source of scattered radiation, while performing complicated fluoroscopically guided interventional procedures. The present study aims at examining methodologies for better assessing eye lens doses of the medical staff involved in all kinds of interventional cardiology procedures in a cardiology centre. Hp(3) values were assessed using a specially designed eye lens dosemeter. The results were compared with the respective values received from dosemeters attached on the thyroid collar and near the eye region that were both calibrated in terms of Hp(0.07). Measurements in more than 170 procedures were performed and 7 operators were monitored. The monitored procedures were: coronary angiography (CA), percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA), pacemaker implantation (PM), radiofrequency ablation (RFA), and paediatric interventions (PI). High-sensitive MCP-N (LiF:Mg,Cu,P) TL pellets, were used in the present study. The pellets were placed in plastic bags on thyroid collar of the physician and the eye region. The eye-lens dosemeter (EYE-D) was also used with an MCP-N pellet and was worn near the left or right eye of the physician (depending on the position of the X-ray tube), attached to a support around the head. As it was expected a good correlation was observed between the Hp(0.07) values at the eye region and the respective Hp(3) ones (R2¼0.952). Moreover, a good correlation was also observed between Hp(0.07) values at the thyroid with the respective Hp(3) ones (R2¼0.665).This result can be a very powerful tool for the RPO in order to assess with a quick and easy way, without disturbing the operator, the eye lens doses by using the indications of the dosemeters attached on the thyroid collar. A survey of soils, collected across Greece, from depths up to 25 cm using a soil corer, was carried out to determine the environmental gamma background radiation levels. The materials and the standards were analyzed using high resolution gamma spectroscopy. A germanium detector of high purity was used to measure the activity concentrations of 226Ra, 232Th, the primordial 40K and the artificial radionuclide 137Cs. The samples were stored for one month, thus equilibrium of 226Ra and its products was achived. The concentrations of measured radionuclides showed significant variations. The 226Ra/232Th and the 226Ra/40K concentration rations were also been estimated. The corresponding absorbed dose rates in air from all those radionuclides were been evaluated too. The mean value did not differ from the average dose rates that past studies have reported and did not exceed the world wide average values. All measured values were comparable with other global radioactivity measurements and were found to be safe for public and environment. Acknowledgements This work has been carried with the financial support of the European Social Fund and national resources through the Public Investment Program, Research Project ARCHIMEDES III, subproject ΟPS 383572 ”Monitoring mycotoxins and radioactivity level in cereal products of Greece” EXPOSURE TO NON-IONIZING RADIATION OF THE POPULATION OF NEAPOLI-SYKIES AREA Ch. Κoulouris, Ch. Аthanasopoulou, St. Chantzi, Е. МolyvdaАthanasopoulou, А. Siountas. Medical Physics Lab, Medical School, AUTH, Greece Introduction: The aim of this paper was to measure the intensity of electromagnetic fields at the frequency zone of 30 MHz e 3 GHz in the Neapoli-Sykies municipality. Method: An isotropic aerial was put on a wooden tripod and fastened on the roof of a car, whose roof was covered with echo reflecting pyramids for the absorption of the reflected waves. The aerial was connected to the spectrum analyser FSH4, R&S, which was inside the car. Each measurement lasted two minutes while the car was still. The exact position was acquired using a GPS device. The positions of measurements were chosen so that they represent the whole area of the municipality, and having selected places of greater interest, (nurseries, schools) and around mobile phones base stations. During the measurements special care was taken to stay at a distance of metal surfaces, cars and buildings so that the maximum intensity was measured. The resulting data and measurement values were entered in a geographic information system and raster data in the region was obtained. Namely, the Google maps api technology was used, provided by Google Map spatial server. Results: In two months, 1.109 measurements of the intensity of electromagnetic fields were acquired at a distance of two meters above ground. ENVIRONMENTAL RADIOACTIVITY MEASUREMENTS OF GREEK SOILS N.G. Servitzoglou a, S. Stoulos b, A. Siountas a. a Medical Physics Labatory, Department of Medicine, School of Health Sciences, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece; b Nuclear Physics Labatory, Department of Physics, School of Sciences, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece Ă Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) The results showed that the intensity was lower than the proposed levels. The comparison was done using the stricter coefficient of 60 % of the European figures, as the Greek legislation proposes. As the measurements covered the frequency zone of 30 MHz e 3 GHz, they were compared with the lowest limit of 21,7 V/m. A 3-dimensional map was generated from the measured values using the geographic longitude and latitude. A map overlay, referred to measurements points, was added on top of the Google map. Info Windows displays information about a particular point of interest and is typically opened just above a marker. http://medresearch1.med.auth.gr/emr/ DESIGN AND CLINICAL IMPLEMENTATION OF A 99MTC-HYNICTOCBASED DOSIMETRIC PROTOCOL IN PRRT OF NETS WITH 90Y-DOTATOC M.T. Chalkia a, A.P. Stefanoyiannis a, A. Prentakis a, S.N. Chatziioannou a, T. Liotsou a, X. Geronikola-Trapali a, I. Armeniakos a, E.P. Efstathopoulos a, G.C. Nikiforidis b. a University General Hospital of Athens “Attikon”, Athens, Greece; b Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion, Greece Introduction: NeuroEndocrine Tumors (NETs) overexpress somatostatin receptors’ subtypes sst1-5. The therapeutic effect of Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy (PRRT) of NETs with 90Y-DOTATOC is based on the binding of radiolabeled somatostatin analog peptide with these receptors. In pretherapeutic PRRT treatment planning, reliable patientspecific dosimetry is essential to achieve an optimized therapeutic outcome. In the scope of this study, the NETs’ imaging radiopharmaceutical 99mTc-HYNICTOC was utilized in order to implement a 2dimensional image-based dosimetric protocol for subsequent PRRT with 90 Y-DOTATOC. Materials & Methods: 725-920 MBq of 99mTc-HYNICTOC were administered at three patients with metastatic NETs. Patient imaging was based on the conjugate view method. Anterior and posterior wholebody scans were acquired at 0, 2, 4, 5, 24 and 27 h p.i. using a singlehead gamma camera. A SPECT scan was additionally obtained at 4 h p.i. for depth estimation. After calibration of the gamma camera system, additional correction factors for attenuation, self-attenuation, scatter and background activity were determined in order to convert the regional count rate values to the corresponding activity values. Dosimetric analysis was based on the Medical Internal Radiation Dosimetry (MIRD) committee schema. The dosimetric protocol was further enhanced by the introduction of actual organ volumes and by preliminary phantom-based validation of activity and volume estimated values. The organs’ and NETs’ absorbed doses obtained from 99mTcHYNICTOC imaging were finally converted to 90Y-DOTATOC therapeutic doses. Results: Implementation of the presented dosimetric protocol led to the estimation of NETs and organs of interest absorbed doses for 90Y-DOTATOC. The results are presented in Table 1. Table 1. Absorbed dose estimates for PRRT with # Patient 1 2 3 90 Y-DOTATOC. Mean absorbed doses (mGy/MBq) LIVER KIDNEYS SPLEEN BLADDER NETs 1.78 0.37 0.53 1.72 0.54 0.71 4.96 0.60 3.15 1.57 0.47 0.14 d 0.69-1.67 0.17-1.95 Conclusions: The patient-specific dosimetric protocol proposed in this study can be relatively easily adopted in clinical routine. The dosimetric results are in agreement with previously published data, demonstrating the efficiency of the applied protocol. Taking into consideration the significant interpatient dose variations, patient-specific dosimetry seems to be an essential tool for individual therapy planning. 7 PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATIONS ON EMF EXPOSURES AND PULSE SEQUENCES AT 3T Luca Moro a, Francesco Frigerio b, Irene Carne a, Antonio Coppola c. a Medical Physics Unit, Italy; b Centre for Environmental Reasearch, Salvatore Maugeri Foundation, Pavia, Italy; c AlphaStudio Lab, Pavia, Italy Directive 2013/35/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 June 2013, grants, to MRI, a derogation from the established exposure limit values of workers to electromagnetic fields, provided that a risk assessment is carried out in accordance with the Directive and, inter alia, the employer demonstrates that workers are still protected against adverse health effects and against safety risks. Accordingly, it must be taken into account the possible instantaneous stimulation effects at frequencies below 100 kHz, due to gradient switching, as well as heating due to the absorption of radio frequency. Different imaging techniques involve different distribution of radiofrequency and application of gradients throughout the examination; in this work, a first comparison is reported between theoretical considerations, literature data and measurements on a GE Healthcare Discovery MR750 3.0T. Indication will be given about the exposure scenarios worth to be considered from the EMF safety point of view in our clinical experience. In some sequences as diffusion imaging and 3D angiography, due to the intensive use of saturation, greater RF exposure is expected; however, during the prescan, electric field strength of about 43 V/m and magnetic field of 0.12 A/m, at 3.5 m from the magnet bore have been measured. These values are in accordance with the far field relation even if the wave length of the central radiofrequency is 2,34 m and in literature is reported that only magnetic field should propagate outside the bore. In pre-scanning greatest exposure to low frequency gradient field can be detected as the scanner must tune power and frequency. The claim for faster and increasingly high resolved images drives to the use of steeper gradients and radiofrequency delivered at higher rates; in order to devise fast and easy to apply measurements protocols for safety operation of MRI further research on relevant exposure conditions is needed. ASSESSMENT OF DOSE CONSTRAINTS OF THE ORGANS AT RISK ON HDR BRACHYTHERAPY OF CERVICAL CANCER BASED ON 3D-CT IMAGES: DOSE PRESCRIPTION TO THE TARGET VOLUME VERSUS THE POINT A PLANNING METHOD ~o a,b. C. Souto a, F. Santos a, M. Fortunato a, G. Fernandez a, M. Rolda Radiotherapy Department, Portuguese Institute of Oncology of Lisbon Francisco Gentil, Portugal; b Faculty of Medical Sciences, New University of Lisbon, Portugal a Objective: To compare the dose on organs at risk (OAR), with the dose prescription to the target volume versus dose prescription to point A, in the treatment of cervical cancer with high-dose rate 3D images-based brachytherapy. Method: The data were obtained by performing dosimetric distributions (7 Gy per fraction: 3 fractions in the total) to the target volume (CTV), volume of visible uterus, delineated by Radioncologist using CT images and also prescribing to the point A, in 57 patients with cervical carcinoma, with previous external beam therapy to the whole pelvis (50.4 Gy in 28 fractions).The underlying assumptions are: full dose of external beam therapy in the target volume, identical location during fractionated brachytherapy and identical method of delineation of the volumes of interest. In relation to the organs at risk (rectum, bladder, intestines and sigmoid), CT is a good imaging system, allowing a good view, and so a good definition of the volumes at risk delineated by Radioncologist. For these organs the outer contour were delineated. We used the Treatment Planning System Oncentra Master Plan version 3.3 of Elekta. The linearquadratic radiobiological model-equivalent dose (EQD2) is applied for brachytherapy and is also used for calculating dose from external beam therapy. Specific dosimetric parameters are evaluated for OARs volumes 0.1cc, 1cc and 2cc: D0.1cc, D1cc and D2cc (group of Gynaecology of ESTRO - GEC-ESTRO-recommendations) and the minimum dose is recommended. 8 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Results: With the dose prescription at point A there was a dose increase in about 30% in OARs. Conclusion: With the dose prescribed to the 3D image-based CT we have good target coverage (we found that the isodoses at points A include the volume of visible cervix) and sparing of OARs can be significantly improved taking into account dose volume constraints for the OARs. Despite the delineation of volumes of OARS, we continue to report the recommended points of the rectum and bladder. etc.) have been created from the retrieved data. Conclusion: The results of this ongoing project, co-funded by the EU and Greek National resources, under the framework of the “Archimedes-III” ELL-Operational Programme, reveal some innovative and promising improvements, in the currently available Pancreas-related Imaging and Radiotherapy Technology. IMPROVING THE QUALITY MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF A PET/CT FACILITY FOLLOWING THE INNOVATION TENDENCIES RELATED TO PANCREAS MEDICAL IMAGING AND RADIOTHERAPY AS DEPICTED IN PUBLISHED INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY DOCUMENTS E. Markou a, B. Spyropoulos a, M. Kallergi a, b. a Biomedical Engineering Department, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Biomedical Research Foundation (BRFAA) of the Academy of Athens, Athens, Greece Aim: Imaging of the pancreas is critical for diagnostic decision-making and improved patient outcome. More accurate and faster diagnostic procedures in the last twenty years have led to slight declines in pancreatic cancerrelated mortality. Despite this and the benefits of adjuvant radiotherapy, progress in pancreatic cancer diagnosis and treatment has remained exceedingly slow. It is the purpose of this project to identify the strengths and weaknesses in pancreatic cancer research by reviewing and presenting the technical innovation trends related to Pancreatic Medical Imaging and Radiotherapy, as depicted in published Industrial Property (IP) documents. Material & Methods: Numerous IP-documents, published during the last 20 years, have been retrieved and evaluated, using the European Patent Office (EPO) and the US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) search-engines. Several specific fields have been searched related to imaging and therapeutic techniques. Results: The up-to-date results are synopsized in Table I. Several Patentmappings (publication-year-dependence, Assignee-country, Companies C. Mantzavinos a, G. Manousaridis a, b, M. Metaxas c, B. Spyropoulos a, S. Chatziioannou c, d, M. Kallergi a, c. a Biomedical Engineering Department, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Greek Atomic Energy Commission, Athens, Greece; c Biomedical Research Foundation (BRFAA) of the Academy of Athens, Athens, Greece; d Medical School of Athens, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Aim: Positron emission tomography (PET) is now a well established diagnostic modality that is extensively used in oncology, cardiology, neurology, etc, particularly in combination with computed tomography (CT). The refinement of standardized performance measurements for PET-CT scanners is an ongoing process. The purpose of this study is the evaluation and improvement of the Quality Management System (QMS) of a clinicalresearch PET/CT facility in an effort to ensure patient and personnel safety and optimum performance. Material & Methods: The starting-point for the QMS is the IAEAguidelines for “Quality Assurance (QA) for PET and PET/CT Systems”. Additional experimental data have been and are still being acquired, evaluated and, by employing the developed software-tools, properly documented. Results: An overview of the components of the QMS under development is synopsized in Table I: Table I. Overview of indicative numbers of processed IP-documents concerning Pancreatic Imaging and Radiotherapy. Imaging related IP-docs IP-docs appraised Radiotherapy (RT) related IP-docs IP-docs appraised Multi-detector Computed Tomography (MDCT) Four-dimensional Computed Tomography (4D-CT) CT Angiography (CTA) Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangio-Pancreatography (ERCP) Endoscopic Ultrasound (EUS) Radionuclide Imaging (RNI) Positron Emission Tomography Imaging (PET) Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Pancreas Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangio-Pancreatography (ERCP) Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) (Pancreatic-Biliar) 98 23 91 6 101 201 156 232 109 10 27 3 3D Conformal Radiation Therapy (CRT) Intensity-modulated RT (IMRT) Robotic Patient Positioning (RPP) Volumetric-modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) Image-guided Radiation Therapy (IGRT) Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) 90 Y Radiotherapy Radiosensitization Radiolabeled Antibodies for Therapy Intra-operative Radiation Therapy (IORT) Proton Therapy (PT) Intensity Modulated Proton Therapy (IMPT) 85 107 46 8 43 7 23 46 17 16 197 7 Table I. Overview of the Quality Management System under development Quality Assurance procedures and components of the Quality Manual Definition of responsibilities for QA Acceptance testing and routine periodic Quality Control Data and Documentation PET and CT acceptance testing. Additional Safety monitoring of Locations, Patients and Staff Patients and Staff Dosimetry (''Solidose'' RTI-Electronics , TLD-Reader Victoreen) X-ray/g Energy Spectra (''XR-100T” CdTe Spectral Analyzer, AMPTEK) Experimental verification of the Radiation Protection Xray/gcalculations E/M-field Compliance measurements (SMC-REMF) Documentation about Imaging equipment, test-objects, phantoms, sources etc. Quality Control of each of the PET and the CT components and their combinantion Tests modalities and procedures in the case of abnormal results Accuracy of PET/CT image registration Visual display and hard copy printing Records of all tests, calibrations and corrective actions performed Staff-training documentation (equipment, Quality Control (QC) procedures etc) Adverse events Documentation and Reporting to the competent Authorities Setting Quality Objectives (QO) and (QI) Quality Indicators Software for QMS technical-managerial data handling in a PET-CT facility and documentation Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Conclusion: This ongoing project, co-funded by the EU and Greek National resources, under the framework of the “Archimedes-III” ELL-Operational Programme, provides for the means and the methodology to facilitate an IAEA-compliant and efficient operation of a PET/CT facility. RADIONUCLIDE THERAPIES (RNTS): WHICH IS THE RADIATION BURDEN FOR THE CAREGIVERS? A.P. Stefanoyiannis a, I. Gerogiannis b, S.P. Ioannidou a, W.H. Round c, E. Carinou d, T. Liotsou a, X. Geronikola-Trapali a, I. Armeniakos a, S.N. Chatziioannou a. a Nuclear Medicine Unit, University General Hospital of Athens '' Attikon'', 1 Rimini St, Athens 12462, Greece; b Nicosia General Hospital, Nicosia, Cyprus; c School of Engineering, University of Waikato, Hillcrest Road, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand; d Department of Dosimetry, Greek Atomic Energy Commission, Ag. Paraskevi, Attiki 15310, Greece Introduction: The contribution of radionuclide therapies (RNTs) to effective patient treatment is widely appreciated. RNTs are beneficial with respect to tumor response and in improving patients’ quality of life. The administration of high-level doses has necessitated investigating the potential radiation hazard of corresponding caregivers. The aim of this study is to systematically review the literature pertaining to radiation exposure of caregivers of patients undergoing RNTs. Materials and methods: The study included papers published from 1999 to 2013. Papers with dose measurements of caregivers for various types of RNTs were included. In these papers, measurements were performed by utilizing various types of dosimeters. Papers with either outpatient administrations or procedures that require post treatment hospitalization were included. Papers with results that were not explicit in terms of statistical measures such as mean value or median value and standard deviation or range of caregivers' doses were excluded. Data were classified according to the applied RNT protocol. Protocol parameters included the type of RNT, the radionuclide used, the applied protocol of dose measurement, the level of administered radioactivity, the type of dosimeter, the duration of the study, the study sample and the radiation protection instructions. Results: Fifteen papers in total were included in the study. Among them 6 concerned thyroid cancer, 4 В-cell lymphoma, 3 thyrotoxicosis (hyperthyroidism), 1 both thyroid cancer and thyrotoxicosis, and 1 pediatric neuroblastoma. In the examined papers, the average recorded doses of caregivers were found to be much lower than the corresponding dose constraint. Discussion: It can be concluded that when adequate radiation protection instructions are provided under the supervision and guidance of experts, the dose to the caregivers can be maintained at very low levels. Dose measurements were not differentiated according to the type of dosimeter utilized. Therefore, dosimeter choice depends on protocol structure and availability issues. With regard to specifying the length of hospitalization, it is recommended that new criteria, in addition to accounting for the level of residual activity, should be adopted. For situations where the radiation exposure to caregivers is negligible, outpatient treatments based on specific cost-effectiveness criteria could be established. PEPTIDE RECEPTOR RADIONUCLIDE THERAPIES (PRRTS): WHICH ARE THE DOSIMETRIC DATA FOR THE PATIENTS? A.P. Stefanoyiannis a, M.T. Chalkia a, I. Gerogiannis b, W.H. Round c, T. Liotsou a, X. Geronikola-Trapali a, I. Armeniakos a, S.N. Chatziioannou a, E.P. Efstathopoulos a, G.C. Nikiforidis d. a Nuclear Medicine Unit, University General Hospital of Athens '' Attikon'', 1 Rimini St, Athens 12462, Greece; b Nicosia General Hospital, Nicosia, Cyprus; c School of Engineering, University of Waikato, Hillcrest Road, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand; d Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion, Greece Introduction: NeuroEndocrine Tumours (NETs) belong to a relatively rare class of neoplasms. Nonetheless, their prevalence has increased significantly during the last decades. Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy 9 (PRRT) therapeutic effect is based on the binding of radiolabelled somatostatin analogue peptides with NETs’ somatostatin receptors, resulting in internal irradiation of tumours. Pre-therapeutic patient-specific dosimetry is essential for a treatment course with high levels of safety and efficacy. This study reviews the methods and dosimetric results of PRRT dosimetry presented in the literature. Focus is given on data concerning the therapeutic somatostatin analogue radiopeptides 111In-[DTPA0,DPhe1]-octreotide (111In-DTPA-octreotide), 90Y-[DOTA0,Tyr3]-octreotide 177 and Lu-[DOTA0,Tyr3,Thr8]-octreotide (177Lu(90Y-DOTATOC) DOTATATE). Materials and methods: This study included papers that have performed dosimetry in adult patients for the therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals 111InDTPA-octreotide, 90Y-DOTATOC and 177Lu-DOTATATE. Furthermore, papers presented herein were published during the last 15 years (1999 e 2013), with 177Lu-DOTATATE studies being published during the last 4 years (2010 e 2013). Additionally, selection was limited to papers providing dosimetric data for at least two regions of interest. Results: Dosimetric results are provided for tumors, kidneys, red marrow, liver and spleen, Following Medical Internal Radiation Dose (MIRD) committee formalism, dosimetric analysis demonstrates large interpatient variability in tumour and organ uptake, with kidneys and bone marrow being the critical organs. Results are dependent on the image acquisition and processing protocol, as well as the dosimetric imaging radiopharmaceutical. Discussion: The large interpatient variability in tumour and organ uptake stresses the need for personalized therapy planning. Patient-specific dosimetry in PRRT is therefore needed, in order for the fixed dose regimens to be replaced with patient-tailored therapy planning. Kidney absorbed doses are higher in PRRT with 90Y-DOTATOC, allowing for higher 177Lu activities to be administered in 177Lu- DOTATATE therapies. In order for such dosimetric techniques to be systematically implemented in a busy clinical environment, dosimetry software programmes may provide an essential tool, as they help in making the procedures less time-intensive. QUANTIFICATION STUDY OF IODINE CONCENTRATION AND IMAGE QUALITY INDEXES IN DUAL ENERGY CONTRAST-ENHANCED DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY Yi-Shuan Hwang a, Yu-Ying Lin b, Yun-Chung Cheung c, Hui-Yu Tsai b. a Department of Medical Imaging and Intervention, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou, Taoyuan, Taiwan; b Department of Medical Imaging and Radiological Sciences, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan, Taiwan; c Department of Medical Imaging and Intervention, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Taoyuan, Taoyuan, Taiwan The purpose of this study is to develop calibration method with phantom to quantify the image quality indexes with dual-energy (DE) contrastenhanced digital mammography (CEDM) techniques as a function of iodine concentration. Custom-made phantom as illustrated in Fig. 1 composed of 24304 cm acrylic plate with a smaller insert of 9 by 9 cm contained matrix of four times four holes of 8 mm deep with a diameter of 15 mm where the contrast agent injected was used for the investigations. Contrast agent containing area density of 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1, 1.5 ,2, 2.5 and 3 mg iodine per cm2 were included in the study. All the image acquisitions will be performed on a full-field digital mammography system (Senographe Essential, GE) with dual energy acquisitions. The imaging parameters were Rh/Rh /29 kV/70 mAs for low energy (LE) images, and Rh/Cu /45 kV/176 mAs for high energy (HE) images, respectively. Mean pixel value (MPV) ratio, contrast, and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were used as image indexes for further evaluating the quantification relationships between the iodine concentration. As we can see in the Fig. 2, MPV ratios defined as the MPV in the iodine contained area normalized to the MPV in background went downward as the contrast concentration increased in the both LE and HE acquisitions through the raw image analyzing. When evaluating the DE images, MPV ratios increased as the contrast concentration increased. For evaluating contrast and CNR performance, both were shown as linear functions of iodine area density for LE, HE and DE subtraction images as demonstrated in Fig. 3 and Fig. 4 (R2¼0.70, 0.85 and 0.92 10 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) for LE, HE and DE images, respectively for both contrast and CNR). The calibration results may further serving as a reference for analyzing contrast enhancement for patient participating the dual energy CEDM procedures. Fig 4. CNR as a function of iodine area density for LE , HE and DE images.Ă Fig 1. Custom-made phantom.Ă A NOVEL NON-INVASIVE METHOD SUBSTITUTING BREAST CANCER BIOPSIES N. Martini a, V. Koukou a, P. Sotiropoulou a, C. Michail b, I. Kandarakis b, G. Nikiforidis a, G. Fountos b. a Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Patras, 265 00 Patras, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Egaleo, 122 10 Athens, Greece Fig 2. MPV ratios for the LE , HE and DE images.Ă Dual-energy digital mammography (DEDM), where low- and high energy images are acquired and synthesized in order to cancel out the tissue structures, may improve the ability of enhancing the visibility of certain elements (calcifications) in the subtracted X-ray image. According to former researches, microcalcifications are mainly composed of calcite (CaCO3), calcium oxalate (CaC2O4), and apatite (a calciumphosphate mineral form). It has also been considered that any pathologic alteration (carcinogenesis) of the breast may produce apatite. A method using a quantitative parameter which characterizes the calcification, such as Calcium/Phosphorus (Ca/P) mass ratio, is of interest. This method will be able to sufficiently discriminate between malignant and benign lesions, reducing the need for invasive methods, such as biopsies. A simulation study, using dual energy method, was accomplished for the determination of Ca/P mass ratio in calcifications in order to distinguish between malignant and non-malignant lesions. In this study, the Ca/P mass ratio of calcifications larger than 300mm was calculated. The simulation was performed for hydroxyapatite calcifications, indicating malignancy, and compared with calcite calcifications. The Ca/P mass ratio appeared to be at least 20% higher in case of hydroxyapatite, indicating that this method can be used in breast cancer diagnosis. Acknowledgement This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “Archimedes III: Funding of Research Groups in TEI of Athens” project of the “Education & Lifelong Learning” Operational Programme. USE OF GAFCHROMIC EBT3 FOR CHARACTERIZATION OF DOSE DISTRIBUTIONS IN INTRAOPERATIVE ELECTRON RADIOTHERAPY (IOERT) Fig 3. Contrast as a function of iodine area density for LE, HE and DE images.Ă es de Oncologia do Filipa Costa a, Sandra Sarmento a, b. a Instituto Portugu^ ~o, Rua Dr. Anto nio Porto, Francisco Gentil, EPE, Centro de Investigaça Bernardino de Almeida, 4200-072 Porto; b Instituto Portugu^ es de Oncologia do Porto, Francisco Gentil, EPE, Serviço de nio Bernardino de Almeida, 4200-072 Porto Física Medica, Rua Dr. Anto Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) IntraOperative Electron Radiation Therapy (IOERT) consists of delivering a single high radiation dose directly to the malignant tissue, after the removal of a neoplastic mass, with minimal exposure of the surrounding healthy tissues. Unlike conventional external beam radiotherapy, the dosimetric determinations in IOERT are not based on a Treatment Planning System (TPS). Treatment planning for IOERT is limited to manual calculations. The volume to be irradiated is visually estimated at the operating theatre, and the electron energy is chosen considering the depth of tissue to be treated and the isodose curves measured in reference conditions. Software is used to generate isodoses curves, by interpolation, from the dose profiles measured in a water phantom. This process is time consuming and does not provide much detail, especially near the surface. Film dosimetry is generally a good alternative to obtain 2D dose distributions, when compared with point dose detector as ion chambers, diodes and others, even though the use of solid phantoms for electron dosimetry is generally not recommended. In this work, we have investigated the possibility of using Gafchromic EBT3 film and a solid water phantom to obtain complete 2D dose distributions parallel to the beam. This is usually a challenge due to the effect of air gaps which may easily cause artefacts in the dose distribution. The setup is crucial to obtain good results, particularly near the surface where the air gap effect is more evident. We studied several setups and optimized a practical and easy methodology for irradiation of films parallel to the beam in a solid water phantom. The irradiated films were digitized and the resultant image processed to obtain detailed and uninterrupted dose distributions, to be used during a surgery by the radio-oncologist, for a better visual estimation of the irradiated volume. Good agreement was observed between the dose distributions obtained with gafchromic film in a solid water phantom and with a diode in the water tank phantom, between 1mm below the surface and 60% isodose, for 9MeV. THEORETICAL MODELING OF THE DETECTOR OPTICAL GAIN (DOG) AND THE ANGULAR DISTRIBUTION OF COLUMNAR PHOSPHORS USED IN MEDICAL X e RAY IMAGING. AN ANALYTICAL METHOD AND THE APPLICATION TO CSI:TL 11 SYSTEMATIC INVESTIGATION OF THE DOSIMETRIC EFFECT OF BEAM ANGLES IN IMRT OF THE PROSTATE Spiridon V. Spirou PhD, George Loudos PhD. Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, TEI Athens, Greece Purpose: To systematically investigate how the choice of beam angles in IMRT of the prostate affects the dosimetry of the PTV and each OAR, as well as how the dosimetry of each structure is correlated with that of other structures. Methods and Materials: Five prostate patients, previously treated with a 5-beam IMRT plan to 86.4 Gy, were selected for this study. Candidate beams were defined in a 360 arc around the isocenter. Treatment plans were generated for each set of 5 beams taken out from the set of the candidate beams. First, all the optimization constraints, as well as all other algorithmic parameters, were kept fixed as in the clinical plan. Subsequently, additional constraints were placed on the rectum and bladder, in order to bring forth any differences between the beam sets. Preliminary Results: The methodology described previously has been manually applied to a single prostate patient for 9 candidate beams, equally spaced every 40 . Altogether 252 (126 x 2) plans were generated for this patient. All plans were normalized so that the maximum dose to the rectal wall is 99%. The envelope DVHs describe all the DVHs obtained from the 126 plans (Fig. 1). The clinical DVHs may or may not lie within the envelope because the clinical beam arrangement was not among the 126 examined. The envelope DVHs for the PTV is fairly narrow, indicating that coverage was not an issue for this patient, regardless of the beam arrangement used. However, the envelope DVHs for the rectum, bladder and, especially, the large bowel are much wider, suggesting that the choice of beam directions may have a significant impact on the treatment plan. The use of additional constraints improves the range of DVHs for the rectum, bladder and, especially, the large bowel. Conclusion: The choice of beam directions may have a significant impact on the dosimetry of the rectum, bladder and, especially, large bowel. Furthermore, the use of additional constraints has the potential to improve current treatment plans. These may, in turn, affect the patient’s quality of life and post-treatment disease management. K. Psichis a, N. Kalyvas b, H. Delis a, I. Kandarakis b, G. Panayiotakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras 26500, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Agiou Spyridonos, 122 10, Egaleo, Athens, Greece Phosphor screens have been used extensively in medical imaging either in the form of powdered phosphors or in the form of columnar phosphors. In digital medical imaging, the broad use of columnar phosphors has lead to the development of many theoretical models for the propagation of light inside these phosphors. A two dimensional model for light propagation inside columnar phosphors has been developed and was used for the prediction of the Detector Optical Gain (DOG) and the angular distribution of these crystals. DOG is defined as the ratio of the total number of optical photons that exit the crystal to the total number of x-ray photons that enter the crystal. The model for light propagation is based on optical photon propagation physical and geometrical principles and takes into account the attenuation of x-rays inside the crystal bulk, the conversion of x-ray energy to optical photon beams, the propagation of these light photon beams inside the crystal where the multiple reflections on the sides of the crystal column, the infinite forward and backward reflections as well as the attenuation of photon beams during these reflections are taken into account. This theoretical model was applied to CsI:Tl columnar crystals, it was compared to results found in literature and good correlation with them was observed. It was found that DOG is affected by the length of the columns of the crystal as well as the incident x-ray energy spectrum. The results of the angular distribution are in accordance with the theory that the longer crystal columns have more directional light distribution. Fig. 1. Envelope DVHs for the PTV (cyan), rectum (pink), bladder (orange) and large bowel (green). Top row: the optimization constraints are the ones used in the clinical plan. Bottom row: additional constraints are placed on the rectum and bladder. The solid black lines are the DVHs obtained using the clinical beam directions. 