4.5 Article

New technology enables high precision multislit collimators for microbeam radiation therapy

Journal

REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS
Volume 80, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.3170035

Keywords

biomedical equipment; collimators; Monte Carlo methods; radiation therapy; synchrotron radiation; tungsten compounds

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During the past decade microbeam radiation therapy has evolved from preclinical studies to a stage in which clinical trials can be planned, using spatially fractionated, highly collimated and high intensity beams like those generated at the x-ray ID17 beamline of the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. The production of such microbeams typically between 25 and 100 mu m full width at half maximum (FWHM) values and 100-400 mu m center-to-center (c-t-c) spacings requires a multislit collimator either with fixed or adjustable microbeam width. The mechanical regularity of such devices is the most important property required to produce an array of identical microbeams. That ensures treatment reproducibility and reliable use of Monte Carlo-based treatment planning systems. New high precision wire cutting techniques allow the fabrication of these collimators made of tungsten carbide. We present a variable slit width collimator as well as a single slit device with a fixed setting of 50 mu m FWHM and 400 mu m c-t-c, both able to cover irradiation fields of 50 mm width, deemed to meet clinical requirements. Important improvements have reduced the standard deviation of 5.5 mu m to less than 1 mu m for a nominal FWHM value of 25 mu m. The specifications of both devices, the methods used to measure these characteristics, and the results are presented.

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