A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Scattering of therapeutic radiation in the presence of craniofacial bone reconstruction materials




AuthorsToivonen J, Björkqvist M, Minn H, Vallittu PK, Rekola J

Publication year2019

JournalJournal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics

Journal name in sourceJournal of applied clinical medical physics

Journal acronymJ Appl Clin Med Phys

Volume20

Issue12

First page 119

Last page126

Number of pages8

ISSN1526-9914

eISSN1526-9914

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1002/acm2.12776(external)

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/44260608(external)


Abstract
Purpose

Radiation scattering from bone reconstruction materials can cause problems from prolonged healing to osteoradionecrosis. Glass fiber reinforced composite (FRC) has been introduced for bone reconstruction in craniofacial surgery but the effects during radiotherapy have not been previously studied. The purpose of this study was to compare the attenuation and back scatter caused by different reconstruction materials during radiotherapy, especially FRC with bioactive glass (BG) and titanium.

Methods

The effect of five different bone reconstruction materials on the surrounding tissue during radiotherapy was measured. The materials tested were titanium, glass FRC with and without BG, polyether ether ketone (PEEK) and bone. The samples were irradiated with 6 MV and 10 MV photon beams. Measurements of backscattering and dose changes behind the sample were made with radiochromic film and diamond detector dosimetry.

Results

An 18% dose enhancement was measured with a radiochromic film on the entrance side of irradiation for titanium with 6 MV energy while PEEK and FRC caused an enhancement of 10% and 4%, respectively. FRC‐BG did not cause any measurable enhancement. The change in dose immediately behind the sample was also greatest with titanium (15% reduction) compared with the other materials (0–1% enhancement). The trend is similar with diamond detector measurements, titanium caused a dose enhancement of up to 4% with a 1 mm sample and a reduction of 8.5% with 6 MV energy whereas FRC, FRC‐BG, PEEK or bone only caused a maximum dose reduction of 2.2%.

Conclusions

Glass fiber reinforced composite causes less interaction with radiation than titanium during radiotherapy and could provide a better healing environment after bone reconstruction.


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