12 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) ICTP/UNITS: A MEDICAL PHYSICS TRAINING OPPORTUNITY FOR PHYSICISTS FROM THE DEVELOPING WORLD IN EUROPE William Ona Rodriguez a, Luciano Bertocchi b, Renata Longo c, Renato Padovani b. a Presenting author e student at ICTP- Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics and Trieste University, Trieste, Italy; b ICTP- Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics, Trieste, Italy; c Dept. of Physics & INFN, Trieste University, Trieste, Italy The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics - ICTP, a UNESCO educational institution with training initiatives in the area of medical physics like the well known bi-annual College in Medical Physics and several ICTP/IAEA training courses, has developed the Master on Medical Physics programme according to the recommendations of IOMP and IAEA for the education and the clinical training. IOMP and IAEA are seeing this initiative as an answer to the growing demand of Medical Physicists in developing Countries. The ICTP with the University of Trieste have initiated the Master on Medical Physics (www.ictp.it/programmes/mmp.aspx), a two-years training programme in Medical Physics, co-sponsored by the Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS). The Master Programme is designated to provide young promising graduates in physics, mainly from developing countries, with a post-graduated theoretical and clinical training suitable to be recognized as Clinical Medical Physicist in their countries. In this first course 13 participants from Africa, South America, Asia, Europe and Midle East have been selected among more than 250 applicants. The Master Programme in Medical Physics consists of basic and advanced courses and practical and clinical training given by experts in these fields. In the first year 330 hours of lectures and 230 hours of guided exercises are devoted to: Anatomy and Physiology as applied to Medical Physics, Radiobiology, Radiation Physics, Radiation Dosimetry, Medical Physics Imaging fundamentals, Imaging Detectors, Physics of Nuclear Medicine, Physics of diagnostic and Interventional Radiology (X rays, US, MRI, Hybrid systems), Physics of Radiation Oncology, Radiation Protection and, Information Technology in Medical Physics. There will be an examination at the end of each course. The second year will be spent in a medical physics department of the hospitals’ network for a full time clinical training in radiotherapy, diagnostic and interventional radiology, nuclear medicine and radiation protection. The clinical training will be informed by the IAEA recommendations (TCS37, TCS47 and TCS50). After all courses, the practical and clinical training participants are required to work on a dissertation to be submitted and defended during the last month of the programme. ELABORATION OF PATIENT DRL IN CBCT IN DENTAL PRACTICE D. Petrov, J. Vassileva. National Centre of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection, Sofia, Bulgaria The aim of present study is to perform a national patient dose survey and to elaborate a DRL in Cone beam CT used for dental purposes. The patient dose was measured with calibrated KAP dosemeter Diamentor E2 (PTW Freiburg) with a standart head CT phantom. Also the size of the radiation field was measured with Gafchromic film. The pilot measurements was performed on two CBCT: NewTomVG and ILUMA e Imtec 3M. The result data was widely distributed, because of the different FOV and time of exposure. Complete set of ongoing measurements and analysis will be presented, as well as findings and conclusions. RADIATION DOSE AND IMAGE QUALITY IN DENTAL CONE BEAM COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY Olivera Ciraj-Bjelac a, b, Danijela Arandjic a, b, Predrag Bozovic a,b, Jelena Stankovic a, b, Sandra Ceklic a, b. a University of Belgrade, School of Electrical Engineering, Serbia; b University of Belgrade, Vinca Institute of Nuclear Sciences, Serbia Radiation protection, monitoring and dose reduction Dental examinations are the most frequent type of radiological procedure and account for 21% of the total on a global scale. Individual doses are small but collective doses cannot be ignored due to the high volume of procedures. Dental cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) is increasingly performed for imaging of the dentomaxillofacial region. The proliferation of this imaging modality involving new system geometries, radiation dose profiles, and image quality characteristics requires methodology both for radiation dose and image quality assessment. The objective of this work is to evaluate patient dose and image quality in CBCT and particular model of CBCT Scanora 3Dx Soredex. Patent dose were measured using cylindrical 16 cm diameter phantom for all available clinical protocol using a calibrated dose-area product (DAP) meter. Collected information on the exposure parameters and DAP were used to estimate effective dose. Similar methodology as applied for dose assessment in total 60 patients enrolled. Although a range of image quality indicators can be measured, one must have in mind that dental imaging has a few specific requirements as hard tissue visualisation and excellent spatial resolution, so image quality was assessed in terms of contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) using relevant anatomical detail in clinical images, namely regions with dominate bone, soft tissue and air. Depending on the clinical protocol, obtained DAP values for phantom were in the range 393-2544 mGy$cm2 while corresponding effective doses were 5-391 mSv. For patients, dose levels were 1462±456 (393-2544) mGy$cm2 and 219±58 (73-316) mSv. CNR levels were 14±6 (3-33) and 10±5 (2-29) for the bone-air and bone-soft tissue, respectively. The CBCT scanner provides contrast resolution suitable to visualization of high-contrast morphology in dentomaxillofacial imaging applications at relatively low dose levels. Important part of this survey is development and application of methodology for image quality and patient dose assessment, that can be used in the future optimisation studies as some examination protocols require higher and some of them lower image quality. Further activities should be focused on attempts to optimise exposure factors for CBCT unit and clinical protocols in terms of patient dose and image quality. A SIMPLE METHOD FOR THE TRANSFORMATION OF PHYSICAL DVHS TO RADIOBIOLOGICALLY EQUIVALENT ONES IN HYPOFRACTIONATED RADIOTHERAPY: DOSIMETRIC AND CLINICAL CORRELATIONS Zoi Thrapsanioti a, Eirini Karanasiou b, Kalliopi Platoni a, Efstathios Efstathopoulos a, George Matsopoulos b, Maria Dilvoi a, George Patatoukas a, Demetrios Chaldeopoulos a, Nikolaos Kelekis a, Vassilis Kouloulias a, b. a 2nd Department of Radiology, Radiotherapy Unit, ATTIKON University Hospital, Athens, Greece; b Microwave Laboratory, Computer and Electrical Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Greece Purpose: The purpose of this study was to transform physical DVHs to radiobiologically equivalent ones and additionally to assess their reliability by correlations of dosimetric and clinical parameters. For this purpose 50 patients with prostate cancer and 50 patients with breast cancer, who were submitted to Hypofractionated Radiotherapy, were examined. Methods and Materials: All 100 patients were submitted to Radiotherapy at the “ATTIKON” University Hospital. The method used in this study was based on the use of a Java software. The physical DVH data were exported from the Eclipse TPS of Varian Medical System and then were imported in the Java software for the transformation to their corresponding radiobiologically equivalent. To achieve the transformation, we used mathematical models such as the Linear-Quadratic Model (LQ-Model) and the Niemierko Model. Then the radiobiological DVHs were evaluated and their outcome was correlated with acute toxicity score according to EORTC/RTOG criteria. Results: The procedure mentioned above was applied to all the 100 patients of this study, by means of 100 radiobiological equivalent DVHs derived from the transformation. From all 100 DVHs important dosimetric parameters were exported and correlated with EORTC/RTOG acute toxicity criteria. As far as concern the prostate radiotherapy, a significant Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) correlation between RTOG acute rectal toxicity and dosimetric parameters such as D50 (P<0.001) and V60 (P¼0.001) was found, for a/b¼10Gy. Moreover, as far as concern the breast radiotherapy, RTOG acute skin toxicity and dosimetric parameter V60 were significantly correlated, calculated for a/b¼10Gy (P<0.001). Conclusions: Our results suggest that the transformation of physical DVHs to radiobiologically equivalent ones can constitute a useful tool for the clinicians, in terms of important dosimetric and clinical parameters. The tool seems also to be effective and reliable, as far as concern the significant correlation of dosimetric values with radiation induced acute toxicity. However, more patients are needed to extract safer conclusions and to further evaluate the reliability of the suggested tool. TRACT e BASED SPATIAL STATISTICS IN PATIENTS WITH SMALL CELL LUNG CANCER S.E. Benezi a, b, E. Karavasilis c, I.S. Karanasiou a, G. Matsopoulos a, E. Ventouras d, N. Ouzounoglou a, V. Kouloulias e, M. Papathanasiou e, A. Foteineas e, Th Soldatos c, Ch Iosif c, E. Efstathopoulos e, N. Kelekis e, D. Kelekis c. a National Technical University of Athens School of Electrical & Computer Engineering Microwave & Fiber Optics Laboratory (Room 21.31) 9,Iroon Polytechneiou str., 157 73 Zografou Campus, Athens, Greece; b School of Medicine, University of Patras; c Research Centre of Radiology and Imaging, “Evgenidion” General Hospital, Papadiamantopoulou Street 20, 11528 Athens, Greece; d Department of Medical Instrumentation Technology, Technological Educational Institution of Athens; e National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Division of Radiology-Radiotherapy II Introduction: The aim of this study was to determine microstructural differences in cerebral white matter between healthy volunteers and patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) before the completion of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI). PCI has become a standard of care for selected patients with limited and extensive stage SCLC who have shown benefit with systemic treatment. However, with recent increases in mean overall survival and an increased number of longer-term survivors, the potential contribution of PCI to the development of neurocognitive deficits is becoming more clearly defined. Small cell lung cancer may, even in the absence of overt intracranial metastatic involvement, adversely affect cognitive function by mechanisms that are not clearly understood, possibly paraneoplastic. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is used to study the structure of ordered biological tissue. DTI depends on the Brownian motion of water molecules, which is restricted within the brain by structural barriers including macromolecules and cell membranes. The preferential direction of water diffusion within cerebral white matter occurs along the axons allowing DTI to identify the location and direction of white matter tracts. Material and methods: DTI was performed on 8 patients before PCI and 9 healthy participants. We evaluated 3-Tesla DTI for white matter injury employing voxelwise statistics approach. Fractional anisotropy (FA) maps were calculated for every participant. Tract- based spatial statistics (TBSS) was used to compare FA maps. TBSS projects the FA data into a common space through the use of an initial approximate non-linear registration followed by projection onto an alignment invariant tract representation (mean FA skeleton). Initial results may present differences on FA maps of frontal lobe between healthy and patient group. Conclusion: It is very important not only to continue research regarding the cognitive side-effects of PCI on different age groups and at various stages of disease and treatment but also investigate possible ways to reveal underlying mechanisms that result in these effects possibly even before their clinical manifestations; this research direction constitutes one of the main objectives of the present study. Acknowledgment This research has been co-financed by the European Union (European Social Fund e ESF) and Greek national funds through the Operational Program “Education and Lifelong Learning” of the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF)- Research Funding Program: THALIS e NTUA, “Study and Analysis of Medical Data using structural and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging procedures (MRI/DTI/fMRI): Assessment of changes induced by Brain Radiotherapy” (MIS 380151). 13 COMPARISON OF PRACTICE AND PATIENT DOSES IN INTERVENTIONAL RADIOLOGY AND CARDIOLOGY PROCEDURES PERFORMED IN TWO UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS D. Kostova-Lefterova a, b, I. Dyakov a. a National Centre of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection, Sofia, Bulgaria; b National Cardiology Hospital, Sofia, Bulgaria Background: The purpose of this study is to estimate typical patient doses in angiography rooms in two university hospitals in Sofia, and to compare them with the established national diagnostic reference levels (DRL) and published data. Materials and methods: Prospective patient study was performed for five X-ray units of four different manufacturers. Four most common procedures were included: coronary angiography (CA), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), lower limb arteriography (LLA) and stent placement in iliac/ femoral artery. Totally 285 procedures were recorded, and for each the following information was collected: sex, age, weight, and height of patient, frame rate, fluoroscopy time (FT), total number of series/images, and total dose area product (DAP). DAP in cine mode and cumulative doses were recorded for two of the systems. In addition, entrance surface air kerma (ESAK) rates in fluoroscopy and acquisition mode were measured with a PMMA phantom. Image quality was assessed using DICOM images by calculation of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). Results: Large variations were observed in procedure protocols, resulting in variations in patient dose: DAP ranges were 5.9-172, 31-498, 2.7-78 and 12-326 Gy.cm2 for CA, PCI, LLA and iliac/femoral artery stent placement respectively. The mean DAP values varied by a factor of 2 for CA and a factor of 3 for PCI. Two times difference in mean value of cumulative dose was found due to the 3.6 fold ESAK rate difference. Discussion: The mean values of DAP were higher than national DRL (40 Gy.cm2 for CA and 140 Gy.cm2 for PCI) in three of the rooms and lower for only one room. The mean DAP values of 34 Gy.cm2 for LLA and 65 Gy.cm2 for stent placement were lower compared to the national and published DRLs. The mean FT was higher than the auxiliary reference intervals for only one system. A possible explanation of the higher doses is the higher number of acquired images. Image quality was better for the system with higher doses but sufficient for all systems. Patient dose recording, establishment of typical doses and comparison with national DRL demonstrated to be good tool to find potential for optimization. ESTIMATION OF SECOND CANCER RISK AFTER SPLENIC IRRADIATION FOR HODGKIN’S LYMPHOMA K. Kourinou a, M. Mazonakis a, A. Fasoulaki b, J. Damilakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Crete, P.O. Box 2208, Heraklion 71003, Crete, Greece; b Department of Radiotherapy and Oncology, Heraklion University Hospital, Heraklion 71110, Crete, Greece Purpose: The second cancer risk estimation after lymphoma irradiation is important due to the long-term survival of these patients. This study was conducted to estimate the risk for developing a secondary malignancy following splenic irradiation for Hodgkin’s disease. Materials and methods: Twelve patients with Hodgkin’s lymphoma in the spleen region were examined. Computed tomography images of patients were transferred to an advanced computerized system (XiO 4.3.1, CMS, Saint Louis, MO, USA) for three-dimensional radiotherapy planning. All treatments were performed isocentrically with 18 MV photon beams. The organ equivalent dose (OED) for liver, lung, pancreas and stomach, that were partly included within the treatment volume, was calculated using differential dose-volume histograms (DVH). Lifetime attributable risk (LAR) for cancer induction was assessed using organ, sex and age specific risk factors provided by the BEIR VII report. Results: For a typical target dose of 6 Gy, the mean OED to stomach, liver, pancreas and lung was found to be 1.90±0.41 Gy, 0.23±0.01 Gy, 1.01±0.42 Gy and 0.64±0.08 Gy, respectively. The stomach cancer risk varied from 70 14 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) to 443 cases per 105 persons, depending upon the organ dose, patient’s age at the time of exposure and gender. The corresponding ranges for liver, pancreas and lung cancer risk were (9-37)x10-5, (202-1276)x10-5 and (2311448)x10-5 respectively. Conclusion: Splenic irradiation for Hodgkin’s lymphoma always leads to a relatively increased risk for pancreas and lung cancer induction of more than one case per 1000 irradiated patients. The risk for developing other secondary malignancies was found to be much lower. FAST HISTOGRAM-BASED BRAIN SEGMENTATION FROM T1-WEIGHTED MR IMAGES USING MORPHOLOGICAL PROCESSING AND GEOMETRIC CRITERIA S. Hadjidimitriou a, V. Charisis a, G. Sergiadis a, L. Hadjileontiadis a, V. Kouloulias b, M. Papathanasiou b, N. Kelekis b, D. Kelekis b. a Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece; bSecond Department of Radiology, University of Athens, Greece Background-approach: Segmentation of brain from three-dimensional magnetic resonance (MR) head images has always attracted significant research and clinical interest. Current MR-based brain segmentation techniques, although accurate, are complex and time-consuming for certain applications. This work proposes a fast, automated and accurate technique for whole-brain segmentation from T1-weighted MR images towards brain volume measurement for potential identification of statistically significant differences between healthy individuals and patients. Method: The proposed approach is based on histogram thresholding and simple morphological operations and extends the work of Shan et al. (2002). More specifically, the algorithm consists of three steps. The first step is to remove the low intensity background noise by applying Wiener filtering and to perform background thresholding for separating foreground head tissue information. The intensity threshold value is calculated dynamically and is based on a Rayleigh distribution approximation. The second step aims to disconnect brain from skull and other non-brain tissues and is grounded on the assumption that brain is the largest connected component in the image with similar voxel intensity levels. In this vein, intensity threshold filtering takes place followed by morphological erosion for disconnecting brain from non-brain regions. The majority of non-brain regions are rejected using geometric criteria that determine the acceptable Euclidean distance between the centroids of the largest connected component (brain) and other regions. At last, morphological dilation is applied to recover the brain area. The third step is to remove the fragments of sinus, cerebrospinal fluid and other non-brain tissues that still remain. Initially, the voxels are divided into four groups, i.e., G1/G4-low/very high intensity voxels corresponding to non-brain regions, G2/3-medium/high intensity voxels corresponding to gray/white matter. To remove G1/G4 voxels, two intensity thresholds (low and high) are calculated by employing the parameters of three Gaussian distributions fitting the image histogram. Finally, the aforementioned procedure of erosiongeometric criterion-dilation is applied and the final brain region is extracted. Results-conclusion: Application of the algorithm on real medical images exhibited potent results mainly for axial but also for coronal and sagittal views paving the way for its use towards fast, practical brain volume estimation and research on significant volume changes. Shan, Z. Y., Yue, G. H., & Liu, J. Z., (2002). Automated histogram-based segmentation of T1-weighted three-dimensional magnetic resonance head images. Neuroimage, 17(3), 1587-1598. Acknowledgment This research has been co-financed by the European Union (European Social Fund e ESF) and Greek national funds through the Operational Program “Education and Lifelong Learning” of the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF) - Research Funding Program: THALIS e NTUA, “Study and Analysis of Medical Data using structural and functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging procedures (MRI/DTI/fMRI): Assessment of changes induced by Brain Radiotherapy” (MIS 380151). REALISTIC MC SIMULATED MYOCARDIUM PROTOCOL, INCORPORATING MOTION IN THE XCAT ANTHROPOMORPHIC MODEL. PRELIMINARY QUANTIFICATION STUDY. Paraskevi Liakou a, Panagiotis Papadimitroulas a, George Loudos b, George C. Kagadis a. a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, GR 26504, Rion; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, GR 12210, Egaleo Background: The purpose of this study is to assess the use of Monte Carlo simulations and computer anthropomorphic phantoms, as a tool to quantify the degrading effects of organ motion (respiratory and myocardial contraction) in SPECT myocardium imaging. Methods and Materials: The GATE Monte Carlo simulation toolkit was used in this study (v. 6.2), along with the 3D XCAT computational anthropomorphic phantom of a 75 kg male. The phantom consisted of 510 slices, each of which was divided into 128 128 voxels, with a voxel size of 3.54 mm3. The phantom was filled with a realistic biodistribution of 99mTc N-DBODC. Two simulations were performed: (a) without organ motion (static), and (b) with organ motion. For the latter simulation the duration of the cardiac cycle was set to 1 sec, subdivided into 10 frames. Thirty-six projections were obtained, spanning a full 360 arc. Image reconstruction was performed using the MLEM algorithm, with 15 iterations. Results: As shown in Figure 1, the introduction of motion may significantly affect the reconstructions. Qualitatively, it blurs the size and extent of the myocardium, possibly leading to a misdiagnosis of a cardiac defect (Figs 1a and 1b). Quantitatively, the effect may not always be of the same magnitude and in the same direction. Referring to Fig 1c, the first peak (at a distance of 12 pixels) occurs in the same location for both simulations, and the magnitude of the static simulation is higher than that of the motionincluding simulation. In contrast, the location of the second peak (at a distance of 30 pixels) is different for the two simulations, and the magnitude of the static simulation is lower than that of the motionincluding simulation. This may present particular difficulties for automated feature extraction and image segmentation algorithms. Discussion: Image reconstruction varies significantly with organ motion, necessitating the use of motion correction algorithms. The use of XCAT phantom and GATE simulations provides an accurate and robust tool to further study and quantify the motion effects in order to optimize imaging protocols in SPECT. Figure 1. Reconstruction of a slice through the myocardium: (a) with motion and (b) without motion (c) Line profiles along the yellow lines in the reconstructed images a and b. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 15 IMPACT OF AUTOMATIC TUBE CURRENT MODULATION ON CT DOSE AND IMAGE QUALITY FROM A VIEW OF NATIONWIDE SURVEY MEASUREMENT OF EXTRA LOW FREQUENCY ELF ELECTROMAGNETIC FIELDS IN INDOOR WORKING AREAS Hui-Yu Tsai a, Yi-Shuan Hwang b, Ho-Ling Liu a. a Department of Medical Imaging and Radiological Science, Chang Gung University, Taoyuan, Taiwan; b Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Intervention, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou, Taoyuan, Taiwan A. Skouroliakou a, P. Kontaxis a, S. Anagnostakis a, S. Triantopoulos a, S. Tsantis b. a Department of Energy Technology Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens; b Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras Background: This study aims to survey and investigate the impact of using the current use of automatic tube current modulation (ATCM) in clinical applications on image quality and radiation dose. Materials and methods: CT scanners which used clinical adult abdominal scanning protocols were surveyed nationwide. If ATCM was clinically used, the mAs of an average-weight patient's mid-liver image was recorded to calculate the appropriate volumetric computed tomography dose index (CTDIvol). If ATCM was not applied, CTDIvol were recorded directly. The CTDIvol for abdominal scanning represented the average clinical adult abdominal dose in Taiwan. Additionally, a custom ATCM phantom was designed to survey the radiation dose and image quality for CT scanners using ATCM. After CT scanning, the recorded CTDIvol and dose-length product (DLP) values, and investigated image quality, were compared for turning-on and turning-off ATCM in the same CT scanner. Results: Analyses of survey data showed a significant dose decrease for diagnostic CT scanners between with using ATCM (12±4 mGy) and without using ATCM (15±5 mGy). Evaluations of the custom phantom showed no significant difference of CTDIvol, DLP, noise between turning-on and turning-off ATCM. Discussion: The use of ATCM effectively reduces dose for diagnostic CT scanners from a nationwide view. The custom ATCM phantom was suitable for testing ATCM functions. Background: Extra low frequency (ELF) electromagnetic fields are emitted by electrical appliances and domestic electrical wiring installations located in indoor areas. The need for updated measurements and estimations of ELF-fields levels has been accepted by all National organizations, towards compliance with international standards and acquirement of dosimetric data for epidemiological studies. Since numerous individuals spend 8 hours per day in their office, measurement and evaluation of ELF-fields levels within working environment is considered of importance. Material & Methods: The presented study involves the measurement of ELF-field strength in 50 working areas (i.e. offices of administrative staff in which more than 80% of its working hour is spent). The electric equipment located in the aforementioned areas was recorded along with several characteristics concerning category, type and operational average time in daily basis. All measurements were performed with NARDA EFA 300 spectral field meter which is appropriate for frequency range between 0-100kHz. ELF rms and max values of magnetic field strength were obtained from maximum spots, specific distances from the equipment and employee locations during working hours, with electrical equipment in both stand by and functioning modes. Each measurement’s duration was 6 minutes and it was repeated twice. Results: Magnetic field strength was dominated from 50Hz fields (Greek frequency of the electric supply system). Peak values were measured close to photocopy electric equipment while it was functioning, with magnetic field strength values up to 0,8mΤ when it was actually operating. On the other hand, magnetic field strength dropped with when the distance from the equipment was increased. High values of magnetic field strength were also measured close to the electrical sub panels but in most cases these were installed in low occupancy areas. ELF fields from pc central processing units and monitors were in most cases less than 0,1mT at operating position. Discussion: Results are generally in accordance with corresponding measurements performed by other groups. In cases where the values are high simple reduction methods should be suggested. As maximum and rms values had considerable differences, it might be advisable to consider both at dosimetric extrapolations and electric appliance’s standards. Figure 1A. custom ATCM phantom was designed and shown as the parts of pelvis (a), abdomen (b), chest (c), and combined together (d). MEASUREMENT OF IODINE (I125) RADIOACTIVE SOLID WASTE DERIVED FROM RADIO IMMUNE ANALYSIS (RIA-IRMA) PERFORMED ANNUALLY IN ”THEAGENIO” NUCLEAR MEDICINE DEPARTMENT Kotzassarlidou Maria a, Mone Ioanna b, Giannopulou Katerina a, Kirilidou Pipintakou Ageliki a, Chatzimarkou Michali a, Sidiradi Olga a, Aikaterini a. a ”THEAGENEIO” Cancer Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece; b Aristotelio University of Thessaloniki, Greece Figure 2. Noise distribution for chest (a), abdomen (b) , and pelvis as ATCM was turn on. Figure 3. Noise distribution for chest (a), abdomen (b) , and pelvis as ATCM was turn off. Introduction: I-125 is the preferred radioisotope for tagging antibodies in radioimmunoassay procedures(RIA-IRMA), resulting in significant volume of contaminated solid waste, mainly tubes and absorbent paper. I-125 solid waste management is nuclear medicine physicists’ corcern, which must be in accordance with Geek Legislation. Objective: This study aims to present real practice data of I-125 activityconcentation in solid waste derived from radioimmunoassay testsperformedin the Nuclear Medicine Department of ”THEAGENEIO” Cancer Hospital throughout one year.Brief description of management program for the above mentioned waste, applied in our department is given. Materials and methods: Calibration factor(CF), converting true count rate to I-125 activity was defined, using a standard source, I-129(equivalent to 16 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) 46300dpm or 733Bq I-125). Reporting wasbased on data from all assays performed throughout 2013.Tube count rates, due to I-125 activity measurement, were summed and converted to I-125 activity by use ofCF. Total number and weight of tubes included in solid waste were reported.Proper time for decay-in-storage was determined, meeting Greek regulations, which allow daily solid waste disposal containing I-125, when activity concentration is below 10Bq/g. Results: During 2013, 47127 tubes were assayed in ”THEAGENEIO”Nuclear Medicine Dept. 472 kits (100 tubes each) of RIA-IRMAtests were consumed, mean valueof I-125traceractivity400kBq/kit. Various hormones and tumor markers were assayed:FT3,FT4,ICTP,TPA,TAG-72,TRAK,FREE PSA,IPTH,HTG,FSH,LH,ACTH,DHEA'S,GH,E2,PROL,AFP,B-CG, PSA,NSE,CA199,TESTOSTERONE,TM-AB,TSH,CA15-3,CgA, CA125,CEA,TG-AB, P4 (PROG),ALDOSTERONE,ІNSULIN,CePEPTIDE,RENIN,17ΟНpPROGESTERONE, CALCITONINE. Calibration factor (CF) was 45 cpm/Bq.Each tube’s weight is 1.5g, therefore total weight of solid waste (including bottles containing tracer in the kit) derived equal to73 kg.Total count rate was 2082932567cpm,leading to a total activity of I-125 46.5MBq/year and an average value of 982Bq/tube. According to lab’s practice, wastes of RIA- IRMA tubes are collected every 2 weeks. 24waste packages, 4 kg each, are stored in a dedicated fridge every year. Considering Greek Radiation Protection Regulation, (FЕΚ 1014(FΟR)94 216/06.03.2001), each waste package must be kept in storage for 363 days. Conclusion: Storage of tubes, contaminated with I-125,for one year is needed before removing them from hospital. Therefore, special storage space, safe for staff, should be provided in each lab. Waste packages used must be plastic. Each one must be assigned an I.D. number, initial storing date, weight, contained activity of I-125, projected date of removal from storage. Before disposal each bag is monitored for activity presence. All persons engaged in this work are trained, ensuring compliance with the department’s procedures. RADIATION EXPOSURE AND IMAGE QUALITY EVALUATION USING THE IDOSE4 HYBRID ITERATIVE RECONSTRUCTION ALGORITHM IN PEDIATRIC CHEST HRCT Magdalini Smarda a, Efthimia Alexopoulou a, Argyro Mazioti a, Sofia Kordolaimi a, Agapi Ploussi a, Konstantinos Priftis b, Efstathios P. Efstathopoulos a. a 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens; b Department of Pediatrics, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Background: Computed Tomography (CT) radiation exposure has raised concern, especially in pediatric patients who are more radiosensitive and have longer life expectancy than adults. Therefore, the use of the recently developed Iterative Reconstruction (IR) algorithms is particularly significant for dose reduction. The aim of the study is to compare radiation exposure and image quality between filtered back projection (FBP) and an IR algorithm (iDose4, Philips) in pediatric chest High Resolution Computed Tomography (HRCT). Materials and methods: A total number of 45 pediatric chest HRCT examinations were performed on our Department’s 64-detector row CT scanner before and after the installation of IR algorithm. 21 patients were scanned using the FBP protocol (FBP group) while 24 patients were scanned using iDose4 protocol (iDose4 group). The images of iDose4 group were reconstructed using FBP and all levels of iDose4 algorithm. The tube current-time product (mAs) was reduced for the iDose4 group while the rest exposure settings (kVp, filtration, pitch) were kept constant for both protocols. Radiation exposure quantities (CTDIvol, DLP, ED, SSDE) were evaluated. Image noise was objectively calculated. Subjective image quality was evaluated by 2 experienced radiologists in a 5-point scale.. Unpaired t-tests were used for data statistical analysis. All results were compared on the basis of weight category (higher of lower than 30kg). Results: For the low-weight category (<30kg), iDose4 application allowed an effective dose reduction of about 80%, whereas in the high-weight category (>30kg) the corresponding reduction was 40%. Comparable results concerning overall subjective image quality between the 2 groups were achieved with iDose4 level 4 for the >30kg subcategory and with iDose4 level 6 for the <30kg subcategory of pediatric patients. The corresponding results concerning objective image noise were noticed between FBP and iDose4 images of levels 3 and 6 for the >30kg and <30kg category respectively. Conclusion: The use of the iDose4 iterative reconstruction algorithm in pediatric chest HRCT enables substantial radiation exposure reduction, without compromising image quality and diagnostic confidence. Further evaluation with lower mAs settings is needed in order to draw more precise conclusions, especially in the high-weighted subcategory of patients. QUALITY AUDITS OF SMALL FIELD OUTPUT FACTORS: A MULTI-CENTRE PILOT STUDY G. Azangwe, P. Grochowska, J. Izewska. