Autor: |
Robar, James L., Kammerzell, Barret, Hulick, Kevin, Kaiser, Pierre, Young, Calvin, Verzwyvelt, Vanessa, Cheng, Xin, Shepherd, Matthew, Orbovic, Radojka, Fedullo, Sara, Majcher, Christopher, DiMarco, Stephen, Stasiak, James |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics; Nov2022, Vol. 23 Issue 11, p1-13, 13p |
Abstrakt: |
Purpose: Thermoplastic immobilizers are used routinely in radiation therapy to achieve positioning accuracy. These devices are variable in quality as they are dependent on the skill of the human fabricator. We examine the potential multi jet fusion (MJF) 3D printing for the production immobilizers with a focus on the surface dosimetry of several MJF‐printed PA12‐based material candidates. Materials are compared with the goal of minimizing surface dose with comparison to standard thermoplastic. We introduce a novel metamaterial design for the shell of the immobilizer, with the aims of mechanical robustness and low‐dose buildup. We demonstrate first examples of adult and pediatric cranial and head‐and‐neck immobilizers. Methods: Three different PA12 materials were examined and compared to fused deposition modeling–printed polylactic acid (PLA), PLA with density lowered by adding hollow glass microspheres, and to perforated or perforated/stretched and solid status quo thermoplastic samples. Build‐up dose measurements were made using a parallel plate chamber. A metamaterial design was established based on a packed hexagonal geometry. Radiochromic film dosimetry was performed to determine the dependence of surface dose on the metamaterial design. Full cranial and head‐and‐neck prototype immobilizers were designed, printed, and assessed with regard to dimensional accuracy. Results: Build‐up dose measurements demonstrated the superiority of the PA12 material with a light fusing agent, which yielded a ∼15% dose reduction compared to other MJF materials. Metamaterial samples provided dose reductions ranging from 11% to 40% compared to stretched thermoplastic. MJF‐printed immobilizers were produced reliably, demonstrated the versatility of digital design, and showed dimensional accuracy with 97% of sampled points within ±2 mm. Conclusions: MJF is a promising technology for an automated fabrication of patient immobilizers. Material selection and metamaterial design can be leveraged to yield surface dose reduction of up to 40%. Immobilizer design is highly customizable, and the first examples of MJF‐printed immobilizers demonstrate excellent dimensional accuracy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |
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