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Statistical analysis of the gamma evaluation acceptance criteria : A simulation study of 2D dose distributions under error free conditions

Sunjic, Svjetlana ; Ceberg, Crister LU orcid and Bokulic, Tomislav (2018) In Physica Medica 52. p.42-47
Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the statistical distribution of the gamma value under error-free conditions, in order to study the relation between the gamma evaluation failure rate and statistically significant deviations in the general situation. Methods: The 2D absorbed dose distribution for 30 clinical head-and-neck IMRT fields were calculated in a QC phantom. For the same fields, dose measurements were simulated by assuming that the calculated value represented the expectation value, and by adding a random spatial uncertainty of 1–9 mm (1SD) and a random dose uncertainty of 1%–3% (1SD). The simulated measurements were then compared to the calculated dose using the gamma evaluation, and the distribution of the failure rate (i.e. the... (More)

Purpose: To investigate the statistical distribution of the gamma value under error-free conditions, in order to study the relation between the gamma evaluation failure rate and statistically significant deviations in the general situation. Methods: The 2D absorbed dose distribution for 30 clinical head-and-neck IMRT fields were calculated in a QC phantom. For the same fields, dose measurements were simulated by assuming that the calculated value represented the expectation value, and by adding a random spatial uncertainty of 1–9 mm (1SD) and a random dose uncertainty of 1%–3% (1SD). The simulated measurements were then compared to the calculated dose using the gamma evaluation, and the distribution of the failure rate (i.e. the probability of gamma values above unity) was analysed. Results: For a wide range of the random measurement uncertainty, a distinct peak in the failure rate distribution was observed. The presence of higher failure rates was associated with large values of the second order derivative of the dose distribution. For spatial uncertainties larger than or equal to the resolution of the dose matrix, and for reasonable dose uncertainties, the median value of the failure rate distribution was fairly constant. Conclusions: Simulations showed, in the general case, that the probability of having a gamma value above unity under error-free conditions was not spatially uniform. We believe that this shortcoming may be partly responsible for the limited ability of the gamma evaluation method to detect errors in clinically relevant situations.

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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Gamma index, IMRT, Treatment planning system
in
Physica Medica
volume
52
pages
6 pages
publisher
ISTITUTI EDITORIALI E POLGRAFICI INTERNAZIONALI
external identifiers
  • scopus:85048708666
  • pmid:30139608
ISSN
1120-1797
DOI
10.1016/j.ejmp.2018.06.633
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0fa411d5-5959-4c22-aa43-b7f412f9dcd2
date added to LUP
2018-06-27 16:33:16
date last changed
2024-04-15 09:42:50
@article{0fa411d5-5959-4c22-aa43-b7f412f9dcd2,
  abstract     = {{<p>Purpose: To investigate the statistical distribution of the gamma value under error-free conditions, in order to study the relation between the gamma evaluation failure rate and statistically significant deviations in the general situation. Methods: The 2D absorbed dose distribution for 30 clinical head-and-neck IMRT fields were calculated in a QC phantom. For the same fields, dose measurements were simulated by assuming that the calculated value represented the expectation value, and by adding a random spatial uncertainty of 1–9 mm (1SD) and a random dose uncertainty of 1%–3% (1SD). The simulated measurements were then compared to the calculated dose using the gamma evaluation, and the distribution of the failure rate (i.e. the probability of gamma values above unity) was analysed. Results: For a wide range of the random measurement uncertainty, a distinct peak in the failure rate distribution was observed. The presence of higher failure rates was associated with large values of the second order derivative of the dose distribution. For spatial uncertainties larger than or equal to the resolution of the dose matrix, and for reasonable dose uncertainties, the median value of the failure rate distribution was fairly constant. Conclusions: Simulations showed, in the general case, that the probability of having a gamma value above unity under error-free conditions was not spatially uniform. We believe that this shortcoming may be partly responsible for the limited ability of the gamma evaluation method to detect errors in clinically relevant situations.</p>}},
  author       = {{Sunjic, Svjetlana and Ceberg, Crister and Bokulic, Tomislav}},
  issn         = {{1120-1797}},
  keywords     = {{Gamma index; IMRT; Treatment planning system}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{08}},
  pages        = {{42--47}},
  publisher    = {{ISTITUTI EDITORIALI E POLGRAFICI INTERNAZIONALI}},
  series       = {{Physica Medica}},
  title        = {{Statistical analysis of the gamma evaluation acceptance criteria : A simulation study of 2D dose distributions under error free conditions}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmp.2018.06.633}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.ejmp.2018.06.633}},
  volume       = {{52}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}