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, Austria Background: A new co-ordinated research project (CRP) was launched by the IAEA for the national audit networks for radiotherapy with the purpose of developing the methodology for remotely auditing IMRT related QA. The programme involves three audit steps: (1) remote verification of TPS calculation of small field output factors relevant for IMRT and audit of MLC positional performance, (2) audit of single clinical IMRT field dose delivery and (3) ‘end-to-end’ audit (imaging, planning, dose delivery) for multiple field IMRT techniques. New procedures and phantoms are being developed and examined through multi-centre pilot studies involving CRP participants. Materials and methods: The CRP has attracted research groups from 14 countries across the world. The first study was conducted for the audit of beam output of high energy photon beams for five selected field sizes of 22 cm2 to 1010 cm2, defined by an MLC and corresponding to representative segment sizes used for IMRT treatment planning. The beam outputs calculated by participants’ TPSs were compiled by the IAEA and compared to the datasets published in literature [1]. Results: The results are available for 29 beam/TPS combinations. The agreement within 1%-2% between the TPS calculated output and the literature data was obtained for field sizes > 44 cm2, whereas for field sizes 33 cm2, the TPS doses were overestimated by 3%-4% as compared to the literature data. Discussion: Challenges in TPS commissioning for small fields were highlighted by this study; it may be necessary to correct deviations in the TPS calculation for small segment sizes in the delivery of IMRT once such deviations are confirmed by careful measurements. Acknowledgments D. Followill, S. Kry, D. Thwaites, J. Povall, D. Georg, W. Lechner, M. Tenhunen, M. Tomsej, A. Carlsson Tedgren, M. Arib, W. Bulski, K. Chelminski, S. Luo, V. Alves, J. Samper, D. Ekendahl, R. B. Devu, S. Sirimanoroth, S. P. Vinatha. References: [1] Followill D.S. et al., The Radiological Physics Center’s standard datatset for small field size output factors, J. Appl. Clin. Med. Phys., vol. 13, Nr 5, 2012, p. 282-289 (erratum vol. 15, Nr 2, 2014, p. 356-357). MULTIVARIATE STATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF FACTORS RELATED TO MEAN ANNUAL INDOOR RADON CONCENTRATIONS OF GREEK DWELLINGS Dimitrios Nikolopoulos a, Sofia Kottou b, Ermioni Petraki a,c, Efstratios Vogiannis d, Christos Michail e, Anna Louizi b, Yiannis Chaldeos a, Panayiotis H. Yannakopoulos a. a TEI of Piraeus, Department of Electronic Computer Systems Engineering, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Aigaleo, Greece; b University of Athens, Medical School, Department of Medical Physics, Mikras Asias 75, 11527, Athens, Greece; c Brunel University, Department of Engineering and Design, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, London, UK; d Evangeliki Model School of Smyrna, Lesvou 4, 17123, Nea Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Smyrni, Greece; e TEI of Athens, Department of Biomedical Engineering, A.Spyridonos, 12210, Aigaleo, Greece Url:http://env-hum-comp-res.teipir.gr/ Between 1994 and 2000 a large scale radon survey was implemented in Greece with calibrated radon dosimeters based on CR-39 polymers. The dosimeters were exposed for a period of twelve-months. From the measured dwelling sample, 963 apartments were accompanied with fully filled questionnaires. The questionnaires were designed according to the international standards so as to account for factors that would potentially affect mean annual indoor radon concentrations. The available questionnaires were rechecked recently during 2012-14 with multivariate statistics in order to quantify possible inter-connections. Important factors were the following: i) area, ii) building levelfloor, iii) ground type, iv) basement, v) building type, vi) construction year, vii) building walls contact, viii) wall materials, ix) floor materials. Several multivariate methods were employed in the analysis, namely (i) Linear Regression Analysis, (ii) One way or multiway ANOVA, (iii) General MANOVA, (iv) Stepwise Regression Analysis and (v) Principal Components Analysis. As most significant, it was found that approximately 0.1% of the examined dwellings were associated with outlier radon concentrations. Significant were the statistical correlations between indoor measured mean annual indoor radon concentrations and ”building level-floor” factor, as well as ”wall materials” factor. The findings of this work provided weak evidence regarding potential association of the factors ”building type”, ”construction year” and “floor materials” with mean annual radon concentration. Minor was the link with ”building walls contact” factor. It is important to note, that the employed statistical methods provided significant different results for the relative efficiency of the investigated factors. MODELING OF RADON AND PROGENY CONCENTRATION PEAKS IN THERMAL SPAS: RESULTS FROM THE SEMI-EMPIRICAL APPROACH FROM SEVERAL SPAS IN GREECE Dimitrios Nikolopoulos a, Efstratios Vogiannis b, Sofia Kottou c, Yiannis Chaldeos d, Ermioni Petraki a, e, Panayiotis H. Yannakopoulos a. a TEI of Piraeus, Department of Electronic Computer Systems Engineering, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Aigaleo, Greece; b Evangeliki Model School of Smyrna, Lesvou 4, 17123, Nea Smyrni, Greece; c University of Athens, Medical School, Department of Medical Physics, Mikras Asias 75, 11527, Athens, Greece; d IEEE Student, TEI of Piraeus, Department of Electronic Computer Systems Engineering, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Aigaleo, Greece; e Department of Engineering and Design, Brunel University, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, London, UK Url:http://env-hum-comp-res.teipir.gr/ Radon and its short progeny (218Po, 214Pb, 214Bi and 214Po) are important radioactive indoor air pollutants that are well recognised for their impact on humans. Thermal spas are indoor environments which are identified as significant sources of human radiation burden due to bathing and working. Especially the transient radon and progeny concentration peaks have gained scientific attention because these were associated with short-term impact in patients and personnel. Between 2007 and 2013, novel first-order modelling was achieved for the transient concentration peaks of both radon and progeny. This type of modelling is based on a dynamical set of first-order differential equations describing radon generation and decay. These equations are combined with measurements and several reference values constituting a so-called semiempirical approach. Real-data are used as model inputs. These are utilised through numerical modelling and the use of the Levenberg-Marquard method in estimating progeny concentrations in non-measured time moments. Through these, several exposure and dosimetric quantities are calculated. In this work, the model will be presented along with several verifications derived from the spas of Ikaria, Loutraki, and Lesvos Island (Greece). It worth to note that through this type of modelling several non-easily 17 measured parameters -such as the attachment rate and deposition rate constants- are retrieved. Attachment rate constants ranged between 0.2 and 55 h-1. Deposition rate constants were found different between the short-lived radon decay, namely between 0.2 and 8 h-1 for attached nuclei and 0.4 and 64 h-1 for unattached nuclei. Mean annual effective doses range between 0.001 mSv and 0.6 mSv for patients and 0.001 mSv and 19 mSv for personnel. Differentiations were observed between the various spa centers depending on the radon potential of the thermal waters, the water entrance techniques, the building characteristics and other parameters. RADON ENTRANCE AND ITS DAILY MOVEMENT INTO A CLOSED DETACHED OF THREE LEVEL HOUSE Efstratios Vogiannis a, Dimitrios Nikolopoulos b, Maria Koukou c, d, Sofia Kottou e, Michail Vrachopoulos c, d. a Evangeliki Model School of Smyrna, Lesvou 4, 17123, Nea Smyrni, Greece; b TEI of Piraeus, Department of Electronic Computer Systems Engineering, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Aigaleo, Greece; c University of Applied Sciences, Mechanical Engineering Department, Energy and Environmental Research Laboratory, Central Greece 34400, Psachna, Evia, Greece; d Department of Mechanical Engineering, TEI of Halkis, 34400, Psachna, Evia, Greece; e Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Athens, Mikras Asias 75, 11527, Athens, Greece Url:http://env-hum-comp-res.teipir.gr/ An old house of three levels (ground floor, 1st and 2nd floor connected with internal stairs) was selected for the investigation of radon entrance and its daily movement among house levels. An Alpha Guard radon monitor was situated in the middle of each level. Continuous measurements were taken for a week period in 10 min intervals. Simultaneous measurements were taken for pressure, humidity and temperature, and also differences on pressure and temperature between house floors. Weather data also recorded during survey period. Measurement results were investigated for the purpose to discover the factors that affect radon entrance and movement through house levels. Main radon entrance indoors is the basement floor and secondary the building materials. This was due to the type of house selected, constructed from radon free materials, especially the upper floor. House remained closed during measurements to eliminate every other factor that affects radon movement. In the other hand the closed house ensured fixed air exchange rate which is the major factor that affects radon indoor concentration. Air driven forces due to differences in pressure and temperature were analysed in relation to outdoor air conditions. Weather conditions strongly affect radon entrance from basement. Indoor air gradually heated produces an upper stream known as chimney effect, drives radon from the floor working as vacuum. Movement from down to upper floor due to chimney effect was found not so strongly depended and it was probably due to high radon molecular weight. Radon concentrations in ground floor show a daily variation standard module. Peaks appeared when the previous described mechanism as vacuum amplifies the driven forces. PRELIMINARY STUDY OF DISTRIBUTION OF INDOOR EMR IN GREEK DWELLINGS Sofia Kottou PhD Associate Professor a, Dimitrios Nikolopoulos PhD Associate Professor b, Dionysios Koulougliotis Professor c, Konstantinos Pouliezos MSc c, Efstratios Vogiannis PhD Director d, Nikolaos Gorgolis TEI Student b, Roxanne Suzzet Lorilla TEI Student c, Georgios Kefalas TEI Student c, Sotiria Potozi TEI Student c, Yiannis Chaldeos TEI Student b, Theodore Sevvos TEI Student b, Ermioni Petraki MSc, PhD candidate b, Christos Michail MSc, PhD d, Panayiotis Moustanis Assis. Professor e, Anastasios Kalimeris Assis. Professor c, Panayiotis H. Yannakopoulos PhD Professor b. a Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Athens, Mikras Asias 75, 11527, Athens, Greece; 18 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) b Department of Computer Electronic Engineering, TEI of Piraeus, Greece, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Athens, Greece; c Department of Environmental Technology, Technological Educational Institute (TEI) of Ionian Islands, Neo Ktirio Panagoula, 29100, Zakynthos, Greece; d Evangeliki Model School of Smyrna, Lesvou 4, 17123, Nea Smirni, Greece; e Textiles Department, TEI of Piraeus, Greece, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Athens, Greece Purpose: The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) recently published two monographs in which evaluates ‘extremely low-frequency magnetic fields’ and ‘radiofrequency electromagnetic fields’ as “possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B)”. In the frame of an air quality study this work hopes to contribute with outdoor and indoor electromagnetic field strength measurements. Material and method: Different electromagnetic sources were investigated in a variety of environmental locations, namely houses and workplaces in urban, suburban and rural areas. Based on the suggestions of IARC and WHO International EMF Project’s RF Research Agenda, measurement surveys are conducted to characterize population exposures from all radio frequency (RF) sources. Emphasis was placed on new wireless technologies, mobile telecommunications and DECT telephony. Up-to-date 80 indoor locations are accessed, performing measurements with a personal exposure meter (Antennessa, EME SPY 120, Satimo, France) and an Aaronia spectrum analyser (HF & NF). Focused research has been carried out to further identify places of interest and to standardize the protocol of measurements. Results: Maximal electric field values were below 5 V/m in most cases, however increased values of up to 3 kV/m were addressed near high voltage power transmission lines. Wi-Fi frequencies were identified as the main electromagnetic radiation source indoors, followed by mobile phone and DECT frequencies whenever the later were ON. Rural areas presented significantly lower electric field values: approximately 3-5 times lower than those of urban areas. Magnetic field values were in most cases below 2 mT. Increased values of up to 6 mT were occasionally observed. Conclusion: The results of the above study show that people inside a house are exposed to electromagnetic radiation mainly from the Wi-Fi modem and the mobile phone and DECT facilities when in use, although, the intensity depends greatly on the distance. EMR BACKGROUND MEASUREMENTS IN A SMALL TOWN Efstratios Vogiannis PhD Director a, Dimitrios Nikolopoulos PhD Associate Professor b, Sofia Kottou PhD Associate Professor c, Panayiotis H. Yannakopoulos PhD Professor b. a Evangeliki Model School of Smyrna, Lesvou 4, 17123, Nea Smirni, Greece; b Department of Computer Electronic Engineering, TEI of Piraeus, Greece, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Athens, Greece; c Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Athens, Mikras Asias 75, 11527, Athens, Greece url: http://env-hum-comp-res.teipir.gr/ Background Electro-Magnetic Radiation (EMR) measurements were carried out in the urban region of Mytilene town sited on the east side of Lesvos Island, Greece. More than 50 measurement points were recorded in accordance to a pre-defined measurement plan based on a GIS. All possible sources of background EMR were investigated, namely in the frequency area between 9 KHz e 1.5 GHz. Point values were organised as measurement network-points on a generated digital map of the surveyed area. Network point values were also used to produce a digital map of background EMR in the town using GIS software. EMR measurements are time-depended according to the operation scheme of nearby existing base stations. To avoid severe timebias, several repeated measurements were carried out in every point from which the average value was finally employed. The produced digital map could be considered more-or-less adequate of the actual background electromagnetic field in units of electric field strength (V/m). Since the distribution of EM base stations varies progressively due to new installations, power-density changes and other technical causes, maps delineate profiles adequate only for restricted periods near the measurements. Due to this fact, different scenarios were introduced accounting for potential differentiations in the existing EM base stations network, as for example regarding their power and site. Putting their new characteristics on existing map GIS software, alternative background map were reconstructed according to the new conditions. This work is very useful for policy makers because it offers a scientific basis after an initial EMR background record, then every new installation could be checked out from the developed software. This could be a significant tool for over monitoring taking into account the promulgated rules and limits for EMR. Demonstrated map shows points and neighborhoods of high electric field values up to several V/m. Measurement points were selected, if it is possible (regarding free area from high constructions) near schools, kindergartens and playgrounds. Findings were impressive for such a small town and alarming for new installations. HURST EXPONENT OF RADON PROFILES INDOORS IN ATHENS, GREECE Temenos Nikos a, Filtisakos Spyridon a, Chaldeos Yiannis a, Nikolopoulos Dimitrios b, Yannakopoulos Panayiotis b, Petraki Ermioni c, Kottou Sofia d. a IEEE Student, TEI of Piraeus, Department of Electronic Computer Systems Engineering, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Aigaleo, Greece; b TEI of Piraeus, Department of Electronic Computer Systems Engineering, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 12244, Aigaleo, Greece; c Brunel University, Department of Engineering and Design, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, London, UK; d University of Athens, Medical School, Department of Medical Physics, Mikras Asias 75, 11527, Athens, Greece Url: http://env-hum-comp-res.teipir.gr/ Radon and progeny (218Po, 214Pb, 214Bi and 214Po) are important radioactive indoor air pollutants of impact to humans. Radon enters buildings through gaps around pipes or cables and through cracks in floors. Human exposure depends on building characteristics, local geology and other parameters. All progeny nuclei may attach to aerosols, dust and water droplets creating hence radioactive mixtures which enter human lungs. This work focused on estimation of Hurst exponents (H) in daily radon signals collected in dwellings with Alpha Guard. H ranges between 0 < H < 1 and characterises the persistence properties of the recorded fluctuations. For H ¼ 0.5 there is no correlation between the process increments. As it is well-known, in random walk which models classical Brownian diffusion the walker follows a random path driven by nonmemory dynamics. Whenever the range is 0.5 < H < 1 it is identified, then that persistence of the signal (super-diffusion), i.e. if the amplitude of fluctuations increases in one time interval and it is likely to continue increasing in the period immediately following. The accumulation of fluctuations is faster than in classical Brownian motion. On the contrary the range 0 < H < 0.5 suggests anti-persistence or clustering (subdiffusion), i.e. if the fluctuations increase in one period, it is likely to continue decreasing during the period immediately following, and vice versa. Finally at the limit H ¼ 0 it does not grow at all and the signal is stationary. Hurst exponents were calculated by the R/S method in order to identify whether radon dynamics are governed by persistent, anti-persistent behaviour or if they are uncorrelated. We considered also whether the R/S method verified the values of the H exponent estimated by fractal spectral analysis. During years 2012-2013, 145 dwellings were accessed and their radon concentrations were measured. By employing sliding window R/S analysis of window length eight, Hurst exponents were found to be between the range of 0.5 < H < 1 in the majority of the situations. The latter finding indicates persistency. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) IMAGING PERFORMANCE OF A GD2O2S:PR,CE,F SCINTILLATOR COATED CMOS IMAGING SENSOR C. Michail a, I. Seferis a, b, I. Valais a, V. Koukou c, N. Kalyvas a, A. Bakas d, G. Fountos a, I. Kandarakis a. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens,122 10 Athens, Greece; b Faculty of Chemistry, Wroclaw University, 14F Joliot-Curie Street, 50-383 Wroclaw, Poland; c Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion GR 26504, Greece; d Medical Radiological Technology, Faculty of Health and Caring Professions / Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Athens, Greece Aim: The aim of the present study was to investigate the imaging performance of gadolinium oxysulfide powder scintillators, doped with praseodymium, cerium and fluorine (Gd2O2S:Pr,Ce,F) coupled to a high resolution active pixel CMOS imaging sensor. Methods: Gd2O2S:Pr,Ce,F is a non-hygroscopic material, emitting green light with short decay time. For the purposes of this study, a scintillating screen with coating thickness of 35.7 mg/cm2, was prepared in our laboratory from powder (Phosphor Technology, Ltd) by sedimentation on silica substrates. The CMOS sensor was coupled to the Gd2O2S:Pr,Ce,F scintillator screen. Imaging performance was obtained by means of experimentally determined parameters such as the signal transfer properties (STP), the modulation transfer function (MTF) and the normalized noise power spectrum (NNPS). Measurements were performed using the standard IEC-RQA5 radiation beam quality (70 kVp). Results: It was found that the detector response function was linear for the exposure range under investigation. At 70 kVp, under the RQA 5 conditions, the Gd2O2S:Pr,Ce,F/CMOS combination can resolve 6.88 cycles/mm, at MTF10% and the noise levels were found to decrease from 6.42X10-6 mm2, at 1.38 cycles/mm to less than 2.23X10-6 mm2 at 5.2 cycles/mm. Conclusion: MTF and NNPS values of the Gd2O2S:Pr,Ce,F/CMOS combination were found with high values suggesting an acceptable imaging performance showing potential interest for non-CT medical imaging (i.e. dental radiology) or industrial digital radiography. Acknowledgement: This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “ARISTEIA” project MISCIRLU code 1476 of the “Education & Lifelong Learning” Operational Programme. APPLICATION OF TUMOR BED BOOST BY TWO DIFFERENT METHODS Zygogianni Anna M.D,Ph.D a, Kouloulias Vassilios M.Sc., M.D, Ph.D b, Kyrgias George M.D,Ph.D c, Armpilia Christina M.Sc a, Antypas Christos M.Sc., Ph.D a, Theodorou Kiki M.Sc., Ph.D c, Kouvaris John M.D,Ph.D a. a Kapodistrian University of Athens, Medical School, 1st Radiology Department, Aretaieion Hospital, Greece; b Kapodistrian University of Athens, Medical School, 2st Radiology Department, Attikon Hospital, Greece; c University of Thessalia, Medical School, Radiotherapy Department of Larissa, Greece Aim: We evaluate acute and late radiation toxicity, and the effectiveness of the radiation therapy of the two radiotherapeutic hypofractionated schedules using two different planning techniques of delivering radiation boost using 3D conformal radiation therapy (3DCRT). Method: Eight one patients were studied, between May 2004 and December 2010. The patients were retrospectively selected regarding with either concomitant (group A) or sequential (group B) boost for tumor bed in two groups. In the first group, 27 patients received 2.3 Gy up to 46 Gy in the whole breast tissue and it was added a concomitant boost covering tumor bed as a second daily fraction of 0.4 Gy, so that the total tumor bed boost was 54 Gy. In the second group, 54 patients received radiotherapy with a total prescription dose of 53Gy by 2.65Gy per fraction, in 20 fractions, over 25 days. The last four fractions were delivered as a 19 sequential tumor boost. Using the linear quadratic model, BED has been calculated for the whole breast dose and total boost dose volumes. These values in the first radiotherapy regimen used were 72.5 Gy4 and 90.5 Gy4 , respectively. In the second one they were 70.5 Gy4 and 88.1 Gy4, respectively. Results: The statistical analysis of the comparison between the two methods, showed that cosmetic results, in terms of skin toxicity score, was significantly worse in integrated boost group, for time ranging from the completion of radiotherapy until 12th months thereafter. After the first year post irradiation the toxicity was reduced to minimum in both groups, while the Kruskal-Wallis H Test showed a significant (P<0.05) superiority of group B in skin toxicity in terms of overall follow-up. With a median follow up of 24 months, no patient showed local or regional disease recurrence. Conclusions: There were significant differences in the scoring of erythema, in patients receiving an incorporated boost compared with patients treated by sequential boost. The higher skin reactions were observed in the group with the concomitant boost and especially identified in the application area of the intergraded boost. This can be avoided by the application of IMRT technique whereas the dose distribution is more smooth and homogeneous SOFT-TISSUE MATCHING METHODS FOR LUNG CANCER RADIOTHERAPY - BENEFITS, LIMITATIONS AND MARGIN DETERMINATION Fatma Rahma a, b, Wiviann Ottosson a,c, Claus F. Behrens a, David € stro € m a, Patrik Sibolt a. a Department of Oncology, Radiotherapy Research Sjo Unit, HerlevHospital, University of Copenhagen, DK-2730 Herlev, Denmark; b Department of Medical Radiation Physics, Clinical Sciences, Lund University, Sweden; c Center for Nuclear Technologies, TechnicalUniversity of Denmark, DTU Risø Campus, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark Background: The purpose of this study was to evaluate five different CBCT semi-automatic soft-tissue match methods for lung cancer patients and to calculate the corresponding CTV to PTV margins, both for primary tumor and lymphnodes. Material and methods: For 23 lung cancer patients (16 NSCLC, 7 SCLC) treated with radiotherapy, 135 weekly CBCT set-up images were retrospectively matched to the planning CTs byfive different match methods using the registration software Offline Review, version 10.0 (Varian Medical Systems). Four match methods utilized the volume of interest (VOI) of the 4DCT defined GTV, including the internal motion (GTV-T/ IM), plus a 2, 5, 10 or 20 mmsymmetrical margin, respectively. The fifth match method used a square VOI enclosing the GTV-T with a 10 mm symmetrical margin. An intensity range of [-150;150] HU was used for automatic soft-tissue matches. Residual GTV-T/IM set-up deviations in all directions were studied for each match and PTV-T margins were calculated. Additionally, stable surrogates close to GTV-N was used for the residual GTV-N set-up deviation measurements and PTV-N margin calculations. Results: All match methods gave similarresidual GTV-T/IM set-up deviations, ranging between [0;3] mm (62 % within 0-1 mm, 34 % within 1-2 mm, and 4% within 2-3 mm), resulting in [5.2;5.8] mm PTV-T margins. Match methods utilizing larger VOIs were more stable compared to match methods using smaller VOIs. Auto match on small targets (<3 cm3) was problematic, and not possible for match method 5. For 77 % of the patients with lymph nodes, the main bronchi area was a suitable stable surrogate. For the remaining lateral GVT-Ns the aortic arch and the main pulmonary artery were suitable as surrogates. Residual GTV-N set-up deviations ranged between [-8;10] mm resulting in PTV-N margins between [6;9.8] mm. Discussion: Forsemi-automatic soft-tissuematch on the primary tumor,match within GTV-T/IM witha 10 or 20 mmmargin extensionused as matching VOIs were most appropriate. For small tumors (<3 cm3), matching manually on GTV-T/IM itself is advisable. The main bronchi area is a suitable surrogate primarily for centrally positionedmediastinal GTV-N. 20 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Results: The results derived by the simulations with GATE, were then compared to the experimental data obtained by the NEMA NU-2-2001 protocol. Scatter fraction, count loses and randoms were the main points of interest. Discussion: Good agreement was observed between the results of the experimental data and GATE simulated results. ASSESSMENT OF DOSE ADMINISTRATION CONSISTENCY IN PET/CT N. Sgouros a, T. Stroubinis a, A. Samartzis a, P. Rondogianni a, I. Datseris a. a Department of Nuclear Medicine, Evangelismos General Hospital, Athens , Greece Background: In this work we assess the consistency of the dose administration process of 18F-FDG in the PET/CT establishment of Evangelismos General Hospital. In detail, we retrospectively assess the dose administration accuracy for a three year period and evaluate the dose consistency over two shifts. Both shifts utilized an ANZAI medical semi-automated dispenser. In the first shift trainees are supervised by experienced medical physicists while in the second shift dose administration was performed by experienced professionals. Materials and methods: The data utilized in this study were collected from 2011 through the end of 2013 and were properly anonymized by removing patients’ demographic details. The resulting sample after removing invalid entries contains 4038 records. In order to robustly assess the administration accuracy the initially prepared (PD ) and syringe residual doses (RD ) were measured and the nominal dose (ND ) for each patient was calculated. In order to provide a robust and simple measure we utilized ratio r calculated by Eq. 1 and already proposed by the authors. r¼ Figure 1. GTV-T/IM residual deviation after 3DOF soft-tissue match (utilizing GTV-T/ IM plus a 2, 5, 10 and 20 mm symmetrical margin, and square VOI enclosing the GTV-T with a 10 mm symmetrical margin). PD RD ND (1) Results: In order to examine the accuracy of dose administration the Shapiro e Wilk test is us ed for testing normality of the r values distributions prior to using the t-test. The mean values, standard deviations and the p-values for the Shapiro - Wilk test and the t-test are summarized in Table 1. Table 1. Calculated Statistics MODELLING BIOGRAPH 2 PET/CT SCANNER WITH GATE D. Nikolopoulos a, I. Valais b, C. Michail b, S. Kottou c, N. Chatzisavvas a, P. Yannakopoulos a, V. Malaxianakis b. a Department of Computer Electronic Engineering, Technological Education Institute of Piraeus, Greece, Petrou Ralli & Thivon 250, 122 44, Aigaleo, Athens, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute of of Athens, Agiou Spiridonos, 12210, Aigaleo, Greece; c Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece Background: A commercial PET scanner (Siemens, Biograph 2) previously tested through experiments according to the NEMA NU-2-2001 protocol, was simulated, using the GATE v.6.1 open source software. Materials and methods: The study aimed: (a) to port previously developed and validated GATE codes to the more stable version of GATE v.6.1; (b) to evaluate the overall applicability and validity of the model and to investigate potential sources of bias (c) to examine possible alterations in the results caused by different employed sources, i.e. F-18 (Fluorine-18), O-15 (Oxygen-15) and C-11 (Carbon-11). All modules of the Biograph 2 scanner were described in GATE, namely the detector ring, crystal blocks, PMTs, shielding, electronics etc. In addition, the energy and spatial resolution of the employed detectors and their contribution to the overall system’s efficiency were taken into account. Groups Mean value Standard Deviation p-values Shapiro - Wilk t-test Trainees Professionals 0.9849 0.9882 0.054 0.043 0.2538 0.3102 0.8539 As shown in Table 1 both group samples follow the normal distribution (p>0.05) and have mean values very close to unity which is in line with the design of quantity r . Furthermore, comparison of the standard deviations qualifies both samples for the t-test. The t-test shows (p>0.05) that the two populations have normal distributions with equal mean values. Discussion: The results show that there is no significant difference in dose administration distributions between trainees and professionals. This fact is attributed in part to the semi-automated dispenser used in the process and in part to the standardization of the process and supervision of the medical physicists during the shift where trainees administer the doses. Hence consistent and homogeneous dose administration is achieved throughout both shifts assuring proper dose delivery to the patients of the PET/CT setup. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) ENERGY AND ANGULAR DEPENDENCE OF THERMOLUMINESCENT DETECTORS IN THE DENTAL CBCT ENERGY RANGE. a a b Andreas Stratis , Reinhilde Jacobs , Ria Bogaerts , Hilde Bosmans b. a Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Department of Imaging and Pathology, OMFS-IMPATH Research Group, Campus St. Raphael, Kapucijnenvoer 33, Leuven 3000, Belgium; b University Hospitals of Leuven, Herestraat 49, Leuven 3000, Belgium Background: This work is part of a research study on the validation of a Monte Carlo dosimetry tool dedicated for patient specific dosimetry in dental Cone Beam CT. An investigation towards the angular and energy dependence of TLDs, intended to be used for in vivo skin dosimetry in dental CBCT and validate the framework, was carried out to examine their response at different angles of exposure and kV settings. Material and methods: The HVLs of two CBCT units (3D Accuitomo 170, Soredex Scanora 3D) were measured and their spectra were simulated by adding Al filters to the window of a general radiology xray tube (Philips SRO 2550). An in house built experimental set up was used to mount the TLDs and rotate them from 0 up to 80 in 20 steps, at 85 and at 90 (Figure1). Twenty four field TLD-100 dosimeters, calibrated with a Sr-90/Y-90 source resulting in Element Correction Coefficients ranging from 0.85 to 1.1, were used in the experiment and the readout was performed by a Harshaw 6600-plus reader. Six pairs of TLDs were exposed in air at 80kV up to 100kV (in 5kV steps) and at 110kV with a tube current of 200mA and exposure time of 500msec at each angular step. The mean dose reading of each pair was then compared to the air kerma measured with an ionization chamber (Farmer FC65-G, IBA Dosimetry) at the same location. Results: Conversion factors were produced for each kV and angle of exposure (Table 1, Figures 2.1-2.4). The Pearson’s parametric test was applied to examine any correlation in the response of TLDs with the exposure angle and the beam energy. The statistical analysis showed that there is neither energy dependency at each angular step (-0.16<r<0.2 for Accuitomo, -0.19<r<0.19 for Scanora), nor angular dependency at each energy step up to 80 (-0.19<r<0.2 for Accuitomo, -0.15<r<0.19 for Scanora). Discussion: Based on the resulting independency, there is no need to apply correction factors as the tube rotates around the patient. However, for higher angles up to 90 a gradual decrease in the response of TLDs is observed which may occasionally necessitate the introduction of specific conversion factors. 21 (continued ) Conversion factors - 3D Accuitomo 170 kV Anglew 0 95 1.048 100 1.059 110 1.026 Conversion factors kV Angle 0 80 1.037 85 1.055 90 1.101 95 1.059 100 1.092 10 1.014 20 1.023 1.017 1.040 - Soredex 20 0.997 1.012 1.060 1.018 1.031 1.014 40 60 1.056 1.023 1.058 1.051 1.081 1.046 Scanora 3D 40 1.050 1.050 1.095 1.085 1.030 1.053 60 1.000 1.020 1.071 1.045 1.012 1.022 80 85 90 1.039 1.044 1.032 1.238 1.241 1.297 1.576 1.538 1.623 80 1.024 1.041 1.090 1.046 1.091 1.011 85 1.190 1.253 1.316 1.222 1.303 1.193 90 1.604 1.537 1.330 1.654 1.446 1.500 Figures 2.1-2.4. Energy and angular dependence of TLDsĂ BIOLOGICAL VERSUS PHYSICAL BASED OPTIMIZATION FOR VMAT AND IMRT TREATMENT OF PROSTATE AND HEAD-AND-NECK CANCER Maria Andreou a, Sofia Kordolaimi a, Efi Koutsouveli b, Panagiotis Sandilos b, Constantinos Dardoufas c, Evangelos Georgiou a, Pantelis Karaiskos a, b. a Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens; b Medical Physics Department, Hygeia Hospital, Athens, Greece; c Department of Radiation Oncology, Hygeia Hospital, Athens, Greece Figure 1. Experimental set upĂ Table 1. Conversion factors Conversion factors - 3D Accuitomo 170 kV 80 85 90 Anglew 0 20 40 60 80 85 90 1.026 1.007 1.084 1.082 0.961 1.027 1.094 1.024 1.072 1.035 0.998 1.100 1.068 0.999 1.061 1.354 1.214 1.264 1.645 1.465 1.748 (continued on next page) Keywords: VMAT, IMRT, head and neck, physical optimization, biological optimization, Monaco Volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT) is a novel form of Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) that allows more degrees of freedom such as variation of dose rate, gantry speed and collimator angle in addition to dynamically changing field shape. The purpose of this study was to compare two different optimization approaches used for IMRT and VMAT treatment for two cancer types: prostate and headand-neck cancer. Ten prostate and ten head-and-neck patients were studied respectively. Different plans were created for every patient, using two different optimization approaches: a) biological cost functions and b) Dose-Volume-Histograms (DVH) functions using a commercially available treatment planning system (Monaco, Elekta). 22 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Plan comparison was performed in terms of delivery efficiency, target coverage and critical organ protection by utilizing physical (DVH values, conformity index-CI, target dose inhomogeneity- TDI, gradient index- GI) and radiobiological indices (tumor control probability- TCP, normal tissue complication probability- NTCP). Results of the different plans were compared using the two-sided Wilcoxon matched-pair signed rank test with a threshold of p ¼0.05 for statistical significance. Overall, high quality plans in terms of target coverage and critical organ protection were provided by the two different optimization approaches although differences between the compared plan approaches exist, respectively for each case. All plans had comparable target dose coverage, conformity and gradient indexes, with VMAT plans presenting increased delivery efficiency compared to the IMRT ones. Concerning organs at risk (OARs) the optimization approach based on the biological cost functions was found superior to the conventional one using DVH functions for both prostate and head and neck cases. In conclusion, biological optimization can generate superior plans in terms of OARS sparing using either IMRT or VMAT technique. RADIATION EXPOSURE OF CAREGIVERS OF PATIENTS UNDERGOING PRRT WITH 177LU-DOTATATE FOR THE TREATMENT OF NEUROENDOCRINE TUMORS S.P. Ioannidou a, A.P. Stefanoyiannis a, E. Carinou b, S.N. Chatziioannou a, T. Liotsou a, A. Prentakis a, E.P. Efstathopoulos a. a Department of Nuclear Medicine, University General Hospital of Athens'' Attikon'', 1 Rimini St, Athens 12462, Greece; b Greek Atomic Energy Commission, Ag. Paraskevi, Attiki PO Box 60092, 15310, Greece Background: The potential radiation hazards of caregivers of patients undergoing Radionuclide Therapies (RNTs) has been investigated in several clinical trials. However, the respective literature regarding measurements in Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapies (PRRTs) is scarce. Aim: We sought to assess the radiation exposure of caregivers of patients undergoing PRRTs with 177Lu-DOTATATE for the treatment of Neuroendocrine Tumors (NETs), as well as to compare theoretically calculated and real recorded doses. Materials and methods: The radiation exposure of 11 caregivers of patients undergoing PRRT between November 2013 and March 2014 in ''Attikon'' university hospital was assessed. The personal doses were measured for 7 consecutive days after treatment using thin layer thermoluminescent dosemeters (MCP-Ns TLDs). The administered dose was around 7400MBq. Exposure rate for specific distances and time intervals was used to calculate the theoretically expected doses to caregivers and the effective half life time (Teff). The mean daily consumption of liquids by the patients was compared to the caregivers' doses. Results: The mean total recorded dose of caregivers was 0.1 mSv (range: 0.00-0.29 mSv); around 70% of which was recorded at the first 3 days after treatment. The mean expected dose was 0.78 mSv (range: 0.16-1.59 mSv). The mean daily consumption of liquids by the patients at the same time interval was 2.1 lt (range: 1.0-3.5 lt). The mean Teff was 19 h (range: 9-30 h). Conclusions: The recorded doses to caregivers were considerably lower than the established dose constraints for people assisting patients, when radiation protection instructions are followed by both patients and their caregivers. The theoretically calculated doses were found to be slightly higher than the recorded, but still at very low levels. A 3 or 4-day period of implementation of radiation protection instructions appears sufficient to ensure low radiation exposure to the caregivers. In addition, daily consumption of 2 liters of liquids was associated with the observed very low radiation exposure of caregivers. Effective half life time varies among patients, indicating the necessity for individualized radiation protection instructions. Further studies with larger samples are warranted to confirm our results. X-RAY LUMINESCENCE EFFICIENCY AND DETECTOR QUANTUM GAIN OF LUPO4:EU NANOPHOSPHOR I.E. Seferis a, C.M. Michail b, J. Zeler a, I.G. Valais b, T. Sideras b, P.F. Liaparinos b, N.I. Kalyvas a, G.P. Fountos b, A. Bakas c, I.S. Kandarakis b, E. Zych a. a Faculty of Chemistry, Wroclaw University, 14F Joliot-Curie Street, 50-383 Wroclaw, Poland; b Department of Biomedical engineering, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, 12210 Athens, Greece; c Department of Medical Radiological Technology, Technological Educational Institute of Athens, 12210 Athens, Greece Background: Recently lanthanide orthophosphates (LnPO4) have been considered as good hosts for rear earth doping to produce phosphors. Lutetium orthophosphate (LuPO4) has attract the attention because of the high density (9.4 gr/cm3) and the high atomic number of Lu (Z¼71) which imparts LuPO4 with high stopping power for ionizing radiation. The purpose of the present study was to experimentally evaluate parameters related to the light emission efficiency of a 32.4 mg/cm2 powder nanophosphor screen of europium doped LuPO4 (LuPO4:Eu), under radiographic imaging conditions. Parameters such as the X-ray Luminescence Efficiency-XLE (Light energy flux over incident X-ray energy flux), Detector Quantum Gain-DQG (optical quanta emitted per incident X-ray quantum) were evaluated. Materials and methods: The hydrothermal synthesis of LuPO4:5%Eu was performed using water solution of Lu(NO3)3 and (NH)4HPO4 in pH¼2. The process was executed at 230 C for 10 hours. The raw powder was separated from the solution, washed and dried. Finally, post-fabrication heating was completed at 1350C in air. Despite the high-temperature treatment a submicron size of grains was maintained with average diameter of about 500 nm. The experimental setup used for the evaluation of XLE and DQG comprised a light integration sphere (Oriel 70451) coupled to a photomultiplier (EMI 9798 B) with an extended sensitivity S-20 photocathode, enclosed within a bronze light tight chamber. The detailed experimental procedure is described in previous work of our group [1]. Results: DQG and XLE were found to decrease as the X-ray tube voltage was increased. This behavior is affected by the X-ray energy, since the absorption properties of X-rays, are reduced as a function of energy for the exposure conditions under consideration. The increasing part of those graphs from 70 to 80 kVp is attributed to the K- absorption edge of the LuPO4:Eu scintillator. Discussion: LuPO4:Eu appears to be a very interesting material for X-ray medical imaging. Although the screen is not optimized for use under radiographic conditions the results are very promising and certainly indicate broader and more thorough research on this material. References I. Seferis, C. Michail, I. Valais, J. Zeler, P. Liaparinos, G. Fountos, N. Kalyvas, S. David, F. Stromatia, E. Zych, I. Kandarakis, G. Panayiotakis, “Light emission efficiency and imaging performance of Lu2O3:Eu nanophosphor under Xray radiography conditions: Comparison with Gd2O2S:Eu,” Journal of Luminescence 151, 229-234, (2014). Acknowledgement This research has been supported by the Marie Curie Initial Training Networks (ITN) action under the LUMINET project, grant agreement no. 316906. A NEW APPROACH IN DUAL ENERGY MAMMOGRAPHY USING AN ACTIVE PIXEL CMOS DETECTOR V. Koukou a, N. Martini a, P. Sotiropoulou a, C. Michail b, I. Kandarakis b, A. Bakas c, E. Kounadi d, G. Nikiforidis a, G. Fountos b. a Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Patras, 265 00 Patras, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Egaleo, 122 10 Athens, Greece; c Medical Radiological Technology, Faculty of Health and Caring Professions Technological Educational Institution of Athens, Athens, Greece; d Health Ministry, SEYYP, Pireos 205 str, 11853, Athens, Greece Background: Dual energy X-ray mammography can suppress the contrast between adipose and glandular tissues and improve the detectability of microcalcifications (mCs). Two digital images that have been obtained with two different X-ray spectra, for the low- and high- energy, are used. Weighted subtraction of the logarithmic transform of these images is then performed to obtain a hybrid image that enhances microcalcifications. In this study, contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) is calculated and evaluated in the subtracted images of mCs in breast tissue. Materials and methods: A breast tissue equivalent phantom was constructed with Plexiglas slabs (total thickness 4cm) and a mixture of Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) hydroxyapatite (36.7%) and epoxy resin (63.3%) representing microcalcifications, ranging from 29 to 50mm. The phantom was doubly exposed to a prototype digital radiographic unit using a CMOS based imaging detector. The CMOS scintillator screen was Gd2O2S:Tb with surface density of 33.91 mg/cm2, placed in direct contact with the sensor. The pixel size of the sensor was 22.5mm. The total entrance surface dose was kept below 1mGy. The CNR of the subtracted images, obtained with the dual-energy algorithm (CNRDE), was compared with the CNR of the corresponding low energy image. Results: The results showed that a combination of 40 kVp and 70 kVp radiographs, for the low- and high- energy respectively, provides the best compromise between CNR and dose in the subtracted image. Furthermore, the CNRDE values were 3 to 4 times higher than the CNR values of the low energy image. Discussion: These results indicate that the proposed dual energy method is feasible and worthy of further study. Acknowledgement This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “Archimedes III: Funding of Research Groups in TEI of Athens” project of the “Education & Lifelong Learning” Operational Programme. DEVELOPMENT OF A TIMING CONTROL SYSTEM FOR LASER INDUCED FLUORESCENCE (LIF) IN MEDICAL APPLICATIONS Ioannis Karachalios a, Dimitrios Mathes a, Ioannis Valais a, Ioannis Vamvakas b, Ioannis Sianoudis c. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute (T.Е.I.) of Athens, 122 10 Athens, Greece,; b Department of Energy Technology Engineering, Technological Educational Institute (T.Е.І.) of Athens, 122 10 Athens, Greece; c Department of Optics & Optometry, Technological Educational Institute (T.Е.I.) of Athens, 122 10 Athens, Greece Background: Laser Induced Fluorescence (LIF) as a spectroscopic method is successfully used as optical complementary techniques in medicine, in order to characterize chemical, physical and optical properties in skin tissue and to investigate changes for diagnostic purposes. Materials and methods: The present study relates to the development of a timing control system addapted on a pulsed Laser and optical spectrometer setup, used for fluorescence measurement applications. By controlling the timing between the laser output pulse sequence and the reading of the induced fluorescence pulse, useful information on the material quality and its state can be acquired. Moreover this method can be applied on the characterization of human tissue samples for potential malignancies or skin cancer. The timing control circuitry is based on a microcontroller (RISC technology), programmed to accurately trigger a sequence of emissions and readouts between the pulsed laser and the spectrometer. Results: The timing control circuitry could accurately control the sequence of emissions and readouts between the pulsed laser and the spectrometer. Fluorescence measurements of UV-laser excited phosphor screens were performed and the fluorescence spectral response was acquired Conclusions: The current system offers a low-cost and versatile tool for application of LIF spectroscopy in studying biological samples with fluorescent properties. 23 Background: We have previously reported that adaptive responses induced by chronic exposure to higher than on-earth levels of radiation can greatly decrease radiation susceptibility of astronauts and help them better cope with the detrimental effects of the exposure to unpredictable sudden solar flares and coronal mass ejections which cause dramatic increase in radiation flux (1-3). We have also previously shown that traditional radioprotectors cannot be considered as efficient tools for reducing the risk of space radiation due to some basic limitations such as the very short time window for application of these agents and their considerable toxicity (4). Furthermore, we previously hypothesized that finding appropriate radiation mitigators with a post-exposure time window longer than 24 hours will be a cardinal goal in planning future manned space missions (5). Aims: The aim of the present study was to investigate the potential radiation mitigation effect of vitamin C that is known as an effective antioxidant and free radical scavenger. Materials and methods: One hundred twenty male Wistar albino rats weighing 250-300 g were randomized into the following study groups: I, control; II, Only exposure to gamma-radiation (LD 50/30); treated with a single dose of vitamin C, III, 1h before irradiation, IV, V and VI, 1h, 12h and 24 h after irradiation. Measurement of cell viability and proliferation was also performed by using MTT cell proliferation assay. Results: The survival rate in animals received vitamin C 1h, 12h and 24h after irradiation were 55 %, 60 %, and 80 %, respectively. On the other hand, the viability of cells in animals received vitamin C 1h, 12h and 24h after irradiation were 94.9 %, 99.0 %, and 100 %, respectively. The viability of the cells in animals only exposed to gamma rays was 50.1%. Conclusion: These findings clearly lead us to this conclusion that vitamin C can potentially be used up to 24 hours after exposure to high levels of ionizing radiation in cases such as the occurrence of currently unpredictable solar particle events. In this light, astronauts will have the critical opportunity of evaluating their radiation exposure, before choosing any therapeutic intervention. This long time window even allow them to consult expert scientists on the Earth to make sure if they should use any radiation mitigator. References 1. Mortazavi SMJ, Cameron JR, Niroomand-rad A. Adaptive response studies may help choose astronauts for long-term space travel. Advances in Space Research. 2003;31(6):1543-51. 2. Mortazavi S, Cameron J, Niroomand-Rad A. The life saving role of radioadaptive responses in long-term interplanetary space journeys. International Congress Series. 2005;1276:266-7. 3. Mortazavi SMJ, Cameron JR, Niroomand-rad A. Is the Adaptive Response an Efficient Protection Against the Detrimental Effects of Space Radiation. International Cosmic Ray Conference2003. p. 4299. 4. Mortazavi SMJ. Space radiobiology and the new era of induced radioresistance: Should traditional concepts be moved to science history museums? Technology and Health Care. 2013. 5. Mortazavi SMJ, Mozdarani H. Deep space missions and the issue of overcoming the problem of space radiation. International Journal of Radiation Research. 2013;11(3):199-202. PATIENT AND OCCUPATIONAL RADIATION DOSES FROM AORTIC ANEURYSM ENDOVASCULAR REPAIR FUTURE ROLE OF VITAMIN C IN RADIATION MITIGATION AND ITS POSSIBLE APPLICATIONS IN MANNED DEEP SPACE MISSIONS: SURVIVAL STUDY AND THE MEASUREMENT OF CELL VIABILITY S.M.J. Mortazavi a, b, S. Sharif-Zadeh c, H. Mozdarani d, M. Foadi e, M. Haghani a, E. Sabet f. a The Center for Research on Protection against Ionizing and Non-ionizing Radiation, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; b Medical Physics Department, School of Medicine, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; c Diagnostic Laboratory Science and Technology Research Center, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; d Department of Medical Genetics, School of Medicine, TarbiatModares University, Tehran, Iran; e Student Research Committee, School of Paramedical Sciences, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran; f Radiology Department, School of Paramedical Sciences, Yasouj University of Medical Sciences, Yasouj, Iran P. Raptou a, I. Pantos b, G. Voulalas c, C. Maltezos c, K. Kokkinis a, E. Efstathopoulos b. a Department of Radiology, KAT General Hospital, Athens, Greece; b 2nd Department of Radiology, General University Hospital Attikon, Athens, Greece; c Department of Vascular Surgery, KAT General Hospital, Athens, Greece Aim: Aortic aneurysm endovascular repair (EVAR) requires extended exposure to ionizing radiation. The aim of this study was to quantify the associated radiological risks to patients and operators. Methods: We performed a retrospective analysis of the maintained database on patients with aortic aneurysm undergoing EVAR. Measurements of procedural dose area product (DAP) and fluoroscopic time (FT) were obtained from the mobile C-arm unit and analyzed. We used previously published conversion factors to calculate the peak skin patient dose and operators’ effective dose during these procedures. 24 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Results: Between April 2012 and July 2013, 104 procedures with complete data were available which regarded abdominal aortic aneurysm repairs performed using sequential digital subtraction angiographic shots and vessel reconstruction. The C-arm was positioned anterior-posteriorly and in the cases of acute angled branch vessels that should be preserved, an oblique view was also mandatory. The respective average DAP and FT were 5698±4093 cGy$cm2 and 19.93±13.60 min. The calculated average patient peak skin dose was 0.2Gy which is 10 fold lower than the threshold for induction of skin erythema (2Gy) and the maximal calculated peak skin dose was 0.92Gy. The calculated average effective dose under the protective apron was 13mSv per procedure which corresponds to an annual effective dose of 1.35mSv for the primary operator due to EVAR procedures. Conclusion: The risk associated with radiation exposure during EVAR is relatively low for both the patient and the operator however measures to minimize intra-operative exposure should always be considered. RADIATION DOSE CALCULATIONS DURING PEDIATRIC BARIUM MEAL EXAMINATIONS USING MCNP5 AND PCXMC 2.0 MONTE CARLO CODES Аnastasios Dimitriadis a, Elsa Emmanouel Yakoumakis a, Tzamicha a, Triantafillia Makri b, Efstratios Karavasilis a, Evangelos Georgiou a. a Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias Str. Goudi 11527, Athens, Greece; b Radiological Imaging Department, Ag. Sofia Hospital, Levadias and Thivon, Goudi 11527, Athens, Greece Key words: Pediatric radiology, Radiation dose, Monte carlo simulation, DAP dosimetry Radiation protection and estimation of the radiological risk in pediatric radiology is essential due to children significant radiosensitivity and their greater health detriment. The purpose of this study is to estimate the organ and effective doses of pediatric patients undergoing Barium Meal (BM) examinations. During the (BM) studies, fluoroscopy and multiple radiographs are involved. Since direct measurements of the dose in each organ are very difficult if possible at all, clinical measurements of Dose Area Products (DAPs) and two different Monte Carlo codes, MCNP5 and PCXMC2.0, were involved. In clinical measurements, (DAPs) were assessed during examination of 51 patients undergoing (BM) examinations, separated almost equally in 3 age categories, neonatal, 1 and 5 year old. Organs receiving the highest amounts of radiation during BM examinations were: the stomach (10.4-9.8, 10.2-10.0, 11.1-11.5 mGy), the gall bladder (7.17.2, 5.8-5.8, 5.2-3.1 mGy) and the spleen (7.5-6.9, 8.2-7.5, 4.3-4.7 mGy). The three values in the brackets correspond to neonatal, 1 and 5-year old patients respectively. The first value of each age group is calculated with PCXMC2.0 Monte Carlo code, while the second with MCNP5 simulation. For all ages, the main contributors to the total organ and effective doses are the fluoroscopy projections. There is a reasonable good coincidence between the PCXMC2.0 and MCNP5 calculations for the majority of the studied organs. In some special cases there is a systematic disagreement of organ doses (bones, gonads and oesophagus). EXPOSURE RANGE LIMITS OF THREE INTRAORAL IMAGE RECEPTORS FOR VARIOUS TUBE POTENTIAL, TUBE CURRENT AND EXPOSURE TIME SETTINGS E. Katsoni c, I. Tsalafoutas b, P. Gritzalis c, E. Stefanou c, E. Georgiou a, E. Yakoumakis a. a Department of Medical Physics, Medical School, University of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Medical Physics Department, Agios Savvas Hospital, Athens, Greece; c Department of Oral Diagnosis and Radiology, Dental School, University of Athens, Athens, Greece; Purpose: To comparatively evaluate, in a systematic inter-equipment manner, the useful exposure range of three intraoral image receptors which are representative of the currently available technologies, when exposed to different X-ray beam spectra, dose and dose rate levels. Materials-Method: A modern dental X-ray unit (Prostyle Intra DC, Planmeca Oy, Helsinki, Finland) offering a wide range of tube potential, tube current and exposure time settings was used to expose A dental quality control phantom. The receptors that were used to capture the radiographic images of the phantom were: the Kodak Insight, the Kodak RVG-6000 and the Duerr Vistascan system. The images that were produced over a wide range of exposure factor settings were evaluated in terms of diagnostic quality by three experienced radiologists. Results: The number of images with acceptable diagnostic quality was in total 1257; 310 with Insight, 331 with RVG 6000 and 616 with Vistascan. At 60 kV, diagnosable images were produced with doses ranging from 0.44 1.56 mGy for the Insight film 0.44 - 2.82 mGy for the RVG 6000 and 0.22 4.93 mGy for the Vistascan system. At 70 kV, the respective ranges were 0.39 - 1.28 mGy for the Insight film 0.31 - 2.55 mGy for the RVG6000 and 0.30 - 3.46 mGy for the Vistascan system. Conclusions: The Vistascan exhibited the widest useful exposure range and required the least exposure to produce a diagnosable image at almost all tube potential settings. The RVG 6000 exhibited a slightly wider useful exposure range than the Insight film, with almost the same dose requirements especially in higher Kv settings. MEDICAL RADIATION PROTECTION EDUCATION AND TRAINING PROVIDED BY A UNIVERSITY MEDICAL PHYSICS DEPARTMENT E. Yakoumakis, P. Karaiskos, P. Papagiannis, P. Dimitriou, E. Georgiou. Medical Physics Department, Faculty of Medicine, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias Street, 11527, Greece In the light of the publication of the new EU BSS and the importance given to the E&T issues concerning radiation protection in medical exposures this work presents the activities of the Medical Physics Laboratory (MPL) of the University of Athens (UoA) concerning the provision of Education and Training (E&T) in Medical Radiation Protection (MRP). Several University Departments in Greece offer E&T in MRP. The MPL of the Faculty of Medicine of the UoA is one of the main Academic E&T providers in MRP at both pre- and post-graduate level. At pre-graduate level, MRP forms an integral part of obligatory courses in Medical Physics included in the curricula of the Medical, Dentistry and Nursery Schools of the University. In example, Medical Physics is offered in the first two semesters of the Medical School and E&T in MRP is encouraged by the regulatory authority according to Article 7 of the previous 97/43 MED EURATOM Directive. The syllabus includes Radiation Physics, Dosimetry, Instrumentation, Biological effects, and Radiation Protection (legislative framework, medical, occupational and public exposures including emergency exposures). In addition, elements of MRP are incorporated in various elective courses with learning objectives relevant to the applications of radiation in medicine. At post-graduate level an intereUniversity Post-Graduate Program in Medical Radiation Physics (PGPMRP) is conducted since 1993. The PGPMRP is running under the administration and co-ordination of the Medical Physics Department of the UoA, in collaboration with the Physics and Biology Departments of the UOA and the Medical Physics Departments of the Universities of Ioannina, Thessaloniki, Crete and Thrace, as well as, the National Centre for Science Research (NCSR) “Demokritos”, and the Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC). An extensive part of the syllabus is dedicated to MRP. The PGPMRP leads to an MSc degree in Medical Physics and, optionally, to a PhD. Continuing, lifelong education and training on radiation protection is also provided by the Medical Physics Department to the medical and paramedical staff of medical radiation facilities in collaboration with medical societies and professional bodies. PATIENT RADIATION DOSE DURING EXTRACORPOREAL SHOCKWAVE LITHOTRIPSY J. Hristova-Popova, D. Taseva, I. Diyakov, J. Vassileva. National Center of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection, Sofia, Bulgaria Background: The purpose of this work is to present the first results from a survey of patient radiation doses during Extracorporeal Shockwave Lithotripsy (ESWL) and to compare results. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Materials and methods: Two C-arm fluoroscopy systems and a total of 105 patients were included in the study. The following information was recorded: complexity of the procedure and operator’s experience, patient demographics, fluoroscopy time (FT, min) and patient radiation dose in total kerma-area product (KAP, cGy.cm2). KAP was directly recorded from the X-ray unit reading in the first department and measured with externally mounted KAP meter in the second department. Full characterization of X-ray systems was performed using a PMMA phantom, where entrance surface kerma rates were measured with a reference dosimeter at different modes and field sizes. Results: From the collected data the min, max, average and median values were calculated. Results show that mean value of KAP at second unit was more than 10 times higher: 2478 cGy.cm2 versus 230 cGy.cm2 at first unit. Big variations were found between FT for procedures performed with the first unit, but the mean values for both systems were commensurable: 3.4 min and 3.0 min, respectively, which cannot explain the large difference in patient doses. The reasonable cause is different modes and settings of the X-ray system, mostly the use of continuous fluoroscopy with the first system. Discussion: This comparison revealed a great potential for patient dose reduction in clinical practice, such as the use of ultrasound localization as a first option for restricting the use of fluoroscopy, also the practical skills and radiation protection awareness of clinicians should be increased. A good example of well-known and optimally used operator modes by medical staff is the second X-ray system, where pulsed fluoroscopy with low rates was used. Further studies in other departments are planned aiming to propose national diagnostic reference levels for ESWL. ITERATIVE RECONSTRUCTION AND FILTER BACK PROJECTION ALGORITHMS IN CHEST-ABDOMEN-PELVIS CT: A COMPARISON FOR THE SAME GROUP OF PATIENTS Agapi Ploussi MSc a, Efthymia Alexopoulou MD, PhD a, Nikolaos Economopoulos MD a, Stylianos I. Argentos MD a, Sofia Kordolaimi MSc a, Ioannis Arapakis MD a, Vasiliki Tsitsia BSc a, b, Ioannis Seimenis PhD b, Efstathios P. Efstathopoulos PhD a. a 2nd Dept. of Radiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens; b Medical Physics Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Democritus University of Thrace, Dragana Campus, Alexandroupolis, 68100 Greece Background: Chest-Abdomen-Pelvis (CAP) Computed Tomography (CT) delivers effective doses ranging from 6.7 to 28 mSv and have the biggest contribution to collective dose in relationship with common CT exams. Due to the high radiation dose, there is a raised concern about patient exposure. Iterative Reconstruction (IR) algorithms are a promising tool in order to achieve dose reduction without degrading the diagnostic outcome. Aim: To directly compare radiation dose and image quality between IR (iDose4, Philips) and Filter Back Projection (FBP) algorithms in CAP CT for the same patient population. Materials and methods: A cohort of 17 follow-up patients who underwent CAP CT examinations on a 64 multidetector CT with iDose4 Level 4 and Level 6 was retrospectively included in our study. All patients had previously undergone a CAP CT exam on the same scanner with the standard FBP protocol. Volume CT dose index (CTDIvol) and dose length product (DLP) were recorded, while effective dose was calculated from DLP measurements. In order to take into account the patient size, Size-Specific Dose Estimate (SSDE) was also estimated. Objective image noise, Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) and Contrast-to-Noise Ratio (CNR) were calculated. Two radiologists evaluated subjective image noise, sharpness, contrast, diagnostic confidence and artifacts in chest and abdomenpelvis region. Results: Compared with the standard FBP protocol there was a 45.4% and 46.2% decrease (P<0.001) in effective dose and SSDE respectively, using iDose4. Objective image quality in terms of noise, SNR and CNR was superior in iDose4 as compared with FBP images (P<0.001). Subjective image noise, sharpness, contrast and overall image quality were significantly better in all regions with iDose4 technique (P<0.007). Diagnostic 25 confidence was comparable for the two algorithms in chest region while in abdomenepelvis region was significantly better for iDose4 images (P<0.001). Minor artifacts were observed in FBP and iDose4 image series while a mild pixelated texture was noted in iDose4 Level 6 images. Superior objective and subjective image quality was also observed using iDose4 Level 6 than with iDose4 Level 4. Discussion: iDose4 allows significant radiation dose reduction while improving image quality in CAP CT examinations for the same group of patients. EVALUATION OF THE DOSE, IMAGE QUALITY AND OPTIMIZTION OF CT PEDIATRIC CRANIAL PROTOCOLS Diego Rada, Luis Gonçalves, Carlos de Almeida. Laboratory of Radiological Sciences e Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Av. Sao Francisco Xavier, 524. 20550900, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Background: Universidad de Carabobo, Valencia Venezuela. Bachelor in Physic Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro. Master in Biosciences Computed tomography is a powerful tool for diagnostic imaging of various diseases, but the high exposure to ionizing radiation in pediatric patients in studies of cranial CT may develop complications in more radiosensitive tissues, so it is very important to have a balance between radiation dose and image quality. In this work is tested the hypothesis that the quality parameter of image Noise and the radiation dose can vary as a function of the Ray X tube voltage in the protocols for pediatric cranial and can get this done is a way to reduce the risks of exposure to ionizing radiation in pediatric cranial tomography practices, with out altering the minimum quality required by health authorities. Material and methods: Using pediatric cranial CT protocols, and using the phantom image quality MODEL ACCREDITATION PHANTOM 464 ACR CT, and the AAPM PHANTOM, was determined QC parameters and the number of CT for different reference materials. It was also determined the noise variation and the dose variation as a function of voltage x-ray tube. Also, was created a system of evaluation in pediatric cranial tomography, considering basic parameters of quality image, determining accordance indexes with the minimal quality image in this parameters at eight CT Scanners of Radiology services institutions in Rio de Janeiro-Brasil. Results: Was observed in eight CT scanners in Rio de Janeiro state e Brasil that the image noise in a reference material ( water) and the Dose for pediatric cranial protocols was a quadratic function of the of the Ray X tube voltage, leveraging these two properties was possible to find a value of the voltage at which the image noise and the Dose are minimal, ensuring optimization of protocols reducing the dose up to 69% and respecting the Reference Dose levels set by the bodies under regulators. In turn, the evaluation system implemented in this work showed that five of the eight CT Scanners studied are at different quality levels of nonconformity for diagnostic use, urging the authorities to take corrective action. Discusions: It was possible to reduce the dose of radiation and increase image quality in cranial pediatric protocols modulating voltage X-ray tube. EFFECT OF RECOMBINANT HUMAN TSH (RHTSH) ON WHOLE BODY RESIDENCE TIME OF 131I BASED ON OUR CLINICAL EXPERIENCE. P. Exadaktilou b, E. Giannoula a,b, K. Giannopoulou a,b, M. Kotzassarlidou a, T. Kalathas b, V. Chatzipavlidou b. a Medical Physics Dept, “Theagenion” Cancer Hospital, Greece; b Nuclear Medicine Dept, “Theagenion” Cancer Hospital, Greece Recombinant human TSH (rhTSH) has been used in clinical practice by nuclear medicine physicians and endocrinologists in “THEAGENION” Cancer Hospital since 2012, while treating patients with differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC), who could not tolerate hypothyroidism. 26 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Aim: The aim of this study is to estimate the impact of rhTSH on total body residence time, ttb , after 131I treatment. Materials and methods: 48 DTC patients, who were referred to our centre for their first ablation and/or follow up dose since 2012, were enrolled in this study and divided in 2 groups. Group A included 19 pts received 131I therapy, once with rhTSH stimulus and more than once after thyroid hormone withdrawal. Group B included 29 pts treated only once with rhTSH stimulus. Ablation and follow up dosage were 100 and 200 mCi respectively. Total body dose rate measurements, during the seven days after administration, performed by Inovision 451P survey meter were recorded and converted to activity. Total body residence time was calculated by data analysis software Origin8, whereas statistical analysis of the results was performed by SPSS 13.0. Results: Applying paired samples statistics of Group A patients, mean whole body residence time, ttb, was 28.2±10.6h when treated with rhTSH stimulus and 33.8±11h in the case of no rhTSH stimulus. There was no statistically significant difference between the derived values. In addition, statistical analysis of all therapies from groups A and B, with and without rhTSH stimulus, ended up to the same result. Conclusions: These data suggest that, during 131I treatment, whole body residence time of 131I does not alter significantly, with the method of patient preparation (rhTSH stimulus vs thyroid hormone withdrawal). It will be of great importance to investigate rhTSH effect on blood residence time of 131I, tblood , since they both have a great impact on blood dosimetry according to the guidelines of EANM Dosimetry Committee. IMPACT OF CENTRALIZED RADIO PHARMACY SERVICES AMONG FOUR HOSPITALS IN THE 4TH REGIONAL HEALTH AUTHORITY OF MACEDONIA AND THRACE The purpose of this work is to estimate patient doses from the most commonly performed procedures in a digital radiology department, to compare them with the national DRLs established in the country and to look for a potential of optimization. Materials and methods: The X-ray systems in the imaging department are: digital radiography (DR) system, C-arm fluoroscopy system, 16 slices computed tomography (CT) system, and DR mammography system, all of them manufactured by GE. The most common procedures are chest X-ray performed with the DR system, hysterosalpingography with the fluoroscopy system, and abdomen, chest, head and lumbar spine scans on the CT. Data necessary for dose estimations were extracted from the DICOM header of the patient examination files. Tube output measurements were made on the DR system and kerma area product (KAP) from the DICOM header was compared with the calculated data from the measurements. Entrance surface air kerma (ESAK) rate was measured on the C-arm for all modes. Computed tomography kerma index (CTKI) in phantom was measured and compared with data from the CT display. Tube output and half value layer were measured on the mammography system and incident air kerma and mean glandular dose were calculated for phantom and patients. Results: Not very good agreement was found between the measured and extracted data for DR (up to 28 % for some KAP values) and bigger difference for CTKI (16 % for abdomen and 37 % for head examinations). Estimated local typical patient doses were found to be lower than the national DRLs. Discussion: The current national DRLs were established 5 years ago and a lot of new digital systems were installed afterwards. They provide big potential for reduction of patient doses compared to old analogue systems. New DRLs are planned to be established during next two years and probably lower values will be set. Maria Kotzassarlidou. Medical Physics Dept., “Theagenion” Cancer Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece The aim of this study is to examine and evaluate a realistic case of establishing a shared radiopharmacy program for the Nuclear Medicine Departments of four hospitals in the 4th Regional Health Authority of Macedonia and Thrace (4thRHA), located in the same area of Thessaloniki. The hospitals involved in this study are: University General Hospital of Thessaloniki “AHEPA”, General Hospital “IPPOKRATIO”, First General Hospital “ST.PAUL’S”, Cancer Hospital “THEAGENIO”. Data were taken from the international and greek literature, the above mentioned hospitals and 4thRHA. Principles of the study were adopted by the Operational Restructuring Plan for Greek Hospitals, prepared by the National University of Athens , for the Ministry of Health. Current situation of the above mentioned Nuclear Medicine Departments was presented, regarding equipment, personnel, type and number of tests, budget for consumption of radiopharmaceuticals. Cost and manpower savings were estimated for the case of establishing centralized radiopharmacy services among these departments. According to the results, a shared radiopharmacy program is expected to cause a reduction in annual spending of 92900 V by all the participating hospitals. Patients’ waiting time may be reduced whereas patient welfare may be increased. In addition, more efficient human resource management can be achieved, improving and upgrading the practice of nuclear medicine and patient care in the participating hospitals. ESTIMATION OF TYPICAL PATIENT DOSES IN DIGITAL RADIOLOGY DEPARTMENT S. Avramova-Cholakova a,b, N. Nenova-Balatsenko b. aNational Centre of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection; bHospital for Women’s Health “Nadezhda” Background: Bulgarian legislation introduced in 2005 requirement for elaboration of Diagnostic Reference Levels (DRL) and estimation of local typical doses in every department. There is still little experience in the country with the estimation and use of typical doses, which is not routinely performed yet. BEAM SPECIFIC CALCULATION CHECKS FOR TREATMENT PLANNING SYSTEM COMMISSIONING Patatoukas George, Dilvoi Maria, Platoni Kalliopi, Papadogiannis Panagiotis, Chalkia Marina, Efstathopoulos Efstathios. Medical Physics Unit, 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece Background: Commissioning is one of the most important parts of the entire QA programme for both the TPS and the planning process. Beam specific calculation checks can be used to detect the differences between measured and calculated doses. These checks relate to single beam irradiations of water phantom under the conditions close to those used for the clinical commissioning tests and are designed in such manner that the user should be able to compare the results for selected points with the calculated dose values. We present a (portion of the) series of dose-related measurements that took place in our department in order to prepare the Varian AAA dose calculation algorithm for use in our department’s everyday clinical practice. Materials and methods: The medical physics team of our radiotherapy department followed all procedures described by AAPM TG 51, IAEA report 430 as well as IAEA TEC-DOC-1583 for the AAA beam data commissioning following a software update that took place in the department. We compared point doses in a number of fields and depths for two Varian Linear Accelerators (LINACs).The format of the beam specific calculation checks includes the check of output factors, field width and penumbra size for a range of field sizes for open and wedged fields used in clinical commissioning and also a check of the doses in different parts of the water phantom for open and wedged beams. Results: Dose calculation checks were performed for three open fields (4cm x 4cm, 10cm x 10cm, 25cm x 25cm) and for one wedged (10cm x 10cm) at four measurement depths (dmax, 5cm, 10cm and 20cm). Dose to points on the central axis and off-axis point(s) was measured. Dose calculation checks for high-energy x-ray beams (6 and 15MV) were expressed in dose units (cGy). The difference between these calculated data and the corresponding measured data can be calculated Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) and analyzed in the same way as proposed in the aforementioned protocols. Discussion: Model-based point doses calculated with the AA algorithm in both 6 and 15 MV were in excellent agreement with the ‘true’ dose measured in the treatment room. IN-VIVO DOSIMETRY IN 3D CONFORMAL RADIOTHERAPY OF BREAST AND HEAD AND NECK CANCER Dilvoi Maria a, Thalassinou Stella b, Patatoukas George a, Platoni Kouloulias Vassilios c, Kypraiou Efrosini c, Darakis Kalliopi a, Georgios c, Efstathopoulos Efstathios a. a Medical Physics Unit, 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece; b Papapostolou LTD, Athens, Greece; cRadiation Therapy Unit, 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece Background: We present a study carried out at our department in order to investigate the accuracy of dose distribution at the junction region for 3Dconformal radiotherapy treatments that were accomplished following our adopted clinical protocol for breast and head and neck cases. Materials and methods: “In vivo” dosimetry has been performed using thermo-luminescence dosimeters (TLD) in 10 head and neck cancer patients and 10 breast cancer patients) irradiated with a 6 MV photon beam. Entrance dose measurements were performed in the field junction regions. A comparison between the measured (in-vivo) and expected (TPS) values was carried out and possible sources of discrepancy were studied and analysed. Results: The mean deviation between measured and expected dose in the region of junction was significantly higher in breast compared to head and neck irradiation (-2.8 ± 15.4 % and 0.2 ± 8.2 % respectively, Mann-Whitney test: 푃 ¼ 0.002). Discussion: The results indicate the superiority of mono-isocentric technique compared to the rotating couch technique in terms of dose delivery accuracy for treatments with field junctioning planning techniques. “In vivo” dosimetry remains a reliable method in order to check the actual dose that is finally delivered to a patient and can provide vital insight into the irradiation conditions in the treatment room, which can help in the optimization of the treatment delivery technique(s). DUAL-ENERGY CONTRAST-ENHANCED DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY: GLANDULAR DOSE ESTIMATION USING MONTE CARLO CODE AND VOXEL PHANTOM E. Yakoumakis a, E. Tzamicha a, A. Dimitriadis a, E. Georgiou a, V. Tsapaki c, A. Chalazonitis b. a Medical Physics Dpt, University of Athens, Germany; b Radiology Dpt, Alexandra General Hospital National, Germany; c Radiology Dpt, Agia Olga General Hospital National, Germany Purpose: Clinical results of Contrast Enhanced Digital Mammography (CEDM) are promising. The purpose of this study is to evaluate glandular dose during a CEDM study by using Monte Carlo method and voxel phantom. Materials and methods: Dual-energy CEDM performed by acquiring a pair of low and high-energy images. This is achieved in a single breast compression, using Mo or Rh filter at 26 to 31 kVp values, for low energy images and double-layer filter (0,3mm Cu ± 0,3mm Al) at 45 to 49 kVp, for high energy images. EGSnrc Monte Carlo code and female voxel phantom was used to simulate the interaction of photons with matter and estimate the glandular dose (Dg) to the breast. One million X-ray photons were input to breast geometry of phantom with a 2 to 8 cm thickness range and a breast glandular composition of 1%, 25%, 50%, 75% and 100%. Breast was simulated in both the Cranio-Caudal (CC) and the Medio-Lateral oblique (MLO) views. Air Kerma measurements for various settings of tube current-exposure time product were performed with a Radical (model 2026c with ionization chamber) dosimeter. Results: For a breast with compressed thickness of 5.0 cm and a glandular fraction from 1% to 100%, glandular dose values for CC view were ranged between 0.547 e 2.593 mGy for low and high-energy images, which is less than the European Diagnostic Reference Level. 27 Conclusions: The dose contribution analysis of each projection for all voxel phantom thicknesses and breast compositions from 1% to 100% glandular, indicates that low dose part mammography is the main contributor to total glandular breast dose. CORRELATION OF ADVANCED MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING AND BRAIN SPECT FOR THE PRE-SURGICAL EVALUATION OF CEREBRAL TUMOUR PATIENTS I. Tsougos a, V. Tsitsia a, V. Valotassiou b, I. Siasios c, K. Fountas c, E. Kapsalaki d, K. Theodorou a, I. Fezoulidis d, P. Georgoulias b. a Medical Physics Department, University of Thessaly, Panepistimiou 3, Biopolis, 41110 Larissa, Greece; b Nuclear Medicine Department, University Hospital of Larissa, Biopolis, 41110 Larissa, Greece; c Department of Neurosurgery, University Hospital of Larissa, Biopolis, 41110 Larissa, Greece; d Department of Radiology, University Hospital of Larissa, Biopolis, 41110 Larissa, Greece Background: In order to obtain a more objective and realistic diagnostic pre e surgical approach, data combination of neuro-imaging procedures seems to be the key to success. Under this perspective, a protocol of presurgical brain tumour evaluation is applied in collaboration of the Medical Physics/Radiology/Neurosurgery departments of the University of Thessaly, which aims to correlate Brain SPECT and advanced MR techniques for the optimization of differential diagnosis. Image fusion of advanced MR techniques and brain SPECT using Tc-99, introduce new possibilities and set high expectations regarding differential diagnosis of cerebral tumors. Materials and methods: The study was performed on a 3-Tesla MRI whole body scanner (GE, Healthcare, Signa® HDx) using a standard birdcage phased-array head coil and on a Functional Imaging Scanner (GE, Infinia II gamma-camera). The MRI protocol included a standardized series of brain sequences as well as 1H-MRS, DWI, DTI and PWI. The Brain SPECT was obtained 20e30min after iv injection of 925MBq (25mCi) tracer activity. The radiopharmaceutical was prepared using Myoview™, (General Electric Healthcare Ltd) that was reconstituted with technetium-99m pertechnetate (99mTcO4) sterile solution in the Department of Nuclear Medicine. The imaging data were then analyzed and fused in the Xeleris Workstation (GE Healthcare). Results: Our preliminary results show that there is a positive correlation of the Spectroscopy and MRI Perfusion findings with Brain SPECT results, especially regarding difficult differential diagnostic problems, such as GBM vs Metastasis and typical vs atypical Meningioma. Discussion: Pre-surgical brain tumour imaging that combines SPECT and advanced MR techniques may be able to optimize patient treatment. ASSESSMENT OF MEAN GLANDULAR DOSE (MGD) IN ROUTINE MAMMOGRAPHY IN ASKLEPIEIO VOULAS GENERAL HOSPITAL Despina Papadopoulou PhD, Eleni Likaki MD,PhD, Fotini Soureti, Ioannis Gavriilidis MD, Panagiotis Vitoratos MD, Kassos Ilias MD, Ioannis Kaskarelis MD, PhD.. Department of Radiology, “Asklepieio Voulas” General Hospital, Vasileos Pavlou 1, Voula, Greece Background: Nowadays mammography is the basic examination used for early detection of breast cancer. However, since ionizing radiation is used at a radiosensitive organ, it is very important to estimate patient’s radiation dose and investigate all possible factors minimizing radiation exposure. The aim of this study was to estimate mean Glandular dose (MGD) for Craniocaudal (CC) and Mediolateral oblique (MLO) views and the total MGD per breast. Moreover, all factors affecting MGD were investigated for the optimization of the procedure. Materials and methods: Mean Glandular dose was estimated for 200 women who underwent mammography, with the Siemens Mammomat 300 Nova mammography unit, at the Radiation Department of Asklepieio Voulas General Hospital. Records were kept for each patient concerning mammography technique used (kVp, mAs, Anode/ Filter), Compressed Breast Thickness (CBT), and Breast Glandular Fraction according to BIRADS. The MGD was calculated based on measurements of normalized entrance skin dose (ESD) in air, Half Value Layer (HVL) and conversion 28 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) factors, according to the method described in details at IAEA Technical Reports Series 457. Results: Mean Glandular dose was estimated for 200 women, who underwent routine mammography at Asklepieio Voulas General Hospital. MGD for CC projection view ranged between 0,597-2,120 mGy (mean¼1,141mGy) and for MLO view from 0,697-3,355mGy (mean¼1,308mGy). Total MGD per breast ranged between 1,321- 5,338 mGy (median 2,348mGy). Basic factors affecting MGD were the projection view and the compressed breast thickness, since they affect exposure values. CBT valued between 17mm to 78mm for the CC view and 21mm to 89mm for the MLO view. Discussion: 100% of CC projections and 94,6% of MLO projections, had doses less than 3.0 mGy, as recommended by the American College of Radiology recommendations. MGD values are similar to those published in other studies. However, further investigation and record of MGD values in our hospital, may contribute to the establishment of national diagnostic reference levels in mammography, in order to optimize patient radiation protection. Keywords: Radiation dose, mammography, Mean Glandular Dose BREAST TREATMENT PLANNING OPTIMIZATION: FIELD-IN-A-FIELD (FIF) VS. HIGHER PHOTON ENERGIES I. Grigoriadis a, E. Kamperis b, A. Makridou a, M. Chatzimarkou a, P. Pantelis b, L. Zoglopitou a, K. Theodorou c, M. Charalambidou b. a Medical Physics Department, Theagenio Cancer Hospital, Greece; b Radiation Oncology Department, Theagenio Cancer Hospital, Greece; c Medical Physics Department, University of Thessaly, Greece Background: The aim of this study is to compare four breast treatment planning techniques in the setting of 3D conformal radiotherapy (3DCRT). These techniques were two 6MV tangential fields, two 15MV tangential fields, two 6MV tangential fields plus one 15MV FIF and plus two 15MV FIFs. These were compared in order to show the most efficient technique. Materials and methods: In total, 120 radiotherapy plans were made, four for each of the 30 patients. Treatment planning was performed with Eclipse TPS and dose was calculated using the analytical anisotropic algorithm (version 8917). The dose distribution was “fine-tuned” so that all plans shared the same maximum. The entire PTV was covered with the 95% isodose and the point maximum dose did not exceed 107% according to the ICRU guidelines. The dose received by adjacent normal organs was well within tolerance limits. The plan optimization was made by a medical physicist. Statistical analysis was done with SPSS 20. GLM repeated measures procedure was employed to study the variance among the different treatment planning techniques. Mean dose(%) and minimum dose(%) comprised the measure factors, while age, cancer site (righteleft), T stage in TNM staging system (T1eT2) and clinical tumor volume (CTV) were used as covariates in our model. Results: Analysis showed a statistically significant difference among all different planning techniques regarding mean dose (p<0.001) which, for each plan was 96.63±0.29, 98.89±0.18, 100.46±0.24 and 101.76±0.2, respectively (95% CI, p<0.001). There was an interaction between CTV size and mean dose, notably for large breasted patients (CTV>750cc). In this particular clinical scenario two 6MV tangential fields with 2 FIFs consistently outperformed the others. Minimum dose was also statistically different among all groups (p<0.05) except for the two FIF-less tangential fields with 6 and 15 MV. Interestingly, minimum dose(%) lacked a dependence on volume size. Discussion: The use of two FIFs together with two tangential fields in patients with breast cancer achieved high mean and minimum dose that were also seen in large CTVs. For smaller CTVs (<400cc), all methods converge in terms of efficiency and, therefore, a less involved plan could be adopted. Keywords: breast cancer, radiotherapy, planning optimization ACCURACY ASSESSMENT OF PENCIL BEAM AND MONTE CARLO DOSE CALCULATION ALGORITHMS DURING IMRT AND VMAT DELIVERY N. Yakoumakis a, b, A. Episkopakis c, E. Koutsouveli a, G. Kollias a, C. Paraskevopoulou a, P. Sandilos a, b, P. Karaiskos a, c. a Radiotherapy Department, Hygeia Hospital, Kifisias Avenue and 4 Erythrou Stavrou, Marousi, 15123, Athens, Greece; b 1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion University Hospital, Medical School, Athens, Greece. Vas. Sofias Avenue 76, Athens 11528, Greece; c Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 11527 Athens, Greece Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) and Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) are techniques that have been widely used over the last years for treating cancer due to better target coverage and the lower dose to the critical organs. This study assesses the accuracy of the Pencil Beam (PB) and the Monte Carlo (MC) calculation algorithms commonly used to determine the dose distribution in such applications. IMRT and VMAT plans were created for ten prostate patients using a commercially available treatment planning system (Monaco, Elekta Inc.). All plans were optimized to be clinically acceptable and the final dose calculation was performed using a) the PB and b) the MC calculation algorithm. The plans were evaluated in the central coronal plane using the I'mRT Matrixx (IBA Dosimetry GmbH) 2D-array placed in a solid water phantom a) by setting all control points to zero gantry degree and b) by leaving the beam orientation as planned. Evaluation was performed with OmniPro-I'mRT software using the gamma index method with acceptance criteria of 3% dose difference and 3 mm distance to agreement taking into account all points with dose values greater than the 10% of the maximum dose. Results show that PB calculation algorithm can accurately determine the dose distribution applied to the I'mRT Matrixx 2D array when all control points were set to zero gantry degree for both IMRT and VMAT plans (average passing rates of 96.6 and 94.7% of the points passed the 3%/3 mm acceptance criteria, for IMRT and VMAT, were observed, respectively). On the other hand, considerable differences between the different calculation algorithms were observed when the actual (i.e. the planned) beam orientation was used for the plan verification. In this case, the PB algorithm was found adequate for dose determination only for the IMRT plan verification (an average passing rate of 91% was observed). For the VMAT plans, MC was found significant superior compared to the PB dose calculation algorithm (average passing rates of 73.5 and 93% for the PB and the MC algorithms, were observed, respectively). THERMOGRAPHIC BLOOD FLOW VARIATION RELATIVE TO LOWER LIMP POSITION A. Skouroliakou a, I. Seferis b, C. Michail b, I. Sianoudis c, D. Mathes b, I. Valais b. a Department of Energy Technology Engineering, Technological Educational Institute (T.Е.І.) of Athens, 122 10 Athens, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Educational Institute (T.Е.І.) of Athens, 122 10 Athens, Greece; c Department of Optics & Optometry, Technological Educational Institute (T.Е.І.) of Athens, 122 10 Athens, Greece Background: Quantitative infrared thermography is an established method for the study of skin temperature distribution. Dynamic infrared thermography records skin temperature following the application of a transient local thermal excitation. The method aims at the elucidation of the thermomechanical behavior of the skin and the role of blood flow on heat diffusion Methods: An infrared camera was used to record temperature variations on the skin of human feet of three volunteers, depending on feet position. A cooled cylindrical aluminum bar was placed on the skin. The bar was in contact with the skin for 1 minute. After its removal the temperature on the cooled skin area was recorded with an infrared camera. Time for the temperature to return to its initial value was measured for the foot in horizontal and vertical position. Results: A thermogram was obtained every approximately 10 seconds. Temperature was measured on the recorded thermograms on 6 spots: three in the cooled and three in the neighboring area. Return to thermal balance followed roughly the same pattern for all spots, although the heating rate was faster for the horizontal position of the foot. Thermal balance was achieved faster at the spots that were positioned on a vein passage. Discussion: Our results confirm the influence of blood flow on the thermal regulation of the skin. Spots located over veins exhibit different thermal behavior due to thermal convection through blood flow. Changing the position of the foot from vertical to horizontal, effectively influence blood Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) perfusion as in the vertical position blood flow is opposite to gravity. Our findings contribute to the experimental validation of thermal models that characterize the human skin. CHEST e ABDOMEN e PELVIS CT EXAMINATIONS USING ITERATIVE RECONSTRUCTION TECHNIQUE: EVALUATION OF RADIATION DOSE AND IMAGE QUALITY Arapakis Ioannis a, Alexopoulou Efthymia a, Seimenis Ioannis a, Tsitsia Vasiliki a, b, Kordolaimi Sofia a, Economopoulos Nikolaos a, Argentos Stylianos a, Ploussi Agapi a, Efstathopoulos P. Efstathios a. a 2nd Dept. of Radiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens; b Medical Physics Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Democritus University of Thrace, Dragana Campus, Alexandroupolis, 68100, Greece Background: Chest-Abdomen-Pelvis (CAP) Computed Tomography (CT) examination is the second most common CT examination after CT head and is used to investigate manifestations of systemic diseases, infections, neoplasms or generally is used for diseases that indicate chest and upper and lower abdomen abdormalities. Due to the high radiation exposure and the frequency of CAP CT studies there is a raised concern about patient risk that recommends optimization and reduction of the radiation dose. Purpose: To evaluate how iDose4 hybrid iterative reconstruction algorithm (iDose4, Philips) effects on radiation dose and image quality in Chest Abdomen - Pelvis CT examinations. Materials and methods: 99 patients who took part, underwent CAP CT examinations with the use of “FBP protocol” (the ”old standard”), performing filtered back projection reconstruction algorithm and 84 with the use of “iDose4 protocol” using the Iterative Reconstruction (IR) algorithm iDose4 (Philips Healthcare) on a Brilliance 64 multidetector CT. There were three groups of patients according to their weight. (Group 1, 41 e 60 kg: Group 2, 61 e 90 kg: Group 3, >90kg). Volume CT dose index and dose length product (DLP) were recorded, while effective dose was calculated from DLP measurements. Objective image characteristics in terms of image noise, signal to noise ratio (SNR) and contrast to noise ratio (CNR) were calculated. In addition, the images were subjectively reviewed by two radiologists on a 5-point scale. Results: There was an overall 46.5% reduction of the effective dose with the use of iDose4 protocol compared with the FBP protocol. Objective image quality was better in iDose4 images than in FBP images. Subjective image noise, contrast, sharpness and diagnostic confidence scores tended to be better for iDose4 protocol. Minor artifacts were observed for both protocols. Discussion: According to our results, using the iterative reconstruction algorithm high radiation exposure reduction is achieved, while maintaining or improving image quality in adults’ CAP CT examinations. 29 treatment included superficial x-rays, 60Co, and electron-beam irradiation. The total tumor doses ranged from 6 to 40 Gy. A complete response occurred in all lesions receiving >20 Gy. Various treatment techniques have been used since the introduction of TSEB therapy in the early 1950s. More recent techniques have used stationary two-, four-, six-, and eightfield positions, as well as rotational techniques. In general, the uniformity of dose distribution improves as the number of fields increases, but at the expense of complexity and increased machine time for the treatment of each patient. The optimal technique with reasonable uniformity of dose appears to be a sixedual-field technique refined by Page et al. The electron beam with an effective central axis energy of 3 to 6 MeV and, rarely, 9 MeV is used to treat three anterior and three posterior stationary treatment fields. The patient is placed in front of the beam in six positions during treatment. The entire wide-field skin surface receives 1.5 to 2 Gy each 2day cycle. Irradiation usually is administered on a 4-day/week dose schedule; the total dose depends on the intent (curative versus palliative). The percentage of photon contamination for a single dual-field cycle should not exceed 0.3%. Verification of delivered doses should be performed routinely using thermoluminescent dosimeters placed on skin surfaces. Areas not directly exposed to the path of the electron beam (soles of feet, perineum, medial upper thighs, axillae, posterior auricular areas, inframammary regions, vertex of scalp, and areas under the skin folds) are treated with separate electron beam. Materials and methods: Mycosis Fungoides treatment at Instituto Nacional de Cancerologia (Mexico city) technique use 4 stationary fields with an effective energy of 4 MeV. Because of the field size needed to achieve a one field irradiation, patient must be treated in stand up position using gantry angles near to 90º. This situation lead us to make personalized dosimetries per patient, which involves changes in the known field parameters (known at isocenter) like field size, field shape and flatness. This measurements are usually performed with TLD dosimeters according to AAPM recommendations. However, dosimetry with TLD could be an expensive procedure for the hospital, till the necessary equipment is not available. Instead, we use PTR dosimetry as well as EDR dosimetry to perform this measurements. The measure procedure involves a water phantom of 180 cm length and 20 cm depth. We set up the phantom at a distance from the according to the patients area needed to be irradiated. This distance are measured with the patient (as a simulation) as well as gantry, collimator and field size needed. With the measured dose with the film we estimate a dose rate at 300 cm from source and calculate the number of monitor units needed to achieve 1 Gy to the whole field. DOSE DETERMINATION FOR A MYCOSIS FUNGOIDES DISEASE TREATMENT USING EDR FILM DOSIMETRY FOR A TSEI TECHNIQUE F. Herrera-Martinez, M. Rodriguez-Ponce, D. Toledano-Cuevas. Instituto Nacional de Cancerología, Mexico City, Mexico Background: Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) refers to a spectrum of closely related malignant T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders in which the predominant clinical manifestations involve the skin. There are two major zary’s subgroups within the CTCL spectrum: mycosis fungoides (MF) and Se syndrome. The plaque and tumor phases of classic MF are characterized by clinically perceptible accumulations of atypical lymphoid cells in the skin to produce palpable lesions. Individual lesions tend to regress spontaneously in areas and merge with adjacent lesions to form lesions with irregular shapes. The magnitude of infiltration varies from lesion to lesion, which, with the characteristic configurations, produces a virtually diagnostic clinical appearance. Tumorous lesions may develop gradually from preexisting plaques or may appear suddenly in an eruptive manner, indicating a biologically more aggressive clone of malignant cells. The modalities for Figure 1. (left) Measurement set up. The 15 marks visible at the picture are the points in which we did the dose measurements with PTR. The mark at the center shows the position at the patient umbilicus. In this case we have 88 gantry degrees, SSD¼ 300 cm and field size at isocenter ¼ 34x34 cm. Electron energy was 4 MeV. Since we have 4 different treatment fields, this measurements are repeated four times for each parameter group. (right) Film calibration and measurements by field. The film calibration were done at isocenter in a 4 MeV 10x10 electron field. A PDD measure is taken as well for energy verification purposes. 30 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Clinical results are shown on figure 4. Figure 2. Patient position. Treatment were performed Mondays and Thursdays for anterior and posterior planes (above left) and Tuesdays and Fridays for lateral planes (above right). Results: The dosimetry results were as follows: This measurements were compared with measurements performed daily in vivo, in order to estimate obvious changes in geometry because of the anatomy and, if it is the case, correct the monitor units delivery. Daily dosimetry reported the average dose measurements shown at tables 2 and 3. Table 1. Measured dose rates with EDR films for three treatment positions. Plane Measured Dose rate (cGy/UM) UM for 1 Gy delivery anterior lateral posterior 0.077 0.078 0.074 1294 1290 1351 Figure 4. Clinical results after TSEI treatment. Total dose, 30 Gy.Ă Figure 3. Measured PDD for a 4 MeV electron beam.Ă Table 2 Mean dose received at anterior posterior planes. Neck (cGy) Umbilicus (cGy) Right leg(cGy) Left leg (cGy) 79.785 81.005 109.795 106.26 90.63 91.995 90.275 92.945 INVESTIGATION OF CORRELATION BETWEEN GRID PARAMETERS AND IMAGE QUALITY METRICS AND EVALUATION OF GRID PERFORMANCE THROUGH IMAGE QUALITY Table 3 Mean dose received at lateral planes. Center (cGy) Right leg (cGy) Left leg (cGy) Right arm (cGy) Left arm (cGy) 108.56 103.525 78.18 91.595 83.155 79.04 Conclusions: Since the start of this treatment protocol (April, 2009) we treated 25 patients with magna fields. None of them presented acute effects nor scars for overdose areas or recurrences in partial irradiated areas. In vivo measurements are still performed daily for a quality assurance protocol, because of the complexity mode. Electron magna fields has become a reliable treatment option because of the even radiated areas living option for a second treatment course in case of advance cases or a partial chemotherapy response. For further work, we are planning the design of a filter to improve the beam flatness. References: 1. AAMP Report. No. 23 total skin electron therapy: dosimetry and technique. 2. Perez and Brady's Principles and Practice of Radiation Oncology, 5th Edition Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. 3. Radiochromic film dosimetry: Recomendations of AAPM radiation therapy committee task group 55. 67.155 107.88 93.2 58.955 Ozlem Birgul a, Umran Onal a, Turan Olgar b, Dogan Bor b. a Ankara University, Institute of Nuclear Sciences, Department of Medical Physics, Turkey; b Ankara University, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Physics Engineering, Turkey Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Background: Anti-scatter grids that are used in x-ray imaging improve the image contrast by reducing the scatter at a cost of increased patient radiation dose. Ability to manipulate the image contrast in digital imaging may give the users option to omit the use of grids, especially for pediatric applications where dose is more critical. In this work, the aim is to investigate the use of image quality metrics for the evaluation of grid performance together with the grid parameters used to define the grid specifications by the grid manufacturers. Image quality metrics can be calculated more easily and with this approach, a method which is practical for clinical use and that can simplify decision making process in grid usage and grid selection is proposed. Materials and methods: In the first part of this work, bucky factor(BFGP), grid sensitivity, contrast-improvement-factor(CIF) and signal-to-noiseratio-improvement-factor(SIFGP) were calculated from the measured values of primary, scattered and total radiations using a methodology similar to IEC 60627 protocol. Next, contrast(C), bucky factor(BFIQ), high contrast spatial resolution(HCSR), signal to noise ratio(SNR) and signal-to-noise ratioimprovement-factor(SIFIQ) were calculated using simple image quality tests for the similar scatter thicknesses and kVp values and the correlations between image quality and grid performance parameters were investigated. Results: Grid parameter measurements were made using a digital fluoroscopic system using six different grids with different ratios and strip densities. Experiments were repeated for different tube voltages and scatter thicknesses (5-25cm) to understand the performance variation between different clinical applications and patient sizes. For the second part, a subset of four grids were selected. As a result, SIFIQ and SIFGP values were found close to each other. SIF was found to be less than one for all grids and tube voltages for scatter thicknesses of 5cm and 10cm. For 15cm, it was less than one for some grids. Discussion: Therefore, removal of the grid can be suggested for the infants (0e12months) and up to the 5 year old child. For 15 cm scatter thickness (representing 10 year old child), evaluations should be done together with other image quality metrics and patient doses. This work is partially supported by TUBITAK 112T965 Research Grant. RETROSPECTIVE REVIEW OF LOCALLY SET TOLERANCES FOR VMAT PROSTATE PATIENT SPECIFIC QA USING THE COMPASS® SYSTEM A. Sdrolia, K. Brownsword, J.E. Marsden, K.T. Alty, A.W. Beavis. Department of Radiation Physics, Queen’s Centre for Oncology and Haematology, Hull and East Yorkshire Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, UK Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate COMPASS® pretreatment QA results for prostate VMAT. COMPASS® is a commercial 3D dosimetric QA system which allows calculation of 3D dose distributions based on planning CT data-sets and measurement adjusted beam fluences and is now used as the primary patient specific QA system in our hospital. Initially, all plans were individually reviewed by competent physicists who determined their clinical suitability before continuing to treatment. Our institutional QC standard clinical criterion for g-index assessment (tolerance of 3%/3mm) is failure of less than 3% of points (Low, D. et al, 1998). The criterion for dose comparisons (for all dose points) is 3% which is the accuracy used for TPS verification at commissioning (IAEA TECDOC-1583). This study retrospectively reviews results in terms of our criteria to determine if these pass rates/tolerances are appropriate, or if more challenging values could be used. Method: 76 clinical prostate RapidArc (one-arc) plans, delivered by four dosimetrically matched linacs, were measured using a 2D-array sensor (MatriXX Evolution with gantry angle sensor) and analysed using COMPASS® (v.2, IBA Dosimetry). The g-index (global) and set dosevolume points were used for quantifying the agreement between TPS calculations and measurements. For the PTVs the D99%, D50% and D1% differences were analysed. The percentage volume with g greater than 1, average g and mean dose difference for all the structures were also investigated. Results and conclusions: With respect to the PTV mean dose differences, it was found that the plans all fell within the 3% tolerance and mostly 31 within 2%, although there was a relatively small systematic difference. The absolute percentage differences of average and median doses suggest a weak linac dependence of the results which could be attributed to the differences in the dosimetric leaf gap. To confirm this, a sample of plans should be assessed across the linac fleet. Finally, the correlation between the g pass rates and the differences in the D99%, D50% and D1% was found to be weak suggesting that gamma analysis in isolation has little clinical meaning and should only be used to indicate outliers for further analysis. A STUDY OF DOSE DISTRIBUTIONS MEASURED WITH A HELICAL DIODE ARRAY Sp Papageorgiou, S. Xenophos, J. Vamvakas, V. Gialousis. Physics Dept., IASSO Hospital, Athens, Greece Kostakis, G. Background: Treatment verification of complicated techniques, such as IMRT and VMAT, is often carried out using commercially available QA systems, based on array detectors (or ionization chambers). Materials and methods: This work compares the dose distributions from Oncentra Masterplan TPS (v4.3) to those obtained with a calibrated ARCCHECK system (Sun Nuclear), in connection with an Elekta Synergy Linac. Ionization measurements were also carried out in water and PMMA, using a PTW, Unidos Dosimeter, a Farmer (30013) and a Pinpoint chamber (31006). The following steps were realized: 1/. TPS accuracy was tested in static and rotational fields, planned on the AC phantom, with its density adjusted, so that TPS point dose calculations match the doses at equivalent depths in water. 2/. Scaling factor (SF) and Excess Scatter correction (ESC) of the PMMA phantoms relative to water were obtained from density measurements of the phantoms and ionization measurements in PMMA and in water. 3/. The AC system was calibrated in a 10x10 static field, according to vendors procedure and tested for other F.S. TPS calculations, AC measured values and corrected ionization chamber measurements at the isocenter in the AC and at selected points in a flat PMMA phantom were compared. 4/. Rotational fields with fixed apertures were planned on the AC phantom, with PTV and OARs, and compared to chamber and AC measurements, using the AC software (3DVH). 5/. The same procedure was applied for Patient VMAT/IMRT prostate plans with a 6MV photon beam. Results: 1/. Oncentra calculations, ionization chamber measurements and AC compare very well for static and fixed aperture rotational fields (diffs.within 2%) with g>98% (3%,3mm). 2/. For the vast majority of the patient cases, g93% (3%,3mm), mean PTV and isocenter dose differences within 4% and 3% from the TPS and chamber measurements respectively. DVH differences for other PTVs and ROIs are presented. Discussion: The influence of plan optimization parameters (e.g grid resolution, gantry angle spacing, dose rate etc.) has not been considered here. Effects associated with, couch attenuation, accelerator start/stop and ionization chamber used, are presented. Concerning clinical cases, the overall g value is a “gross” verification criterion, whereas the PTV/OAR DVH may be very significant for the final analysis and decision making. HYPOFRACTIONATED RADIATION THERAPY TREATMENT SCHEMES IN PROSTATE CANCER PATIENTS EMPLOYING VOLUMETRIC MODULATED ARC THERAPY; PLAN VERIFICATION USING A CYLINDRICAL DIODE ARRAY V. Kostakis a, Sp. Papageorgiou a, G. Gialousis a, I. Vamvakas a, M. Trichas b, I. Georgakopoulos b. a IASO Hospital, Medical Physics Department, Greece; b IASO Hospital, Radiotherapy Department, Greece Background: VMAT (Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy) is one of the latest developments in Radiotherapy, allowing the delivery of high dose to complex shaped tumors that lie in close vicinity to sensitive structures by continuously varying beam aperture, gantry speed and dose rate. The aim of this study is to present a hypofractionated treatment scheme for prostate patients using a Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy approach. Materials and methods: VMAT as a treatment technique has been introduced in our department in June 2012 with more than 30 32 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) patients being treated for prostate cancer. Of these, 10 patients were treated with a hypofractionated regime which consists of delivering 70Gy in prostate and proximal vesicles (fractional dose: 2.5Gy) and 61.6Gy in distal seminal vesicles (fractional dose: 2.2Gy) in 28 fractions on daily basis (SIB technique). A dual-arc delivery technique was adopted with an arc length of 348, a collimator angle of 45 and 6MV photon beam. Oncentra Masterplan v4.3 was utilized for the treatment planning process and treatment was performed on a Synergy linear accelerator (Elekta Ltd, Crawley, UK). All the treatment plans were verified using a cylindrical diode array (ArcCHECK, Sun Nuclear Corporation, Melbourne, FL). Results: All treatment plans showed adequate PTV coverage and dose homogeneity based on the investigation of dose distribution along the three axes (transverse, sagittal, coronal) and the value of DVH based metrics, such as D95%, D98%, D2% and mean dose. OAR sparing was fulfilled for all treatment plans according to the treatment planning criteria that were set for each organ at risk (V40 < 35% and V60 < 17% for rectum; V40 < 50% and V60 < 25% bladder; D10% < 50Gy for the femoral heads; D150cc < 40Gy for bowel; D50% < 50Gy for the penile bulb). All the clinical plans delivered passed the gamma analysis (3% / 3mm) with a pixel pass rate of >95%. Additionally, plan evaluation was performed using patient DVH-based metrics which are calculated using the 3DVH s/w. Discussion: Highly conformal dose distributions can be achieved with VMAT techniques with a considerable shortening of delivery time which in turn offers advantages in terms of intrafraction movement and patient throughput. Accuracy of treatment delivery can be verified using ArcCHECK and the 3DVH s/w module. TREND OF OCCUPATIONAL DOSES OF RADIATION WORKERS IN CATH LABS IN MINISTRY OF HEALTH HOSPITALS, OMAN: A DOSE ANALYSIS L.S. Arun Kumar, Rashid Al-Hajri, Saeed Al-Kalbani. Medical Physics and Radiation Protection Service, DGEA, Ministry of Health, PO Box 393, Muscat-100, Sultanate of Oman In Ministry of Health (MOH), Oman, ionizing radiation is widely used in many areas such as for diagnosis, radiation therapy, bio-medical research and use of sealed radioisotope(s) for blood irradiation etc. Use of radiation and particularly the diagnostic use of x-rays in the Sultanate of Oman is increasing with the proliferation of hospitals and clinics. The great benefits of increased and improved diagnostic services have improved the quality of life for those in Oman. The World Health Organisation in 2000 applauded the quality, efficiency and delivery of health care to the population and ranked the Oman's health care system eighth in the world(1). The increased resources are clear from the statistics: in 1970 there were only 2 hospitals in Oman, in 2010 the number was 50 and with 172 health centres(2). One of the balancing consequences of increased x-ray use in Oman is the increased radiation dose to the population. Medical radiation accounts for the majority of the manmade radiation dose to populations(3). Use of radiation must always be according to the ALARP (as low as reasonably practical) philosophy so as to avoid unnecessary radiation doses and minimise the doses where required which in turn reduces the occupational exposure. During 2012, a total of 1,247,016 radiological procedures were performed in Ministry of Health (MOH) institutions. The corresponding number in 2000 was 799,452. This shows that there is about 35% increase in radiological examinations for the last 12 year period. This indicates that the population dose is on the rise as the radiological facilities are increasing in Oman which in turn increases the occupational dose of radiation workers. The occupational exposure of radiation workers of MOH hospitals were monitored by Thermo Luminescent Dosimeters (TLD's) which are dispatched to each location by post. We have developed a dose management software e Centralised Dose Recording System (CDRS) in-house for the management of dose records of Ministry of Health (MOH) radiation workers which manage TLD serial number allocation, issue to various hospitals/institutions, collection from respective hospitals/ institutions after wear period, dose assessment and monitoring, and finally dispatching the dose reports to MOH hospitals/ health centres / institutions. Also, the same software will handle the individual dose(s) of each worker(s) and their dose history. Every month we are dispatching more than 1300 plus badges to 145 hospitals/ institutions of MOH throughout the Sultanate of Oman after tagging in CDRS. Thus we keep track of the TLD badges of each worker in every location of MOH on a monthly basis. Some of the above locations are very remote (few thousand kilometers away from the capital city- Muscat). In this study, we have analysed the dose pattern of radiation workers in the cath labs of Ministry of Health hospitals for the ten year period 2002e2012. The range of effective doses (Hp (10)) of the workers for the year 2012 is shown below: Effective dose Range in mSv Number of workers wearing Number of workers wearing WB badges FH badges 0.0 - 0.5 0.5 - 1.0 1.0 - 2.0 2.0 - 5.0 5.0 - 10 10 - 15 15 - 20 Above 20 681 10 1 2 0 0 0 0 665 25 7 13 0 0 1 0 It has been observed that workers in cardiology receives the highest effective doses from among all the radiation workers where as those workers in radiation oncology receive the lowest as expected. Further details will be discussed during presentation. References 1. The World Health Report 2000 e Health systems: Improving performance. 2001. Geneva, Switzerland, World Health Organization. 2. Annual Health Report 2012 Published by Ministry of Health, Sultanate of Oman, 2012. 3. UNSCEAR. Sources and Effects of Ionizing Radiation. 2000. New York, United Nations. 4. Public Health England (PHE),UK. Technical Specifications of Body Dosimeters and variation of Hp (10) response with photon energy. 2013. PHE, UK. INDEPENDENT 3D DOSE CALCULATION SOFTWARE FOR STEREOTACTIC BRAIN RADIOSURGERY BASED ON IMPLICIT MODELING T. Kilindris, K. Theodorou, C. Kappas. University of Thessaly, School of Medicine, Biopolis, 41100 Larissa Modern treatment planning systems are complex software systems that provide a robust work frame for everyday routine radiotherapy. Those systems do not always offer sufficient flexibility to act as general purpose customizable dose calculation tools. We present a software tool to assist in independent dose calculations by using user specified dose calculation model on full patient anatomical data. The software tool was written in C++ using Kitware's VTK to model anatomical data extracted from DICOM CTs, dose accumulating spatial structures and radiotherapy modalities. All surfaces and volumes involved in dose calculation (patient, irradiation equipment and dose volume) were modeled as implicit functions. Coordinate systems alignment was done either visually using reference markers on CT's or manually provided by user as a transformation matrix. Dose calculation at specific points was done using Tissue Phantom Ratio (TPR) and correcting factors for field sizes. For fractionated dose delivery MU calculation was done per fractionated group. DVH are also calculated for any user provided and selected anatomical structures. Dose accumulation volume was 250 x 250 x 254 mm (XYZ). For comparison reasons the code was run on Windows XP 32bit Pentium E8500 at 3.16 GHz and on a Windows 7 64bit i7 at 3.4 GHz. On both systems the code was 32 bit compiled. Optimizations were disabled. Dose calculation grid spacing was selected 1mm, 2mm, and 5mm. Three dimensional dose matrix of a single beam was calculated in 46, 844 and 6953 ms respectively on the Windows XP system and in 26, 317, 3992 ms respectively on the Windows 7 system. The proposed software tool can be used for fast evaluation and sensitivity test of a calculated treatment plan. Changes of several parameters of the radiation delivery setup can be done by altering several modeling parameters like dose calculation grid density, emulating positioning errors Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) and delineation uncertainties. The computed 3D dose matrix can be merged with the CT data and visualized or saved. AUTOMATIC OPTIMIZATION OF MULTI-ISOCENTER SRT/SRS TREATMENT PLANNING PROCESS T. Kilindris, K. Theodorou. University of Thessaly, School of Medicine, Biopolis, 41100 Larissa Therapeutic effects of stereotactic brain radiosurgery are highly dependent on spatial accuracy and adequate dose homogeneity within target volume. During irradiation delivery, sparing of surrounding healthy or critical tissue is essential. In order to achieve high compliance to the demanding constrains posed by stereotactic brain radiosurgery several optimization techniques were studied regarding critical treatment plan decision variables. We present an optimization framework to ease manual selection of isocenters. Efficient dose delivery in stereotactic radiosurgery requires proper selection of several critical treatment set up parameters. The spatial energy pattern delivered to the lesion during multi arc single isocenter therapy is approximated as a spherical or more general as an elliptical volume enclosing spherical/elliptical surfaces as isodose surfaces. The approximation of the lesion volume with those spherical volumes maintaining several dosimetric requirements can be proven a hard optimization problem. Stereotactic position and morphology of the lesion can lead the problem infeasible under specific dosimetric constrains. Dose conformity at the prescribed level on targets boundaries and dose homogeneity within target volume were the main candidates as objective functions to be optimized. Mixed integer and nonlinear optimization techniques were applied. Several types of lesion that were candidates for stereotactic radiosurgery were delineated and both contours and surface models were generated of the CTV and PTV respectively. Constrains in gantry and couch positions were set up. Design parameters like number of arcs used, number of couch position used, set of collimators to be used etc were either fixed or set for optimization during strategy evaluation. An automated model configuration file was created in AMPL along with data supplied by our in house treatment planning system. The generated configuration file where used directly to online available solvers. The output of the solver was evaluated and if acceptable, calculation of the full treatment plan was done for precise DVH verification. The optimization of isocenter or shot placement in multi-isocenter SRT/ SRS treatment is a crucial factor for target dose inhomogeneity and coverage. This work aims to the development of an automatic procedure that could optimize the number and the location of isocenters in an SRT/ SRS treatment planning process. 33 set of performance indicators. Acceptance results were in accordance with the main standards of NHSBSP and European protocols [2,3]. Parameters such as detector response, MTF, SNR and CNR provided performance data for future comparison against other digital equipments. HVL and radiation output data were used in the determination of conversion factors for the ESAK and AGD assesments, and also to validate display exposure values or convert them into a usable dose metric. The customized set of routine tests proved to be a simplified and effective method for system performance consistency evaluation. It was found that after verification of proper operation during acceptance testing, if the system failed it generally occurred suddenly rather than through gradual deterioration of performance. Nevertheless, gradual performance decrease ocurred for MTF and gradual changes ocurred with SNR of the AOP System. SNR of the AOP (STD) mode stepwiselly increased. The selected routine tests were efficient in identification of all the situations in which technical intervention was necessary. Moreover weekly routine quality control test results were successfull in the identification of system malfunctioning representing possible diagnostic information compromise sometimes blind to the experienced eyes of the radiologists. NHS Cancer Screening Programs (2008) Technical evaluation of GE Essential full field digital mammography system, NHSBSP Equipment Report 0803, pp 1e24. NHS Cancer Screening Programs (2009) Commissioning and routine testing of full field digital mammography systems, NHSBSP Equipment Report 0604 version 3, pp 2e43. European Commission (2006) European guidelines for quality assurance in breast cancer screening and diagnosis, Official publications of the European Communities, 4rd Edition, Chapter 2b, pp 105e165. Acquisition System Senographe DS, Quality Control Manual 5133453-41PT, GE Healthcare, pp 10e108. THE EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PHD HOLDERS AT THE SECTOR OF MEDICAL PHYSICS AND ENGINEERING: PROBITAND OAXACA-BLINDER DECOMPOSITION ANALYSIS Eirini Konstantina Nikolatou a, Dimitrios Glotsos b, Joan Daouli a. a Department of Economic Sciences, University of Patras, Patras, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological Education Institute of Athens, Greece Background: The number of PhD graduates in Greece has been growing continuously throughout the last thirty years. Since 1996 the number of PhD graduates have increased by almost 5.5 times and it reached to 2500 graduates in 2007, where 60% of them are men and 40% women (figure 1). Most of the PhD graduates are observed in health sciences and the sciences of engineering. LESSONS LEARNED FROM A 5 YEAR PERIOD OF A CUSTOMIZED QUALITY CONTROL PROGRAM IN DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY A.R. Roda a, M.C. Lopes a, b, M.C. de Sousa a. a Medical Physics Department of the IPOCFG, EPE, Coimbra, Portugal; b Physics Department of the University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal Topics: Full field digital mammography (FFDM), half-value layer (HVL), entrance surface air kerma (ESAK), detector response, modulation transfer function (MTF), signal to noise ratio (SNR), contrast to noise ratio (CNR). The main role of medical physicist in digital mammography is to implement a quality control program that will ensure consistency and optimal operation of the X-ray equipment. The first step is to identify the physical parameters that characterize the system and optimize image quality performance. The second step is to evaluate the system gradual deterioration -determined limits. This of performance and the compliance with the pre study presents the results of a quality control program performed on a GE Senographe DS full field digital mammography system along a 5 years period. Acceptance baseline values were established using NHSBSP reports [1,2] and European Guidelines [3] as reference. Additionally we used the GE’s templates and the physical parameters recommended by the manufacturer [4] for routine tests and apply them weekly. We improved the set of routine tests in order to extend monitored parameters to the essential Fig. 1. Number of PhD graduates in Greece, per academic year.Ă Source: Statistics of Education, ESYE www.statistics.gr Regarding their employment status, by sector of industry, most of men and women PHD holders are employed in the sector of education (42.3% and 47% respectively), as well as in the sector of health care (22.4% and 26.2% respectively). Most previous research work is concentrated at the U.K. and U.S. academic markets and mainly the areas under investigation concern issues at earnings differential among males and females PhDs holders and issues of 34 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) promotion, and / or other issues of discrimination within the academic sector. The objective of this paper is to investigate the factors influencing the probability for a PhD holder in Greece to work in the Medical Physics and Engineering sector (figure 2) among PhD holders working at the sectors of Health care, Natural sciences and Computer Engineering, as well as the probability of existence of gender discrimination e wage gap in this sector (figure 3). JEL Classification: J21, J24, J31, J71 Acknowledgements ĂThis research has been co-financed by the European Union (European Social Fund e ESF) and Greek national funds through the Operational Program ”Education and Lifelong Learning” of the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF) e Research Funding Program: Heracleitus II. Investing in knowledge society through the European Social Fund. A RETROSPECTIVE DOSIMETRY COMPARISON OF TG43 AND A COMMERCIALLY AVAILABLE MBDCA ALGORITHM FOR AN APBI BRACHYTHERAPY PATIENT COHORT K. Zourari a, V. Peppa a, A. Herein b, T. Major b, P. Papagiannis a. a Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece; b National Institute of Oncology, Budapest, Hungary Figure 2. Number of PhD holders in Medical Physics and Engineering in Greece by gender and age, 1999 - 2012 Source: LFS 1999 e 2012, ESYE www.statistics.gr Figure 3. median wage of PhD holders in Greece, 1999 e 2012Ă Source: LFS 1999 e 2012, ESYE www.statistics.gr Material and methods: In this paper,Probit and Oaxaca model is estimated using Labor Force Survey data of the years 1998 to 2012. Results: Our results indicate that being young PhD holder and woman, increases the probability of being employed in the Greek Medical Physics and Engineering sector, whereas being married decreases the probability. Also, regarding the employment at the sector of Greek Medical Physics and Engineering, the results indicate that being a PhD holder having experience and /or working in the private sector, increases the probability of being employed at this sector of economic activity compared to someone who has less experience and/or works in health sciences, natural science or computer engineering. Our findings also suggest that gender discrimination in wages is being observed for PhD holders working in the sector of Medical Physics and Engineering, as well as there is an observed wage gap among the PhD holders working in Medical Physics and Engineering among the private and public sector. Men PhD holders gain higher earnings than women in the sector of Medical Physics and Engineering, as well as, PhD holders working in the public sector of Medical Physics and Engineering gain higher earnings than those working in the private sector. Keywords: scientific human capital, medical engineering labor market, wage discrimination Purpose: TG43 based TPS for brachytherapy rely on the superposition of source specific data pre-calculated in a standard homogeneous water geometry. Model-based Dose Calculation Algorithms (MBDCA) were recently incorporated in commercially available TPS to account for patient-specific scatter conditions and heterogeneities. This work reports on the comparison of TG43 and MBDCA in an 192Ir HDR Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) patient cohort, to quantify the potential benefit of MBDCAs and assess whether protocol changes are required to conform to the accuracy standards these convey. Materials and methods: A cohort of 38 APBI patients was selected. Dosimetric calculations for the treatment plans were performed using both the TG43 and collapsed cone algorithm options of the Oncentra Brachy v4.4 TPS. Quantitative dosimetry results were obtained in the form of PTV coverage, dose homogeneity and conformity, as well as dose volume histogram analysis for the breast, lung, heart and skin. The source position centroid-to-skin/-lung distances were also considered to investigate the impact of target location to the dose distributions. Significance testing of observed differences was also carried out to assess the importance of target location. Results: Comparison of MBDCA and TG43 dose distributions and DVHs shows considerable differences at the skin and the lung for all patients, as expected. Differences of TG43 and MBDCA plan dosimetric indices are however relatively small, with a slight overestimation by TG43 except for the PTV dose homogeneity. On average, percentage differences are less than 1% for the PTV and the dose homogeneity and conformity indices, greater for the lung and the heart (on the order of 5% for V5Gy) and maximum for the skin (on the order of 10% for D10cc), with a strong correlation to target location. Conclusions: So long as dose optimization and prescription is based on TG43 in view of the relatively increased computation time of MBDCAs, the close agreement observed between MBDCA and TG43 results close to the PTV suggests that there is no need for the amendment of currently used APBI protocols. Acknowledgement: Research co-financed by the EU-ESF and Greek funds. NSRF Operational Program Competitiveness and Entrepreneurship-Joint Research and Technology Programmes. AN EGSNRC-BASED MODEL OF THE GAMMA KNIFE PERFEXION UNIT FOR SMALL FIELD DOSIMETRIC CALCULATIONS E. Pappas a, A. Moutsatsos a, E. Pantelis a, C. Paraskevopoulou b, E. Georgiou a, P. Karaiskos a, b. a Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 11527 Athens, Greece; b Gamma Knife Department, Hygeia Hospital, Kifisias Avenue and 4 Erythrou Stavrou, Marousi, 15123 Athens, Greece Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Purpose: To present an EGSnrc-based model of the Gamma Knife Perfexion (PFX) radiosurgery unit used for Monte Carlo (MC) dosimetry calculations. Emphasis is given on the effect of specific model and scoring parameters on PFX output factor (OF) and relative dose profile results. Materials and methods: A detailed model of the PFX system was established using the C++ geometry package of the EGSnrc MC code, based on relevant drawings provided by the vendor. All 192 Co-60 sources along with their capsules and bushing were modeled in a single input file per collimator size (16mm, 8mm and 4mm). Dosimetry calculations were performed in a spherical, 16cm diameter water phantom using the “egs_chamber” user code. The angular distribution of the photons emitted from each source was assumed to be isotropic. The developed PFX model was benchmarked against off axis relative dose profiles measured with radiochromic films. Dose was scored in concentric spherical volumes, centered at UCP, with radii ranging from 0.2mm to 3mm and used to evaluate volume averaging effects on OF results. Simulations were repeated for confined angular distributions of the emitted photons to assess the gained simulation efficiency against dosimetric accuracy. In specific, the cone half angle, as defined with respect to the source channel central axis, varied from 5o to 90o. Results and conclusion: Confinement of the emitted photons angular distribution resulted in a time efficiency gain factor of up to 210 (for 5o cone half angle and the 4mm collimator), and had no considerable effect on relative dose profile data. Contrarily, the gained simulation efficiency was found to come at the expense of the accuracy of the calculated OF values, leading to an overestimation of up to 6% and 3.5% for the 4mm and 8mm collimators, respectively, as compared to isotropic photon emission. Volume averaging was found to impact OF results for sensitive volume radii greater than 0.5mm and 1.25mm for the 4mm and 8mm collimators, respectively. The developed PFX model will be used to determine the kQcln correction factors corresponding to commonly used detectors for PFX OF measurements. CONTRIBUTION OF FLT-PET/CT IN METASTATIC BRAIN TUMORS Alexandra Nikaki a, Roxani Efthymiadou a, Ioannis Tsougos b, Vassilios Prassopoulos a, Vassiliki Filippi a, Fani Vlachou a, Despina Savvidou a, Theodoros Pipikos a, Ioannis Andreou a, Panagiotis Georgoulias c. a PET/CT Department, HYGEIA SA, Greece; b Medical Physics Department, University of Thessaly, Greece; c Nuclear Medicine Department, University of Thessaly, Greece Aim: To explore the role of FLT-PET/CT in recurrent metastatic brain lesions. Method-material: 13 patients underwent 17 FLT-PET examinations for evaluation of metastatic brain lesions. The primary tumor site was: breast cancer in 7 cases, lung cancer in 7, thymoma in 2, and melanoma in 1 case. All patients had received the appropriate treatment during the course of disease and all of them had received radiotherapy for metastatic brain disease, while in 2/17 cases additional surgical excision of the brain lesion was performed. FLT-PET/CT was performed 55±5min after the iv administration of 18F-FLT at a Siemens Biograph LSO PET/CT device. Findings were evaluated visually as positive or negative: any finding with FLT uptake clearly above the background activity was characterized as positive. Semiquantitative assessment was also used, with the calculation of SUVmax and tumor-to-background ratio (T/B: SUVmax of the tumor/ SUVmean of the background). Results: FLT-PET/CT was characterized negative in 3 cases and positive in 14 (15 lesions). Average SUVmax and T/B were 2.27±1.3 and 11.62±5.47 respectively. Using paired t-test, T/B values were statistically significant higher than the SUVmax values (p <0.05). In 12 cases patients were referred for treatment after FLT-PET examination, 11 of whom had a positive PET examination, while data is missing for 1. In 2 FLT-PET positive cases the patients were referred for biopsy, both of which were negative: 1 of these patients exhibited progressive disease in the next follow-up examination. In the other PET-positive/biopsy-negative case, FLT uptake pattern was diffuse and SUVmax was 1.29. In 2 FLT-PET-negative cases patients were put under surveillance. In 1 FLT-PET negative case, the patient was referred for chemotherapy, due to disease lesions other than brain. 35 Conclusion: Admitting the referral bias and the small and inhomogeneous sample, our results indicate that 18F-FLT- РЕΤ, by offering additional functional information, may be a useful tool in evaluation of metastatic brain lesions. Average SUVmax and T/B values differ substantially, possibly due to the more constant background activity. Variability noted mostly in T/B values could be attributed to differences in primary site and treatment response. THE USE OF CENTROMERIC/TELOMERIC PNA PROBES IN PREMATURELY CONDENSED CHROMOSOMES OF PERIPHERAL BLOOD LYMPHOCYTES FOR ABSORBED DOSE ESTIMATION I. Karachristou a, D. Zafiropoulos b, M. Karakosta a, V. Hatzi a, G. Pantelias a, G. Terzoudi a. a Health Physics, Radiobiology & Cytogenetics laboratory, Institute of Nuclear & Radiological Sciences & Technology, Energy & Safety, NCSR “Demokritos”, Athens, Greece; b Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro, Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Legnaro, Italy Background: The frequency of dicentric chromosomes in human peripheral blood lymphocytes at metaphase is considered as the “goldstandard” for biological dosimetry and at present is the most widely used method for dose assessment. This methodology requires lymphocyte culture and analysis time of more than three days. Such long time period, is inadequate in radiation emergency medicine since a rapid and accurate estimation of the dose is considered to be a high priority. Alternatively, cell fusion mediated premature chromosome condensation (PCC) enables the observation of radiation-induced cytogenetic damage directly in non-stimulated lymphocytes without the need of blood culturing. Quantification of an exposure by means of this method has been limited so far mainly to the analysis of chromosome fragments and rings. This limitation is due to the fact that staining with Giemsa of prematurely condensed chromosomes (PCCs) does not allow visualization of the centromeric regions and, consequently, the identification of dicentrics, centric rings, and acentric fragments. In the present work, we overcome this shortcoming by developing a methodology enabling us the detection of dicentric chromosomes rapidly and accurately in non-stimulated lymphocyte PCCs. Materials and methods: The methodology of cell fusion mediated premature chromosome condensation was used and combined with fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) technique, using simultaneously telomere and centromere peptide nucleid acid (PNA) probes. For detecting of dicentric chromosomes in cultured lymphocytes conventional metaphase analysis was used. Results: Analysis of dicentrics, centric rings and acentric fragments in nonstimulated lymphocyte PCCs was carried out and dose-response curves for doses up to 8 Gy have been constructed. For comparison, dose response curves were also obtained using the conventional metaphase analysis in stimulated lymphocytes. Discussion: FISH analysis with centromeric/telomeric PNA probes in G0lymphocyte PCCs is proved to be an effective, sensitive and fast approach for the estimation of absorbed doses especially in case of radiation emergency medicine. The advantages of this new approach in comparison with the conventional method will be discussed. STUDY OF THE REPLACEMENT-UPDATE OF THE PACS/RIS SYSTEM IN THE MEDICAL IMAGING DEPARTMENT OF THE IASO GENERAL HOSPITAL Ioanna Tzovara Foteini Stromatia MScMedical Physicist a, MDRadiologist b. a Department of Medical physics IASO General Hospital, Greece; b Department of Medical Imaging IASO General Hospital, Mesogion 264, 15562 Holargos, Greece Aim: The aim of the study was to update or replace the PACS/RIS system of the medical imaging departments, of IASO General Hospital, after eight years of archiving 5341 G-Bytes of medical data, since the installation in 2002, in order to achieve better work flow and faster medical diagnosis. Materials and methods: The archiving and management of medical imaging data, in our Hospital, were performed using a PACS/RIS system, 36 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) interconnecting Radiology, interventional Radiology and Nuclear Medicine departments. High resolution diagnostic workstations were used for diagnosis, whereas secondary workstations allowed direct access of the Intensive Care unit and the Emergency department. In order to update the installed system, a systematic recording of the specifications of all medical devices, connected to the PACS system, along with information concerning the department of installation, the level of their operation and any additional operations, was performed. A corresponding recording was performed for the current diagnostic workstations along with data concerning modifications. All users were personally interviewed in order to establish user oriented specifications. The number of images per unit was calculated by the product of the number of images per examination by the number of examinations per unit. Furthermore the amount of DICOM information from every modality was also documented. Finally it was determined that all exams should be directly accessible for at least five years and archived for thirty years, according to the regulations for medical imaging archiving. Results: Total time for diagnosis was reduced due to bidirectional communication of the diagnostic workstation and the workstation of every medical device. Radiologists noted 30% faster diagnosis and now they process special exams in the reading- evaluation facility. Ability for MPR was given and safer measurements for vessel region. Access to archives was improved, daily workflow also due to corresponding improvement in the work list. Conclusions: Replacement e updating of PACS/RIS system has improved daily workflow. Also has fastened information processing giving additional capabilities in cases such as comparative assessment for oncological patients. DOSE CALCULATION PROGRAM BY MATLAB, FOR MONITORING RADIOTHERAPY TREATMENT PLANNING SYSTEM COMMISSIONING I. Vamvakas a, b, S. Synefia a, P. Charalabatou c,a, Ch. Armpillia a, Ch. Antypas a, M. Lyra a. a Medical Physics Unit, A’ Radiology Department, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Medical Physics Dep., Iaso Hospital, Athens, Greece; c Radiotherapy Dep., University Hospital, Rabat, Morocco Background: In modern radiation therapy with high energy photon beams produced by linear accelerators, fast and accurate calculation of the dose distribution in patient’s body is required. Special computer systems known as treatment planning systems calculate the dose distribution. Medical Physicists use the treatment planning systems for radiotherapy planning. Every treatment planning system must be checked for the accuracy of the computed dose compared to measured dose under several cases, before it can be used clinically. We created an independent routine in MatLab that calculates dose at any point in the central axis of a photon beam in water and we used it to check the accuracy of the treatment planning calculation. Materials and methods: A graphical user interface that calculates point dose was created in MATLAB language. Percentage depth doses, collimator scatter factors, phantom scatter factors for several field sizes of Siemens 6 MV linear accelerator were inputted in MatLab and a special code was generated. A simple form, named VAMLY-plan, has been created and can be completed to extract dose at any point in the central axis. The accuracy of the calculations was compared to absolute dose measurements in water with ion chamber. Point doses for several fields' sizes and several depths in water were calculated with the Oncentra Masterplan treatment planning system. The results were compared to the MatLab VAMLY-Plan calculation values respectively. Results: The agreement between the Oncentra Masterplan treatment planning system calculations and the VAMLY-Plan calculation MatLab routine was better than 2% for any case. Discussion: Treatment planning systems must be checked thoroughly for dose calculation accuracy in order to be commissioned for clinical use. Hand monitor unit calculation is time consuming and often prevents Medical Physicists from detailed examination of the treatment planning system. The MatLab calculations routine, VAMLY-Plan, helps Medical physicists to commission treatment planning systems fast and accurately. ENERGY RESOLUTION OF THE GAGG:CE SINGLE CRYSTALS WITH VARIOUS THICKNESS COUPLED TO A SIPM G. Delimani a, M. Georgiou a,b, P. Papadimitroulas c, P. Papamichalis a, K. Mikropoulos a, S. David a, G. Loudos a. a Department of Biomedical Engineering, Technological and Educational Institute of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Department of Medical School, University of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece; c Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Rion, Greece Aim: Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPMs) are good candidates for the replacement of common Photomultiplier Tubes (PMTs) because of their small size, low cost, low operating voltage, robustness, compactness and they are insensitive to magnetic fields. In this study, the energy resolution, that have been measured with the SensL's (SPMMicro) photo-detector, is presented. The SPMMicro is coupled to a new mixed Gd3Al2Ga3O12:Ce or GAGG:Ce scintillator with seven different crystal size elements (3, 5, 6, 8, 10, 15, 20 mm thickness). All the experimental data have been simulated with GATE Monte Carlo simulation toolkit which is dedicated for nuclear imaging applications. The radioactive sources that were used both in the experiments and the simulations are: 22Na, 137Cs, 57Co, 109Cd. Results regarding the energy proportionality of the optical detector as well as the sensitivity achieved were reported. Methods/materials: GAGG:Ce scintillator is non hygroscopic, with fast scintillation response and high light yield. The density of GAGG:Ce is 6.63 g/cm3, with effective atomic number equal to 54.4 [1-2]. All GAGG:Ce scintillator crystals with 3x3mm2 cross section were purchased by Furukawa Co Ltd. The SiPM that was studied is the SPMM-3035 included in SensL's ScintPack evaluation package. It has an overall area of 3x3mm2, with cell pitch of 35 mm. We also used a Preamplifier and Power Supply Module (SPMA4). SPMA4 is comprised of three individual boards: a) a preamplifier board that interfaces with the detector and provides signal amplification, b) a power supply board that provides the detector bias and power for the preamp and c) a shield board between the two to prevent interference [3]. The applied bias voltage was set equal to +30 V. The digitization of the pulses was done with the CAEN DT5720 desktop digitizer. The energy resolution values were calculated applying a Gaussian fit on the photopeaks with ±10 energy window. The coupling material used for the optical coupling among the SIPM and the scintillator crystals was grease (BC-630). All the measurements were conducted in a black box with stable temperature at +180C controlled by a peltier cooling system. Results-Discussion: Experimental and simulated energy resolution values for seven different GAGG:Ce scintillators under 137Cs irradiation are summarized in Table 1. Table 1. Energy resolution for GAGG:Ce with 137Cs. First column shows the scintillator sizes, the second column shows the simulated results and the third the experimental results. GAGG:Ce Scintillator size (mm3 ) GATE Simulation Experimental values 3x3x3 3x3x5 3x3x6 3x3x8 3x3x10 3x3x15 3x3x20 11.1% 10.1% 10.9% 10.6% 10.8% 11.1% 10.7% 15.8% 13.1% 14.1% 14.4% 11.2% 12.2% 13.6% The best simulated energy resolution value was computed for the GAGG:Ce 3x3x5mm3 single crystal equal to10.1%. The best experimental value measured for GAGG:Ce 3x3x10mm3 equal to 11.2%. Acknowledgment: This research has been co-funded by the European Union (European Social Fund) and Greek national resources under the framework of the “Archimedes III: Funding of Research Groups in TEI of Athens”. References [1] J. Iwanowska et al. “Performance of cerium-doped Gd3Al2Ga3O12 (GAGG:Ce) scintillator in gamma-ray spectrometry”, Nucl. Instrum. Meth. A, vol. 712, pp. 34-40, 2013 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) [2] M. Georgiou et al. ”Development of a SIPM based gamma-ray imager using a Gd3Al2Ga3O12:Ce (GAGG:Ce) scintillator array,” IEEE Nucl. Sci. Symp.& Med. Imag conf. M21-48, Oct 27- Nov 2, Seoul, Korea, 2013 [3] N. Efthimiou et al. “Initial results on SiPMs performance for use in medical imaging,” Meas. Sci. Technol. 22 (2011) 114001 COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT DOSIMETRY METHODS FOR 64-ROW DETECTOR COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY M. Gancheva, I. Dyakov, J. Vassileva, D. Kostova-Lefterova, S. AvramovaCholakova. National Centre of Radiobiology and Radiation Protection, Sofia, Bulgaria Background: The aim of this work is to study how the CTDI measurement methods influence results for Multi-Detector Computed Tomography (MDCT) with beam width less than 40 mm. The current IEC standart suggests standad dosimetry can be applied for these scanners. Our previous TLD measurements of dose profiles of different MDCT revealed even for a beam width of 32 mm the integration length of 100 mm in the definition of CTDI100 is insufficient to evaluate the full dose profile, which motivated further research. Materials and methods: The study was performed with Aquilion 64 of Toshiba. Additionally to the standard dosimetry, four other approaches were applied. First, suggested by IEC for MDCT with width higher than 40 mm, includes free in air measurements with a standard 100 mm CT chamber, stepped through the X-ray beam, along the z-axis, at intervals equal to its sensitive length. Two cases were studied e with integration length of 100 mm, and of 200 mm. Except measurements with standard PMMA phantom, secondary approach was implemented with twice-longer phantom (30 cm length) and two standard chambers positioned and fixed against each other. Since the inactive area between the two chambers third and fourth approaches were applied. They comprises measurements with 30 cm long phantom and standard chamber placed in two and in tree different positions respectively, forming a detection length of 200 mm in the middle of the phantom and forming a detection length of 300 mm along the phantom. Phantom measurements of CTDI were made only in the central hole e CTDIc. Results: The results indicated that CTDIfree-in-air measured with an integration length of 200 mm for 32 mm wide beam is 13% higher than the standard method. CTDIc measured in phantom with standard method is 17% lower then CTDIc calculated with IEC method, 32% lower then the second method, 58% lower then values obtained by the third method and 70% lower then the fourth method. Discussion: The length of the phantom and the integration length have strong influence on the result. The study results demonstrated the limitation of the standard method of CTDI measurement for 64-row MDCT. 37 Preliminary Results: Fig. 1 shows the excess dose due to a GNL in 3 different scenarios. In all cases, an increase of dose after the GNL is observed, which, however, is matched by a corresponding decrease of dose before the GNL. The excess dose curves for the GNPs (Fig 2) exhibit significant noise, in large part due to the much more significant effect of lack of lateral electronic equilibrium at such small source sizes. After the GNP, the excess dose for the 100 nm solid and hollow GNPs is similar and extends to a greater distance than that for the 50 nm GNP. However, the magnitude of the peak at the location of the GNP is higher for the 50 nm GNP. Before the GNP, there is clear underdosing for the 50 nm GNP. The curves for the 100 nm GNPs are more complicated, requiring further investigation. Conclusion: Our results indicate that, for GNPs in particular, nanoscale MC simulations must be carefully designed and implemented, since inherent perturbations and uncertainties may significantly affect the results. References 1. Benhalouche, S., D. Visvikis, et al. (2013). “Evaluation of clinical IMRT treatment planning using the GATE Monte Carlo simulation platform for absolute and relative dose calculations.” Medical Physics 40(2): 021711. Fig. 1. Excess dose along the beam central axis due to a 50 nm GNL at: 5 mm depth in a 20x20x20mm3 water phantom (red), 5 mm depth in a 40x40x40mm3 water phantom (blue), and 15 mm depth in a 40x40x40mm3 water phantom (green) DOES THE SETUP OF MONTE CARLO SIMULATIONS INFLUENCE THE CALCULATED PROPERTIES AND EFFECT OF GOLD NANOPARTICLES? Dimitris Makris MSc, Spiridon V. Spirou PhD, George Loudos PhD. Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, TEI Athens, Greece Background: Gold Nanoparticles (GNPs) are promising radiation therapy agents due to their cell-killing enhancement effect. Their properties at the nanoscale level are being investigated using Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, with little, if any, experimental verification. The purpose of this work is to investigate whether the setup of the MC simulation itself affects the results. Methods and Materials: The GATE MC toolkit (v6.2) was used to simulate the irradiation of a water phantom containing GNPs and Gold Nanolayers (GNLs). The water phantoms ranged from 1x1x1 to 40x40x40 mm3. GNLs (10, 50 and 100 nm in thickness, length and width same as those of the phantom), and solid and hollow GNPs (10, 50 and 100 nm in diameter) were placed at the central axis and at various depths. A realistic 6 MV photon source was placed 2 mm outside the phantom1. The number of particles generated was 25x106 photons/mm2 for the GNLs and 108 for the GNPs. The direction of the photons was perpendicular to the phantom. The source was rectangular and covered the GNL or the GNP. Fig. 2. Excess dose along the beam central axis due to a spherical GNP at 5 mm depth in a 20x20x20mm3 water phantom: 50 nm diameter solid GNP (red), 100 nm diameter solid GNP (blue), 100 nm outer diameter and 50 nm inner diameter hollow (shell) GNP (green) 38 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) A SURVEY ON AVERAGE GLANDULAR DOSES IN DIGITAL MAMMOGRAPHY UNITS OF FOUR DIFFERENT MANUFACTURERS I.A. Tsalafoutas a, Ch. Panaretos b, S. Thalassinou c, I. Georgiou a, A. Christou d, E. Cassianou e, R. Aggelatou a, E. Yakoumakis f. a Athens General Anticancer-Oncology Hospital “Agios Savvas”, Athens, Greece; b Diagnostic Center “Iatriki Merimna”, Petroupoli, Athens, Greece; c N. Papapostolou Ltd, Psychiko, Athens, Greece; d Diagnostic Center “Christou”, Maroussi, Athens, Greece; e Diagnostic Center “Ef Frontizein”, Metamorfossi, Athens, Greece; f Medical Physics Department, Medical School, University of Athens, Athens, Greece Objective: To investigate the average glandular dose (AGD) levels in four mammographic facilities equipped with digital units of different manufacturers. All units calculate the entrance surface air kerma (ESAK) and average glandular dose (AGD) values in real time. Methods: 1899 digital mammograms performed in four units [A: GEEssential (#461), B: Siemens-Mammomat Novation DR (#505), C: HologicLorad Selenia (#526) and D: Fujifilm-Amulet (#407)] were collected. Using appropriate software (DICOM Info Extractor), all dose related parameters were extracted from DICOM headers into four Microsoft Excel files (one for each unit). These files contained embedded equations and algorithms to allow for the retrospective calculation of ESAK and AGD values automatically, using the DICOM header info. Results: Mean AGD and CBT values and ranges [values within brackets] were: A: 1.39 mGy [0.87e2.85] for CBT¼ 5.8 cm [2.7e9.8], B: 1.34 mGy [0.80e3.1] for CBT¼ 4.7 cm [1.6e8.9], C: 1.06 [0.44e2.11] for CBT¼ 5.6 cm [2.3e9.3] and D: 2.36 mGy [0.94e4.3] for CBT¼ 5.2 cm [2.1e7.9]. In unit A the Rh/Rh filer combination was used for the majority of mammograms, in unit B the W/Rh (exclusively), in unit C the W/Rh, while in unit D the Mo/ Rh. Compared to the EUREF’s acceptable and achievable AGD level curves, for unit A almost all AGD values were below the achievable level curve (except ~1% performed with the high dose protocol), for unit B ~3% were above the acceptable and ~10% above the achievable level curves, for unit C all AGD values were below the acceptable and only ~2% was above the achievable level curves. For unit D there was a considerable number of AGD values above the two curves for two reasons: the high dose protocol was often used and the CBT value was underestimated by about 1 cm, leading to low kV selection and considerable AGD overestimation. Comparisons of real time ESAK and AGD values with retrospective calculations will be presented. Conclusion: Dose surveys in digital mammography units should be performed periodically in order to check for conformance with EUREF’s proposed AGD levels and detect possible problems that lead to high patient doses or false AGD indications. DOSIMETRIC COMPARISON OF GAMMA ANALYSIS OF BRAIN AND HEAD AND NECK INTENSITY MODULATED RADIATION THERAPY TREATMENTS USING GAFCHROMIC EBT3 FILMS AND 2D ION CHAMBER ARRAY MATRIX € Yıldıray c, Tokatli Alkaya Fadime a, Üzümlü Evren a, Yaray Kadir b, Ozgüven a € _ Füsun a, Aksakal Oznur . a Medicana International Istanbul Hospital, b _ Erciyes University, Medical Radiation Oncology Department e ISTANBUL; _ c Cumhuriyet University, Faculty, Radiation Oncology Department- KAYSERI; _ Medical Faculty, Radiation Oncology Department - SIVAS Background: Patient based quality assurance (QA) procedures for IMRT patients is a daily routine now to be sure about the agreement of treatment planning system (TPS) calculated dose and the dose delivered by the lineer accelerator. Materials and methods: The comparison of the dose distributions by using Gafchromic EBT3 film and PTW 2D Array 729 has been done for 15 brain and head and neck IMRT patients (plans with ECLIPSE TPS) treated with 6 MV photon beams (Varian 2100 DHX Clinac Linac with 120 millenium dMLC). The parameter of the verification method is gamma index (g-index) method. The acceptance limits for g calculation we have used are 3% for dose agreement and 3mm for distance to agreement parameters. Results: The qualitative dose distribution comparison was performed using composite dose distribution in the measurement plane and profiles along various axes for TPS vs. EBT3 film and TPS vs. PTW 2D Array 729. The quantitative analysis between the calculated and measured dose distribution was evaluated using g-index. The percentage of pixels matching with the data set g values for EBT3 films are higher than g values for PTW 2D Array 729. After measurements it is found that for 2D Array average g values of head and neck patients are 90,105 and for EBT3 films 95,33; for 2D Array average g values of brain patients are 95,37 and for EBT3 films 96,73. Discussion: If your g values are close but under acceptance limits, EBT3 films would be a good method to check your dose distributions. However due to simplicity and fast evaluation process of array detectors, it can be routinely used in busy departments without compromising the measurement accuracy. NEW DISCOVERIES IN g-RAY ATTENUATION MEASUREMENTS FOR MEDICAL PHYSICS E. Adamides a, A. Kavadjiklis a, b, S.K. Koutroubas a, N. Moshonas a, c, A. Tzedakis d. a Department of Physics, Chemistry and Materials Technology STEF, TEI Piraeus, P. Ralli and Thivon 250, Egaleo, Greece; b School of Applied Mathematical and Physical Science, National Technical University of Athens, Athens, Greece; c School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Athens, Greece; d Department of Medical Physics, University Hospital of Heraklion, Crete, Greece In the present work we report on a new way to evaluate the buildup factor in g-ray attenuation which is crucial in determining the correct exposure dose at the target in Medical Physics. Based on our detailed g-ray attenuation experiments using 60Co radioactive source and absorbers of lead and iron we found out that the g rate after passing an absorber of thickness x in space, i.e. , is a step-wise function of x. For each mean free path the function can be fitted quite well by a straight line. From its slope we define, for the first time, the buildup coefficients ki as the decrease in m. The physical meaning of ki is that they refer to the Compton scattered radiation through the i-th mean free path. The buildup factor propagated through the i-th mean free path is given by our model1 as:where xm is the length of the mean free path. Our model comes much closer to the physical understanding of the g-ray attenuation process compare to the previously used mathematical formulae for the buildup function. 80 9 1 < nX = 1 Bi Eg ; mx ¼ exp @ kj ki xm A þ ki x : ; j¼1 A close look into our detailed g-ray attenuation date revealed special features like a pigmy resonance at the end of the mfp which may mislead the determination of the parameters used in the previous buildup functions. These weak bumps can become important in the case of a strong radioactive source in radiation protection. A comparison of our experimental results with Monte-Carlo calculations showed systematic deviations which could be explained by the introduction of a new mechanism to the already known interactions of radiation with matter. On this new mechanism we shall comment. Our model for determining the buildup factor can be easily applied and comprehended from the physics point of view in medical physics educational laboratory thus giving to the student a more realistic interpretation of the g-ray attenuation process in matter. References 1. E. Adamides, A. Kavadjiklis, S.K. Koutroubas, N. Moshonas, A. Tzedakis and K. Yiasemides. “Reduction of the buildup contribution in gamma-ray attenuation measurements and a new way to study this experiment in student laboratory” Phys. Educ. 49(1), 55e60, 2014 IN-VITRO STUDY OF FLOW RELATED CHARACTERISTICS IN GLASS STENOTIC TUBES USING MAGNETIC RESONANCE ANGIOGRAPHY Patatoukas George, Argyropoulos George, Kazerou Aspasia, Christopoulos George, Efstathopoulos Efstathios. Medical Physics Unit, 2nd Department of Radiology, Medical School, University of Athens, Greece Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Background: Arterial blood flow characteristics can be studied nonedinvasively using Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Magnetic Resonance angiography provides real-time velocity information. This functional information is of paramount importance in the study of arterial blood flow characteristics and can lead to the quantification of individual hemodynamic-related parameters in any patient; it can also assist in the development of diagnostic tools to quantify artery disease and it can contribute to the design of devices that mimic blood flow either for educational purposes or for developing tools that alter blood flow. Materials and methods: To simulate blood circulation in stenotic arteries, a positive displacement pump driven by an electrocardiogram (ECG) generator was used. Water was considered as the flow medium of choice. Three different glass tubes, each exhibiting a stenotic geometry were studied. The percentage of the stenosis was unknown. The glass stenotic tubes were placed between two gelatin layers to mimic tissue-equivalent material and to enhance MRI signal acquisition. Imaging was performed with a Philips Intera 1.5T MRI system using phase contrast sequences. Results were compared to CT image-based stenosis quantification. Results: Velocity values were acquired and recorded pre- and poststenotically for each glass tube. Stenosis percentage quantification was performed using the MRI-velocity information. In addition, Signal To Noise Ratio (SNR) calculation was performed around the stenotic vicinity (preand post-) and their ratio was noted and related to stenosis percentage. Furthermore, velocity profiles were acquired, studied and compared to the theoretical parabolic profile. Finally the MRI flow-based calculated values for each of the stenosis percentage were compared to those extracted using CT imaging anatomy. Discussion: Higher flow velocity values were observed post-stenotically. The length of the induced jet and the consequent signal loss were related to the stenosis percentage. Turbulent flow and dispersion of velocity values is an important factor of signal lose in the stenotic vicinity. CT based and MR based stenosis quantification exhibited differences. Further steps need to be done in MR imaging to fully appreciate and quantify each factor that influences blood flow. S.E.Y.Y.P INSPECTIONS RELATED WITH RADIOLOGY DEPARTMENTSLABORATORIES FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN GREECE E. Kounadi, I. Manousopoulou, N. Kallitsantsis, M. Adamopoulou, V. Panagopoulos, H. Merentitis, P. Sakellariou, M. Rekkas, S. Sampatakakis. Ministry of Health in Greece, SEYYP, Athens Greece Background: In Greece, under current legislation the Radiology Departments-Labs (DL) must be equipped with specific ionizing and nonionizing radiation diagnostic systems. Special operating license required for Radiology DL operation which must be renewed every five years. Also quality control program for each system is mandatory. The purpose of this work is to present the results of SEYYP inspections related with Radiology DL, i.e. the problems identified, and proposals that can eliminate these problems. Materials and methods: The SEYYP where its services aiming to improve the Public Health, during the years 2012-2014, have been carried out inspections related with public and private Radiology DL in urban areas and in the countryside. In this inspection procedure was checked and implicated, not only the Radiology DL, but also the related public health services. Inspection subjects, was the licensing of DL and the proper operation of them. Also issues related to magnetic tomographs (MRI) licensing and statistical data related to the computed tomography (CT) examinations, in the country, was explored. Results: At Radiology DL, where problems with their licensing, was found after the inspection forced to comply with the current legislation. In some of them monetary penalties was imposed or they were forced to close down for some time. Deficiencies in current legislation for the MRIs licensing was identified and proposals for the improvement was formulated. In the conduction of the CT exams, great variation, in the CT exams number per 1,000 inhabitants, between public hospitals from different Local Regions, was found. Also great variation at the number of exams per CT system, for the year 2013, in Public Hospitals in the country was identified. 39 Discussion: The recommendations that were performed at checked and implicated public services and Radiation DL, were aiming to improve the public health in the country. Thus proposals for a more efficient use of manpower and medical instrumentation in public Hospitals, taking into account the economic situation of the country, was performed. Furthermore proposals to reduce the induced demand of the CT exams in the country were made. EVALUATION OF THE ACCURACY OF THE ELECTRON TRANSPORT ALGORITHMS OF THE MCNP6 AND EGSNRC MONTE CARLO CODES USING THE FANO THEOREM E. Zoros, E. Pappas, E. Pantelis. Medical Physics Laboratory, Medical School, University of Athens, 75 Mikras Asias, 11527 Athens, Greece Background: Monte Carlo (MC) codes are commonly used for simulating ion chamber response in photon or electron beams. Besides cross section libraries, accurate modelling of the ion chamber and beam quality, the accuracy of the obtained results depends also on the electron transport algorithm (ETA) parameters used by the MC codes. In this study, the accuracy of the ETA of the recently released MCNP6 as well as of the EGSnrc MC codes is evaluated using the Fano theorem. Methods: MCNP and EGSnrc simulations were performed for a cylindrical infinite graphite slab phantom containing a cavity delimited by two parallel planes. The cavity was filled with ‘gas’ of the same composition as graphite but with mass density of a thousand-fold smaller. Identical cross sections (including the density effect) were used for both the cavity walls and the gas. Electrons with initial kinetic energies ranging from 0.05MeV to 10MeV were generated in the wall and in the gas with a uniform intensity per unit mass. The initial emission direction was either perpendicular or parallel to the gasewall interface motivated by the design of pancake- and thimble-type chambers. The degree of violation of the Fano theorem was quantified for the default parameters of the EGSnrc and as a function of the ESTEP parameter (determining the number of sub-steps per energy step) for the MCNP codes, respectively. For the MCNP simulations the new energy indexing method was used. The effect of the ESTEP value on simulation efficiency was also studied. Results: Results showed that EGSnrc verifies Fano theorem within 0.1% for the studied electron energies. Corresponding MCNP results showed that the default ESTEP value of 3 should be used only for electron kinetic energies of 0.05MeV. As energy increases a greater ESTEP parameter should be used, taking a value of 30 for 10MeV electron energy, to obtain dosimetry results with 0.1% accuracy. Increasing ESTEP up to 30 downgrades time efficiency, by a factor of 4 for 1MeV electron energy. Discussion: This work is intended to help users adopt the optimal parameters of the MCNP and EGSnrc MC codes that guarantee high-accuracy dosimetry calculations. PRE-RADIOTHERAPY (RT) TREATMENT PLANNING FACTORS TO TAKE INTO ACCOUNT IN ONCOLOGIC PATIENTS WITH INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES (IBD) M. Tolia a, A. Zygogianni a, G. Kyrgias b, K. Theodorou b, C. Kappas b, J. Kouvaris a, V. Kouloulias a. a 1st Department of Radiology, Radiation Oncology Unit, Aretaieion University Hospital, Vassilissis Sofias 76, 115 28, Medical School of Athens, Greece; b Radiotherapy Department, Larissa University Hospital, Medical School of Thessaly, Greece Background: IBD represents a chronic intestinal inflammation in the absence of an infectious or dietary cause. IBD can produce many similar clinical characteristics as RT toxicity and has been considered a relative contraindication for the delivery of RT. There is a relative scarcity of data concerning the safety of irradiation for oncologic patients with an IBD history. We evaluated the optimal treatment factors in order to reduce the risk of RT bowel toxicity in oncologic IBD patients. Materials and methods: A review of all published reports was performed by Medline. Results: Modern techniques such as image-guided tomotherapy or volumetric-modulated arc therapy may possibly permit the administration of higher doses with less bowel toxicity. Use of IORT and brachytherapy (vaginal implant, perineal proton boost) in combination of 40 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) photon radiotherapy in order to deliver supplemental irradiation. Brachytherapy in early-stage prostate cancer should be considered. Special positioning (prone or decubitus) and fully distended bladder to minimize bowel irradiation. Surgical omentoplasty, dexon, vicryl mesh and tissue expanders to mobilize the bowel away from irradiated area. Surgical clips placement are useful for precise tumor localization and delineation of tumor bed. Delivery of only a fraction, not higher than 1.8e2 Gy daily. Reduction of total dose and eventually employment of scheduled rest periods during RT. Hormonal therapy could shrink the prostatic gland (downsizing) in prostate cancer patients and thus reduce the radiation field size. Steroid-induced femoral head osteonecrosis represents an aseptic and ischemic disease developing after chronic administration of steroids in IBD patients. Keep doses within femoral head tolerance. Care must also be taken to age associated osteoporosis in geriatric patients. Discussion: A special attention should be given to RT dose and technique, in order to minimize post-RT complications. NATIONAL PATIENT DOSE SURVEY IN DENTAL CBCT AND ELABORATION OF NATIONAL DRLS D. Petrov, J. Vassileva. National centre of radiobiology and radiation protection, Sofia, Bulgaria Background: The aim of this study is to present results from the national patient dose survey in cone beam CT (CBCT) used in dental practice, and to elaborate national diagnostic reference levels (DRL). Materials and methods: Patient doses were measured with calibrated kerma-area product (KAP) dosemeter Diamentor E2 (PTW Freiburg), installed on the tube housing exit. Patient head was simulated with a standart CT head phantom. The size of the radiation field was measured with Gafchromic film placed on the imaging detector. Organ doses and effective dose E were calculated with PCXMC v.2.0 (STUK) by Monte Carlo simulation. Pilot measurements were performed on three CBCT: one NewTomVG (QR-Italy)and two ILUMAeImtec 3M (USA). Results: CBCT dose varied substantially depending on the device, field of view (FOV), and selected technique factors. Up to 3 fold differences were found between KAP for adult patient, with lower values for the system NewTomVG, working with tube current modulation. Discussion: Complete set of ongoing measurements and analysis will be presented, as well as findings and conclusions. COMPARISON OF 111IN-OCTREOSCAN AND 99MTC-TEKTROTYDE IN TECHNICAL MATERS [RADIOLABELING, QUALITY CONTROL, INJECTED DOSES AND PATIENT RADIATION EXPOSURE] M. Papachristou, І. Xirafi, I. Datseris. Department of Nuclear Medicine e PET/CT General Hospital of Athens “Evaggelismos” Introduction: The imaging of positive SSTR's tumours with radiolabeled analogues of somatostatine has a broad use in oncology. The radiopharmaceutical of choice was 111In-DTPA-D-Phe-Octreotide. The use of 111In is facing some problems because it depends in cyclotron production which leads to restricted availability and very high cost. So to overcome these problems the use of 99mTc was selected as “easy- toget” radionuclide with low cost. The 99mTc-EDDA/HYNIC-Tyr3-Octreotide can image the tumours with SSTRs. We report a comparison between the 111In-Octreoscan and 99mTc-Tektrotyde in radiolabeling, quality control, injected doses and patient radiation exposure. Methods: The radiolabeling procedure of both radiopharmaceuticals were carried out according to the SPC of the products and the European Pharmacopeia. After the labelling, both drugs undergo quality control which includes pH measurements, visual control and instant thin layer chromatography (TLC), in order to be released. One vial 111In-Octreoscan is used for one single patient and one vial of 99m Tc-Tektrotyde is used for two patients. The dose of the 111In is ~5 mCi and the dose of 99mTc is ~ 20 mCi in accordance with our Department protocols. Results: To label 111In-Octreoscan takes 30 min and to label 99mTc-Tektrotyde takes almost 50 min. The quality control of 111In needs only one TLC system (~ 20 min) where for the 99mTc needs two TLC systems (~ 40 min). The patient’s injected with111In have higher radiation exposure than the patients injected with 99mTc. The imaging protocol of 111In is a 2-day, one day longer than 99mTc (1-day protocol). Conclusions: 111In- Octreoscan is a well standardized and well know radiopharmaceutical with easy labelling procedure and quality control. Its cons are the 2-days protocol, the higher radiation exposure, the higher cost and the short availability. 99m Tc- Tektrotyde is a new radiopharmaceutical which isn’t well defined. Its radiolabeling procedure and quality control are long. 99mTc-Tektrotyde pros are the 1-day protocol, the lower radiation exposure, the lower cost for two patients and it's broad availability. Both radiopharmaceuticals have advantages and disadvantages. The choice depends on the Nuclear Medicine Department’s resources, protocols and qualification standards. BLOODLESS MEASUREMENT OF HEMATOCRIT M. Adamopoulou a, G. Fountos b, E. Kounadi a, M. Rekkas a. a Ministry of Health in Greece, SEYYP, Athens, Greece; b Department of Biomedical Engineering, TEI of Athens, Greece Background: The direct estimation of the hematocrit at surgery without blood sampling procedures and laboratory analyzes, could yield significant time savings for the clinician, especially when managing emergencies. The purpose of this study is the construction of a biotechnology device, in order to determine the hematocrit value, in a bloodless non invasive method, that can be used for an immediate diagnosis. Materials and methods: Using technology similar to that of an “oxymeter”, we are in the process of manufacturing a portable device, which in contact with a large vase (jugular, femoral or brachial artery etc), will be able to count the number of red blood cells per cubic millimeter. The red blood cells are identified by their concave surface, separating them from the remaining blood cells (white blood cells , platelets, etc), where light scattering occurs in a different way. Results: After the completion of the prototype which called «Hemo-detector», measurements of hematocrit will be performed using this device to patients. The hematocrit values measured will be compared with them upon laboratory tests (blood draw) to assess the reliability of this novel non invasive method. Discussion: The immediate and bloodless measurement of hematocrit is an important help for the clinician where he will be able to evaluate a significant number of diseases. Also, pain and stress for the patient can be avoided. Furthermore, since this will be a low cost method resources for the patient as well as social health funds can be saved. THE ROLE OF DOSIMETRIC CALCULATIONS IN OPTIMIZING PEPTIDE RECEPTOR RADIONUCLIDE THERAPY BY [177LU-DOTA0, TYR3] OCTREOTATE Irini Baka a, Maria Argyrou a, Marina Michalitsi a, Alexia Valassi a, Agapi Ploussi a, Maria Lyra a, b. a Radiation Physics Unit, 1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion hospital, University of Athens, Greece; b Nuclear Medicine Section, 1st Department of Radiology, Aretaieion hospital, University of Athens, Greece Aim: Response and toxicity prediction is essential to the implementation of Peptide Receptor Radionuclide Therapy (PRRT) for neuroendocrine tumors. Radiolabelled somatostatin analogue [177Lu-DOTA0, Tyr3] octreotate stands as a promising therapy tool. Specific dosimetry is a crucial factor in patient treatment planning. Dosimetric techniques implemented in our Institution are presented. Methods: In our Institution, neuroendocrine tumor treatment, by radiopeptide infusion via intrahepatic arterial catheterization, is a well established technique. Kidney protective agents are also included in our protocol. The individualized patient dosimetry calculations were based on planar and SPECT scintigraphy images. Counts were Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) determined in a region of interest (ROI) around the tumor, liver, kidneys and spleen. In planar technique, the ROIs were drawn in both anterior and posterior images while in SPECT counts measured per slice. For counts conversion to activities, system calibration factors were measured. Planar and SPECT images of cylindrical water - filled phantom, with five different known amounts of activity, were obtained. Corrections for scatter attenuation, collimator efficiency and detector response were obtained. In bone marrow dosimetry, blood based methods were used as in 177Lu images no significant radiopeptide data of bone or red plasma activity are displayed. Absorbed doses were calculated using MIRD formalism and S values were calculated using the RADAR system. Results: The calculated absorbed doses to organ per unit administered activity, for both planar and SPECT techniques, were comparable. On average, the tumor dose was [4-40] mGy/MBq, the kidney dose [0.25-1.05]mGy/MBq, the bone marrow dose [0.01-0.13]mGy/MBq, the spleen dose [0.3-2.1]mGy/MBq and the liver dose [0.05-0.34]mGy/ MBq. Conclusion: In order to deliver higher dose to tumor and avoid kidneys and red marrow toxicity, accurate individualized dosimetry is obligatory. Furthermore, the results quantitatively confirm the therapeutic efficacy of transhepatic administration and introduce 177Lu labeled peptide as an ideal for peptide receptor radiotherapy. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE NEW TG-51 ADDENDUM IN CLINICAL PRACTICE S. Papageorgiou a, P. Georgolopoulou b, S. Nikoletopoulos a, b, G. Laskaratos a, b, S. Xenofos a, b. a Physics Department, IASO Hospital, Athens, Greece; b Physics Department, “St. SAVVAS” G. Anticancer Hospital, Athens, Greece Introduction: Since the original publication by AAPM of the TG-51 protocol for clinical reference dosimetry of high-energy photon beams in 1999, changes have occurred in the dosimetry chain that required revision of the protocol. In the recently published addendum (2014) more accurate Kq values are presented for currently available chamber models and specifications are provided for reference-class dosimetry chambers. This work evaluates the implementation of the new addendum in the clinical practice of two institutions. Method: The set of MV dosimetry chambers available for clinical work was evaluated in view of the recent recommendations. Chamber characteristics including settling, polarity dependence, recombination correction and stability, were measured so as to evaluate compliance with suggested specifications for a reference dosimeter. Absolute dose was specified using new Kq values, based on Monte Carlo calculations, for a range of high energy clinical beams. Results: Absolute dose determination for the typical range of clinical high energy beams using the new recommended values for beam quality correction shows insignificant changes for corrections determined by kQ ¼ A + B $ 10 e 3 $ % dd (10)x + C$10 5 $ (% dd(10)x) 2 with A, B, C ¼ fit parameters and 63 < % dd (10) X < 86. Application of chamber-specific correction is not required for reference-class dosimeters. Factors contributing to combined uncertainties, as analyzed in the TG-51 addendum, are addressed. Conclusions: More accurate, Monte Carlo based, kq values can now be applied for absolute dosimetry in radiotherapy clinics equipped with modern design chambers. Selection of a reference dosimeter can be based in a given chamber’s compliance with specific performance recommendations that exclude small field dosimetry instruments. EFFECT OF METALLIC SPINAL IMPLANT ON RADIATION THERAPY DOSE DISTRIBUTION: A CASE STUDY S. Kanellopoulou a, I. Stamatelatos a, A. Miliadou b, P. Georgolopoulou c, J. Kalef-Ezra d. a Institute of Nuclear & Radiological Sciences, Technology, Energy & Safety, National Centre for Scientific Research 'Demokritos' Aghia Paraskevi, Greece; b Radiation Oncology Department, “Saint Savvas” 41 General Anticancer Hospital of Athens, Greece; c Department of Medical Physics, “Saint Savvas” General Anticancer Hospital of Athens, Greece; d Department of Medical Physics, University Hospital of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece Introduction: Presence of metallic implants in radiotherapy patients affects calculated dose distributions and hence, clinical decisions on the optimum treatment scheme. Monte Carlo simulations have been shown to improve calculation accuracy in such cases. In this work Monte Carlo tools were used to determine the dose distribution in the case of a spinal implant patient in need of radiotherapy. Method: A patient was planned for radiotherapy of a primitive neuroectodermal tumor in the vicinity of a metallic spinal implant. Both the implant and the spinal cord had to be included in the irradiated volume, raising concern over the accuracy of the treatment dose calculations. The treatment plan was recalculated using the collapsed cone convolution algorithm and a Monte Carlo model of the patient was developed using the MCNP code. Dose perturbation due to the implant was calculated. Results: The presence of the implant affected significantly the dose distribution in close vicinity, causing increased backscatter and attenuation. Nevertheless, the dose to target volume and critical organs was not affected and the results obtained by the collapsed cone convolution algorithm could still be considered valid for calculating daily and total dose to the target volume and the spinal cord. Treatment was completed and the patient was free from disease and side effects at the 2-year follow up. Conclusion: Although this study was focused on a specific case and results therefore cannot be generalized, it showed the important role of Monte Carlo tools in evaluating the accuracy of dose calculations in cases where metallic implants are involved in the treatment field. 3D SPECT THYROID VOLUME ALGORITHM IN MATLAB QUANTIFICATION BY THYR-VOL S. Synefia a, M. Gavrilelli c, A. Valassi a, M. Argyrou a, M. Rouchota a, J. Floros a, M. Mihalitsi a, I. Baka a, M. Lyra a, b. a Radiation Physics Unit, 1st Radiology Department, University of Athens, Athens, Greece; b Nuclear Medicine Section, 1st Radiology Department, University of Athens, Athens, Greece; c Paediatric Nuclear Medicine Center, Athens, Greece Purpose: The aim of this work consists of a method of determination of the thyroid gland’s volume using the SPECT data in order to calculate the absorbed patient dose from the radioactive substances injected to the patient during thyroid treatment. Further than thyroid function diagnosis, thyroid SPECT scintigraphy is used for thyroid volume estimation. In this study, a MatLab algorithm which integrates 3D visualization is used and thus volume estimation of the thyroid gland is achieved. Materials and methods: 14 patients completed thyroid SPECT examination by a gamma camera GE SPECT Star Cam4000. SPECT image acquisition was performed for angles -90 to +90 degrees, in 32 projections. Images of thyroid gland were reconstructed by the GE Volumetrix software in the GE Xeleris-2 processing system using Ramp and Hanning filters. Dicom data was extracted for each patient and an algorithm that integrates 3D visualization has been used for image processing analysis by MatLabR2012b. We used Thyroid transaxial slices in Dicom format and we created Thyr-Vol algorithm by Matlab. Ellipse ROIs are created around each thyroid lobe while rectangular ROIs include both lobes uptake data. Matrices of the maps of the counted voxels of the slices of the organ were created. Their total is multiplied by the elementary voxel size in mm to obtain the final organ volume. The appropriate threshold value was identified by creating intensity isocontours. Results: The “Thyr-Vol” MatLab algorithm, we have created, detects the segmented regions automatically and the outer contour can be specified. Therefore, the thyroid volume was evaluated and reconstructed as 3D image based on the threshold value. Using this method, numerical errors are eliminated because the images are filtered and reconstructed. 42 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Discussion-Conclusion: Thyroid gland volume estimation in 3D images will give confidence in accurate absorbed patient treatment dose calculation. We demonstrate a method that determines the thyroid gland volume by using SPECT gamma camera data. These data are being processed by a mathematical algorithm “Thyr-Vol” that we created using MatLab language, in order to calculate thyroid volume and mass. Volume and mass calculations are very useful in Nuclear medicine therapy. A RADIAL GRADIENT-BASED SEGMENTATION MICROCALCIFICATIONS IN X-RAY MAMMOGRAPHY METHOD FOR Nikolaos Arikidis a, Spyros Skiadopoulos a, Filippos Sakellaropoulos a, Anna Katerina Vassiou a, Alexandra Kazantzi b, Lena Karahaliou a, a a Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, Costaridou . University of Patras, Patras, Greece; b Medical Diagnostic Center “BDiagnosis”, Patras, Greece Background: Shape analysis of individual microcalcifications contributes in the diagnosis of microcalcification clusters in X-ray mammography. Precise segmentation is a prerequisite for developing computeraided diagnosis (CAD) schemes for microcalcification clusters. Challenges in automated microcalcification segmentation concern variability in microcalcification shape and size, low distinguishability from surrounding tissue, as well as image noise. This study focuses on performance evaluation of an automated microcalcification segmentation method with respect to accuracy and time efficiency, fulfilling requirements of a content-based image retrieval (CBIR) CAD scheme. Materials and methods: A two-stage segmentation method was developed. Initially, a circle containing a microcalcification is manually defined and image gradient is sampled within the circle in polar coordinates (dUi) for 16 orientations, for each grey level iso-contour curve. The grey level iso-contour curve corresponding to the maximum image gradient is estimated (dUmax) providing initial contour pixel estimates, subsequently transformed to Cartesian coordinates. Finally, the contour is optimized by an active contour model, overcoming problems concerning microcalcification grey level spatial variations and image noise (contour leakage). The proposed method was compared with a single-stage radial gradient-based segmentation method. Segmentation accuracy was quantitatively evaluated employing the area overlap measure (AOM), by comparing automated segmentations to expert manual delineations derived by two radiologists in consensus. The sample consists of 120 individual microcalcifications originating from 20 clusters of the DDSM database. Microcalcifications spanned a wide range of shapes, sizes and background mammographic parenchyma. The segmentation method was incorporated in a home-developed software. Time performance was assessed on individual-microcalcification segmentation basis, as well as on a cluster-basis. Results: The proposed method achieved AOM of 0.67±0.21, outperforming statistically significantly (p<0.001) the radial gradient-based method (AOM: 0.45±0.18). Real time segmentation for individual microcalcifications is achieved, while approximately one minute is required for segmenting a total of 5 microcalcifications within a cluster. Time is independent of seed pixel, circle radius, number of initial contour pixel estimates and shape of microcalcification, while is slightly dependent on size of microcalcification and active contour parameters. Discussion: The proposed segmentation method is accurate and timeefficient in case of microcalcifications of varying shape and size in presence of dense parenchyma. QUANTITATIVE DIFFUSION WEIGHTED IMAGING AT 3T FOR BREAST CANCER DIAGNOSIS: ADC HISTOGRAM ANALYSIS Anna Karahaliou, Katerina Vassiou, Nikolaos Arikidis, Spyros Skiadopoulos, Lena Costaridou. Department of Medical Physics, School of Medicine, University of Patras, Patras, Greece Background: Diffusion Weighted Imaging (DWI) accounts for a promising technique for the identification of imaging-based biomarkers for cancer diagnosis, prognosis and monitoring response to therapy. In lack of standardized approach/scheme for quantitative DWI of the breast, current state-of-the-art focuses on defining a diagnostic ADC threshold, i.e. mean value of lesion ADC for differentiating malignant from benign lesions. A few studies, however, have exploited statistics reflecting lesion ADC heterogeneity. The current study investigates the feasibility of histogram statistics in capturing ADC lesion heterogeneity and differentiating malignant from benign lesions at 3 T DWI. Materials and methods: The dataset consists of 89 histologically verified breast lesions (51 malignant, 38 benign) of patients undergoing DW-MRI at 3 T (b-values 0, 900 s/mm2). ADC maps were generated for a slice representative of lesion largest diameter. An expert radiologist manually delineated lesion contour on ADC map, defining the lesion region of interest to be subjected to histogram analysis. Specifically, feature extraction considered mean, standard deviation, skewness, kurtosis, entropy, maximum, minimum and range of ADC. The ability of histogram features in discriminating malignant from benign lesions was investigated by means of a least squares minimum distance classifier. The area under Receiver Operating Characteristic curve (Az) was considered for evaluating classification performance. The feasibility of histogram features in identifying highly aggressive carcinomas is also considered, by investigating correlation to established prognostic indices (histopathological factors). Results: Malignant lesions demonstrated statistically significantly lower average value of feature ADC mean (0.99 x103 mm2/s) as compared to benign lesions (mean ADC: 1.44x103 mm2/s). Malignant lesions demonstrated increased average value of ADC entropy (5.83) reflecting increased ADC heterogeneity, as compared to benign ones (5.60). The feature mean ADC achieved the highest classification performance of Az¼0.87±0.04, which further increased to Az¼0.91±0.03 when combined with features ADC entropy and ADC minimum. Discussion: Quantitative DWI by means of ADC histogram analysis improves differentiation of malignant from benign lesions and may contribute in breast cancer prognosis. DEVELOPMENT OF QUALITY CONTROL PROTOCOL IN LINAC-BASED STEREOTACTIC RADIATION THERAPY Drossatou Kelly a, Konidari Aikaterini b, Kantemiris Ioannis b, Diamantopoulos Stefanos b, Zaverdinos Panagiotis c, Dimopoulos JCA d. a MSc in Medical Physics; b Medical Physics Dpt, Radiation Oncology division, Metropolitan Hospital, Greece; c Director of Medical Physics Dpt, Radiation Oncology division, Metropolitan Hospital, Greece; d Director of Radiation Oncology Dpt, Metropolitan Hospital, Greece Stereotactic Radiation Therapy (SRT) and Stereotactic Radio Surgery (SRS) are advanced oncologic treatment modalities, which apply conventional or hypofractionated doses of radiation. The dose is mainly delivered with small fields and sometimes with accelerated schedules (1e5 fractions) within a short time period. Despite the high dose per fraction which is delivered with SRS, clinical reports using these stereotactic approaches, showed high local tumor control rates, coupled with low incidence of serious side effects. Because of the high dose per fraction which is applied with SRS, the acceptable margin of error is significantly smaller than that of conventional radiotherapy. Overdosage of adjacent normal tissues, even if this occurs only in a single fraction, could escalate the risk of serious complications significantly. The low output factors for small fields which require delivery of a high number of monitor units, are further increasing the associated risk. The majority of accidents are attributed to human errors. Therefore, the implementation of robust Quality Assurance (QA) processes to minimize these errors is inevitable. There is no established QA protocol for LINAC based SRS and SRT systems existing in Greece. This report presents a dedicated Quality Control Protocol which was developed for the Novalistype SRS/SRT system. Essential QA items and dedicated tolerance ranges were selected in order to develop a proper QA protocol. Subsequently, an Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) anatomical phantom was used for execution of selected QA items and the evaluation of overall QA state. Finally, the measured values served as a reference. Although there is a broad range of specific QA processes and procedures for stereotactic program elements, generally, they can be grouped in two main categories: Mechanical accuracy QA part and radiation delivery QA part. The mechanical accuracy QA part is comprised of the radiation generation machine QA part, the assistive devices QA part and the multileaf collimator QA part. The radiation delivery QA part is divided into the radiation iso-center accuracy QA part and dosimetric evaluation QA parts. Stereotactic quality control programs should include daily, weekly, monthly and annual equipment QA procedures. This work proposes a comprehensive Quality Control Protocol which was developed for the Novalis-type SRS/SRT system. References Task Group 142 report: Quality assurance of medical accelerators, Med. Phys. 36(9): 2009. Timothy D. Solberg, James M. Balter, Stanley H. Benedict, Benedick A. Fraass, Brian Kavanagh, Curtis Miyamoto, Todd Pawlicki, Louis Potters, Yoshiya Yamada. Quality and Safety Considerations in Stereotactic Radiosurgery and Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy, Practical Radiation Oncology: 2011 Dong-Joon Lee, Kyung-Nam Lee, Suk Lee, Sang Hoon Lee, Dae-Hong Kim. Development of Novalis Quality Assurance Protocol for Radiosurgery, Med. Phys. 21(1): 2010. 43 Conclusion: The applied method has proven to be useful for the analysis and comparison of cardiac CT image quality. It can be applied for quality control and optimization tasks. References: 1. Wang Z, Bovik AC, Sheikh HR, Simoncelli EP. Image quality assessment: from error visibility to structural similarity. IEEE Trans Image Process. 2004;13:4600e12. 2. Li C, Bovik AC. Content-partitioned structural similarity index for image quality assessment. Signal Processing: Image Communication. 2010;25:517e26. 3. Chen GH, Yang CL, Xie SL. Gradientebased structural similarity for image quality assessment. IEEE International Conference on Image Processing; 2006. IMAGE QUALITY ASSESSMENT METHOD IN CARDIAC CT. FEASIBILITY OF USE FOR QUALITY CONTROL AND OPTIMIZATION TASKS D. Garcia-Pinto, A. Calzado. Departamento de Radiología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM), Spain Purpose: The aim of the work was to devise a method to assess image quality of cardiac CT examinations in a phantom across various protocols and simulated heart rates. Materials and methods: Three different CT scanners were used in the study: a 64-slice scanner (GE Healtcare LightSpeed VCT), a 320-slice scanner (Toshiba Aquilion One), and a dual source CT (Siemens Somatom Definition Flash). Coronary CT angiography examinations were performed using a Sim4D Cardio system to mimic 3D cardiac motion synchronized with the ECG signal and inserted into a thorax QRM phantom. Two different heart rates were simulated (60 and 80 bpm) to study its effect on image quality. Images of cylindrical inserts simulating arteries of 1 or 2 mm diameter with nominal attenuation in the range 200e400 HU, were acquired, either with the insert at rest or in motion. Multiplanar reformatted images of the inserts were used for image quality evaluation by assessing different parameters, such as contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and normalized area under attenuation profiles (AHT). Two similarity indexes, SSIM and G-SSIM [1,2,3], were also used to assess the degradation of structural information. Values of the proposed quality parameters were obtained by comparing insert images in motion and at rest. Results: CNR values were in the range 3.0e6.5 for 1mm diameter and 5.0e7.2 for 2 mm diameter; AHT relative ranges were, respectively, 0.14e0.45 and 0.35e0.87. Global SSIM values in the central plane were in the range 0.4e0.7 for 1 mm diameter, and 0.6e0.9 for 2 mm and 0.3e0.7 for 1 mm and 0.5e0.9 for 2 mm in the case of the G-SSIM index. Details of the behaviour of both indices for the 3 scanners are given in figs 1e3. The highest values corresponded systematically to 400 HU stationary images whereas the lowest were found mainly for 200 HU prospective acquisitions. Image quality is higher in the case of lower heart rates, as expected. However, SSIM values were similar for 60 and 80 bpm at the 320-slice scanner. Fig.1. Mean values of the SSIM index for the two diameters used and different nominal attenuation values. Images were obtained at the 320-slice scannerusing two acquisition modes corresponding to 60 and 80 bpm heart rates. Fig.2. Mean values of the SSIM index for the two diameters used and 400 HU nominal attenuation. Images were obtained at the dual source CT scanner using three acquisition modes and 60 bpm heart rate. 44 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Conclusion: For all the radiography procedures the comparison between the National Diagnostic Reference Levels provided by the GAEC and the Local Diagnostic Reference Levels of Theageneio Cancer Hospital show that the measured doses do not exceed the recommended levels. For all the CT procedures, the measured dosimetric quantities were much lower than the national recommended values. To conclude, the hospital's procedures do not exceed the National Diagnostic Reference Levels in any case of diagnostic procedure thus the Diagnostic Radiology department runs without malpractices. Keywords: Diagnostic Reference Levels, Reference Values, Guidance Levels, Quality Assurance IMRT PROSTATE AND HEAD & NECK TREATMENT PLANNING AND PRETREATMENT VERIFICATION. THE ARETAIEION UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL EXPERIENCE Fig.3. Mean values of the G-SSIM index for the two diameters used and two different nominal attenuation values. Images were obtained at 64-slice scanner using three acquisition modes and 60 bpm heart rate. ESTABLISHMENT OF LOCAL DIAGNOSTIC REFERENCE LEVELS AT “THEAGENEIO” CANCER HOSPITAL OF THESSALONIKI S.G. Chanlaridis a, M. Chatzimarkou b, A. Makridou b, N. Servitzoglou b, E. Soidou b, S. Stoulos a. a Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Department of Physics, Section of Nuclear & Elementary Particle Physics, GR-541 24, Thessaloniki, Greece; b Theageneio Hospital for Cancer Treatment, Department of Medical Physics, GR-546 39, Thessaloniki, Greece Motivation: Estimation of doses received by patients undergoing radiological examinations for establishing local diagnostic reference levels (LDRL) for routine procedures of diagnostic radiology department along with minimization of patients' radiation exposure. The obtained results were compared with the national values of DRL provided by the Greek Atomic Energy Commission (GAEC) for the audit of malpractice in this department. Materials and methods: Numerous parameters were measured for a large sample of patients undergoing radiography exams and CT scans. The mean value of these parameters was selected for irradiation of patients and measurement of the delivered dose. A standard ionization chamber was selected to measure the suitable dosimetric quantity. For Radiography exams the dosimetric quantity that was measured was the air-kerma at a distance of 1 meter from the source. The entrance skin dose was calculated by multiplying the obtained air-kerma value with suitable backscatter factors and correcting according to the inverse square law for the standard patient’s dimensions. For CT exams the dosimetric quantities that were measured were the weighted Computerized Tomographic Dose Index (CTDIw) and the Dose Length Product (DLP) for one acquisition and a complete examination. Results: For the two operating radiographic units the doses in term of entrance surface air-kerma are as follows: Rad. UnitExam CPI CPM 200DR MERATE BMI BRG 200R MERATE Chest Radiograph (PA) Chest Radiograph (LAT) Lumbar Spine Radiograph (PA) Lumbar Spine Radiograph (LAT) 0,297 mGy 1,28 mGy Not enough data Not enough data 0,284 mGy 1,259 mGy 4,06 mGy 6,938 mGy For the CT unit: Dosimetric quant.Exam CTDIw DLP Cerebrum Seq. Inner Ear Visceral 51,05 mGy 29,756 mGy 24,018 mGy 40,84 mGy cm 5,95 mGy cm 7,205 mGy cm Christos Antypas a, Christina Armpilia a, Ioannis Floros a, Zoi Liakouli b, Anna Zygogianni b, Vassilios Kouloulias c, John Kouvaris b, Maria Lyra a. a 1st Department of Radiology, Medical Physics Unit, Aretaieion Hospital, University of Athens, Greece; b 1st Department of Radiology, Radiotherapy Unit, Aretaieion Hospital, University of Athens, Greece; c 2nd Department of Radiology, Radiotherapy Unit, Attikon Hospital, University of Athens, Greece Background: The main principle of intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) is the combination of many segmental beams to produce a complex dose distribution. The nature of IMRT delivery requires pre-treatment quality assurance (QA) and plan verification. The Aretaieion University Hospital is the first hospital of the public health sector in Greece that implements IMRT in clinical practice. We present our preliminary experience on IMRT pre-treatment QA and plan verification. Materials and methods: 10patients with prostate and head-and-neck cancer treated with step-andeshoot IMRT in a 6MV Siemens Oncorlinac are presented. The IMRT plans were created on the Oncentra v4.3 (Nucletron, Elekta) treatment planning system. The ICRU 83 and QUANTEC recommendations for IMRT prescribing and constraining dose to organs at risks were followed. The Delta4 diode array phantom (Scandidos, Sweden) was used for the plan verification. Measured dose was compensated for linac daily output. Planned and measured dose were compared by using percentage dose deviation, average distance to agreement (DTA) and gamma index (3%/3mm). For all cases, a plan is considered to be successful if more than 90% of the tested diodes pass the gamma test. Results: Objective sand dose constraints for the target volume and the respective organs at risk were well satisfied for all cases. Regarding prostate cases, the average gamma index passing rate was measured higher than 97%. Regarding the head-and-neck cases, the average gamma index passing rate was measured higher than 90%. Discussion: The ICRU 83 and QUANTEC recommendations for IMRT prescribing and constraining dose to organs at risks were followed and satisfied for all studied cases. Our preliminary experience shows that pretreatment plan verification using the Delta4 phantom provides accurate and reliable results of 3D dose distributions comparisons between the TPS calculated and the deliverable plan. We expect to increase the IMRT patient workload in our hospital. MAGNETIC RELAXATION MEASUREMENTS ON TISSUE MIMICKING PHANTOMS: COMPARISON BETWEEN DIFFERENT FITTING ALGORITHMS IN MRI T2 CALCULATIONS G. Kalaitzakis a, L. Kavroulakis a, T. Boursianis a, S. Veneti a, L. Kontopodis b, K. Marias b, E. Papadaki c, A. Karantanas c, T.G. Maris a. a Department of Medical Physics, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece; b Institute of Computer Science, Foundation for Research and TechnologyeHellas (FORTH), Heraklion, Crete, Greece; c Department of Radiology, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece Purpose: The aim of this study is to compare five different regression fitting algorithms for precise measurements of T2 relaxation times in tissue mimicking phantoms Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) Materials and methods: Twenty one (21) glass test tubes filled with various materials, which simulate T2 values of different human organs/ lesions, embedded in a plastic holder served as a generic T2 relaxation phantom. Test tubes were filled with materials which consisted of: (a) standard EUROSPIN gel test objects, (b) Gd-DTPA hydatic solutions (c) milk creams with various fat contents and (c) raw eggs with various relative concentrations of egg-white and egg-yellow parts. The expected range of T2 values in reference to all materials was from 20 up to 2000 ms. The generic T2 relaxation phantom was repeatedly scanned on a clinical MRI system (1.5T) for over a 4 month period with a 2D single slice Multi Echo Spin Echo (MESE) sequence with TR:6000 ms. Three different sets of 32 symmetrically repeatable echoes were used as TE values: (setA: TE:(8-256)ms, set-B: TE:(20-640)ms and set-C: TE:(40-1280)ms. T2 relaxation parametric maps were calculated utilizing : (a) a Vendor Specific (VS), (b) a Conventional Linear (CL), (c) a Weighted Linear (WL), (d) a Non Linear (NL) and (e) a Multi Exponential Non Linear (MENL) regression fitting model. T2 value precision figures (T2-ROI-CV) and long term time (LTT-CV) reproducibility figures expressed by coefficient of variation (CV %) measurements were obtained on each test tube with each fitting model. Results: T2 values of all EUROSPIN gel test tubes were in agreement with their nominal values (accuracy<5%). T2 measurements performed with the (WL), (NL) and (MENL) methods showed better precision (mean T2-ROI-CV< 3%) and LTT-CV (5.2%) as compared to the (VS) and (CL) methods. (MENL) methods were in agreement with the (NL) and (WL) methods when a material with a single T2 value was measured. EUROSPIN gel test objects and Gd-DTPA hydatic solutions were characterized by single T2 values. Milk creams and raw eggs were characterized by double T2 values. TE choices of Set-A and Set-B were adequate for the calculation of the majority of T2 values present in human organs/lesions. Conclusion: (WL), (NL) and (MENL) regression fitting algorithms proved to be an excellent means for precise measurements of T2 values on tissue mimicking phantoms. 45 Fig 1. (Left) Experimental setup. The measurements were performed with small, large and without BT filtration. (Right) The normalized air kerma profiles were calculated by using the real (red lines) and Al-equivalent (blue points) BT filters.The air kerma attenuation by incrementally increasing the thickness of aluminium was calculated until the ratio of the attenuated to the unattenuated air kerma rate profile was approximately equal to the corresponding measured ratio at each fan angle. These thicknesses of aluminium represent the Al-equivalent BT filters. A non-disclosure agreement with the GE Company enabled the use of the exact information on the shape and components of the BT filters installed in the CT scanner. A comparison of the calculated attenuated air kerma profiles by using the real BT filter and the Al-equivalent BT filter validated the results obtained in the present study. This work found a good agreement between the attenuated profiles through the real and Al-equivalent BT filters, which is presented in Fig. (1) (right) as a function of the fan angle. References [1] Adam C. Turner et al., Med. Phys., 36 (2009), pp. 2154e2164 [2] Kyle McMillan et al., Med. Phys. 40 (2013), 111907 [3] NORM ISO 4037-1 (1996) [4] G. Poludniowski et al., Phys. Med. Bio., 54 (2009), N433eN438 QUALITY OF MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY FOR FLEXIBLE ENDOSCOPES AND DISINFECTSORS EXPERIMENTAL CHARACTERIZATION AND VALIDATION OF BOW-TIE FILTERS IN A CT SCANNER Babak Alikhani, Ludwig Büermann. Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), D-38116 Braunschweig, Germany M. Franken a, J. Ansems b, B. Damink c. a Medical Physicist, Franciscus Hospital Roosendaal, The Netherlands; b Medical Physicist, Lievensberg Hospital Bergen op Zoom, The Netherlands; c Medical Physicist, Franciscus Hospital Roosendaal, The Netherlands In recent years dosimetry in computed tomography (CT) based on Monte Carlo (MC) simulation has significantly increased. A proper description of scanner parameters is required for an accurate MC simulation. The characterization of bow-tie filters (BT) in the CT scanners is a necessary part of MC simulations. Up to the present time, methods have been developed and used in different works to characterize the BT filters of different scanners [1,2]. The methods were based on a comparison of the calculated and measured air kerma attenuation profile as a function of the fan angle. Thereby, an aluminium-equivalent BT filter with an arbitrarily assumed central ray thickness was determined. The goal of the present work was to improve these methods by the absolute determination of the central ray thickness of the BT filter. The scanner used in this work was a GE Optima 660 with two different BT filters. An almost energy-independent responding ionization chamber (i-chamber) of the type Radcal 10x6-0.6CT was used to measure the air kerma rate profile along the x-axis of the CT gantry. The air kerma response of the i-chamber was measured in narrow beam radiation qualities [3] (20 kV to 300 kV) using PTB's primary air kerma standard. A sketch of the experimental setup is shown in Fig. (1) left). In order to measure the X-ray qualities of the CT scanner, the half-value layer (HVL) method has been utilized. The measured first and second HVL in the absence of the BT filters for the X-ray tube high voltage of 120 kV were (6.9 ± 0.1) mm Al and (8.9 ± 0.1) mm Al, respectively. Using a program called “SpekCalc” [4], a photon spectrum with approximately identical HVLs for aluminium was calculated. The obtained spectrum is a good approach to the initial spectrum of the X-ray tube with Al-equivalent inherent filtration. For the BT filter determination, first of all the ratio of the measured air kerma rate profile with and without the BT filter at each fan angle was calculated. Background: In 2011 the “Professional Standard Handbook of Flexible Endoscopes; Cleaning and Disinfection, version 2.1” was introduced. The Dutch Healthcare Inspectorate regards this handbook as a field standard. Dutch hospitals have been working on the implementation of a quality system using this handbook. Here we describe our practical approach to the introduction of this quality system. Materials and methods: We started with a multidisciplinary group of users, technicians and medical physics experts. Based on the life cycle of medical equipment and the Plan-Do-Check-Act Cycle, two local quality handbooks were introduced; the first focuses mainly on the users and the cleaning and disinfection processes. The second handbook focuses on the technical management of the medical equipment. These documents include the tasks and responsibilities of the stakeholders, the outcomes of the risk assessment, and describe the procedures for purchasing new equipment. Futhermore they contain a validation scheme for the desinfection machines and defines the release of maintained medical equipment from the technician to the user. Results: The acceptance test of repaired flexible endoscopes is improved by using a mini-microscope, that can view into the inner canals of the endoscope. In the Franciscus Hospital, the biomedical engineering technician performs the endocopic-disinfector validations. The medical physicist reviews the validation report. Canal tests are performed 4 times a year, periodic validation is done at least once a year. These actions have resulted in an average save of 15 kV per year. Discussion: By setting up a multidisciplinary team and using the plan-do-check-act cycle for this technology specific process, the quality of the management of medical equipment is continuously improved. We now have better technical support and more knowhow about the flexible endoscopes and cleaning procedures. In 2014 version 3.0 of 46 Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) the Standard Handbook of Flexibele Endoscopes will be launched in English. MEDICAL PHYSICS INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL e SERVING THE MEDICAL PHYSICS PROFESSION WORLDWIDE M. Stoeva a, S. Tabakov b, P. Sprawls c. a Medical Imaging Department, Medical University e Plovdiv, Plovdiv, Bulgaria; b Department of Medical Engineering and Physics, King's College London, London, UK; c Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA Background: Medical Physics International (MPI) is the official journal of the International Organization of Medical Physics (IOMP) and fully representing medical physicists all over the world targeting to increase the visibility of our profession by publishing articles that contribute to medical physics education, professional development, activities, heritage and newest technologies. Materials and methods: MPI has been established in 2013 as an open platform for medical physicists to share their knowledge and experience. Papers published in MPI reach over 20,000 medical physicists in more than 80 countries around the world. With this large network of readership the journal is one of the most popular and reputable journals in our profession. Results: During its existence MPI attracted many readers and established itself as a valuable reference and resource for the medical physics profession. The Topics covered by the MPI Journal are: The History and Heritage of Medical Physics, IOMP Professional and Educational Activities, Developments within. Medical Physics Organizations, Educational Resources, Contributions on Practical and Applied Medical Physics; Innovations in Technology and Clinical Methods, Reviews of Signicant Developments, Tutorials, PhD Dissertation and Thesis Abstracts, and Abstracts of Presentations at Conferences. Discussion: MPI is dedicated to provide every medical physicist а platform to use either as an author or as a reader and contribute to the advancement of medical physics. Medical Physics International Journal is a valuable and important source of scientific and professional information for all IOMP members. IS THE USE OF SHIELD PAD AN EFFECTIVE TECHNIQUE FOR LOWERING INTERVENTIONIST RADIATION DOSE? Ahmed M. Outif, Aida Labriguito. Department of Medical Physics; King Fahad Medical City; Riyadh; Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Background: Several manufactures have recently introduced shield pads to lower interventions radiation doses. This pad is placed outside the scanning field and is claimed to protect the staff from scattered radiation. This kind of shield has been used in KFMC. However, no clear study has been conducted to quantify the effectiveness of such shield pad. Aim: The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness of shield pad on interventionist radiation doses. Method: Rando phantom was used in this study and was placed on the scanning table to mimic patient position. Radiation shield pad was placed at different places on the phantom mimicking the usual clinical placement of the pad during different cathlab procedures. The x-ray tube was kept under the chest. The dose at different operator levels (waist, collar, eye, and knee) was assessed with and without the use of radiation shield pad. Results: The effect of using shield pad on staff dose was found to be function of operator position, levels, and x-ray field size. 1) For direct procedure on the heart, the pad reduces operator waist dose by 89%, the collar by 75%, eye by 53%, and the knee by 0%. 2) For Femoral insertion: the pad reduces operator waist dose by 57%, the collar by 2%, the eye by 5%, and the knee by 0%.s 3) For Central vein insertion: the pad reduces operator waist dose by 58%, the collar by 48%, eye by 34%, and the knee by 0%. The use of large field size (20X30) was found to prohibit pad waist level dose reduction effect dramatically during direct hear (closer to primary beam), however the dose reduction effect of pad remain valid for collar, and eye levels. As the operator moved away from the primary beam the effect of pad on dose reduction remains valid with different field sizes. Conclusion: The use of shield pad was found to be an effective method of lowering interventionists radiation dose at most levels, however this effect may be reduced when large x-ray fields are used. No effect of pad was found on operator lower limb dose. COMPARISON OF FLUORESCENT 99MTC-AU-BSA AND CONVENTIONAL 99MTC-BSA SPECT/CT DISTRIBUTION IN VIVO M. Stalnionis a, b, R. Rotomskis a, b. aLaboratory of Biomedical Physics, Institute of Oncology, Vilnius University, LT-08406, Vilnius, Lithuania; b Laser Research Center, Vilnius University, LT-10223 Vilnius, Lithuania Combining optical imaging with other imaging modalities has brought scientific attention, and it could lead to important advances in diagnostics [1]. Radiolabelled human serum albumin (HSA) products that have been used clinically for scintigraphical detection can be modified for advanced optical detection [2]. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) can also be used as a platform for forming targeted tracers [3]. Moreover, BSA embedded fluorescent gold nanoparticles (Au-BSA) can be one of promising optical imaging tracers [4]. The aim of this study was to investigate a SPECT/ Fluorescence agent 99mTc-Au-BSA for imaging and compare its’ in vivo characteristics with the conventional 99mTc-BSA. Au-BSA nanoparticles were radiolabeled by mixing Au-BSA with sodium pertechnetate (Na99mTcO4). Labeling efficiency and stability studies were performed by means of thin-layer chromatography (TLC). Biodistribution imaging of the 99mTc-Au-BSA and 99mTc-Au-BSA tracers in a small animal model was performed using clinical SPECT/CT gamma camera and compared. The distribution studies of 99mTc-Au-BSA in vivo revealed that the behavior of dual-labeled tracer is similar to the behavior of 99mTc labeled BSA and similar to 99mTc labeled HSA. Shortly after the injection 99mTcAu-BSA and 99mTc-BSA were seen as a bloodpool tracers as is 99mTc-HSA. The uptake from the blood circulation into the organs of clearance started rather quickly after the injection. Within the first minute of the study the most of the 99mTc-Au-BSA and 99mTc-BSA was detected in the lung, liver, and kidneys as it was presented for 99mTc-HSA [5]. It should be noted that as high uptake of 99mTc-Au-BSA in the urinary system as of 99mTc-BSA represents the good excretion of 99mTc-Au-BSA to the bladder, thus, favorable as a tracer for the diagnostics. From our results it could be concluded, that gold nanoparticle formed inside the albumin does not affect the behavior of albumin itself in vivo. The behavior of 99mTc-Au-BSA is ruled by the BSA. The results of the distribution in vivo would suggest that 99mTc-Au-BSA kinetic pathways are through the liver and urinary tract as it was with the 99mTc-BSA. References: [1] Azhdarinia A, Ghosh P, Ghosh S, Wilganowski N, Sevick-Muraca EM. Dual-labeling strategies for nuclear and fluorescence molecular imaging: a review and analysis. Mol Imaging Biol. 2012;14:261e76. [2] Brouwer OR, Buckle T, Vermeeren L, Klop WM, Balm AJ, van der Poel HG, et al. Comparing the hybrid fluorescent-radioactive tracer indocyanine green-99mTc-Nanocolloid with 99mTc-Nanocolloid for sentinel node identification: a validation study using lymphoscintigraphy and SPECT/CT. J Nucl Med. 2012;53: 1034e40. [3] Bunschoten A, Buckle T, Kuil J, Luker GD, Luker KE, Nieweg OE, et al. Targeted non-covalent self-assembled nanoparticles based on human serum albumin. Biomaterials. 2012; 33:867e75. [4] Xie J, Zheng Y, Ying JY. Protein-directed synthesis of highly fluorescent gold nanoclusters. J Am Chem Soc. 2009;131:888e9. [5] Wang YF, Chuang MH, Chiu JS, Cham TM, Chung MI. On-site preparation of pechnetium-99m labeled human serum albumin for clinical application. Tohoku J Exp Med. 2007;4:379e85. Abstracts / Physica Medica 30S1 (2014) EFFECT OF GAMMA RADIATION ON THE FERRITIN ACTIVITY V. Kochev a, L. VladimirovaeMihaleva a, At. Papucharov b, G. Gyulchev c, G. Zlatevac c, N. Atanasova e Gesheva b. a Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Faculty of Physics, 5 James Boucher Blvd. 1164 Sofia, Bulgaria; b Specialized hospital for active treatment in oncology, 6 Plovdivsko Pole Str., Sofia, Bulgaria; c Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski”, Faculty of Medicine, 1407 Sofia, 1 Kozyak Str., Sofia, Bulgaria Presenting authors: At. Papucharov, G. Gyulchev Topics: Radiation protection, monitoring and dose reduction 47 The consequences of ferritin exposure to different doses of gamma radiation, typically used in therapy, are disclosed in this paper. Although, the ferritin is susceptible to UV and visible light, responding with a change in the redox state of its mineral core, the effect of high energy gamma photons turned out to be more subtle. However, at increased doses there is a facilitated mobilization of inorganic core Fe3 +, which is reduced to Fe2+ and released from the protein interior in the presence of ascorbic acid as exogenous reducing agent. According to a working hypothesis, this is attributed to the impact of the products of water radiolysis on the architecture of the threefold channels responsible for the transport of iron. Keywords: ferritin, gamma radiation therapy, potentiometric redox titration, radiolysis of water