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Dive into the research topics where Liliana Stolarczyk is active.

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Featured researches published by Liliana Stolarczyk.


Medical Physics | 2015

Measurement of stray radiation within a scanning proton therapy facility: EURADOS WG9 intercomparison exercise of active dosimetry systems

J. Farah; V. Mares; M. Romero-Expósito; Sebastian Trinkl; C. Domingo; V. Dufek; Magdalena Kłodowska; J. Kubancak; Željka Knežević; Małgorzata Liszka; M. Majer; Saveta Miljanić; O. Ploc; K. Schinner; Liliana Stolarczyk; F. Trompier; Marek Wielunski; P. Olko; R M Harrison

PURPOSE To characterize stray radiation around the target volume in scanning proton therapy and study the performance of active neutron monitors. METHODS Working Group 9 of the European Radiation Dosimetry Group (EURADOS WG9-Radiation protection in medicine) carried out a large measurement campaign at the Trento Centro di Protonterapia (Trento, Italy) in order to determine the neutron spectra near the patient using two extended-range Bonner sphere spectrometry (BSS) systems. In addition, the work focused on acknowledging the performance of different commercial active dosimetry systems when measuring neutron ambient dose equivalents, H(∗)(10), at several positions inside (8 positions) and outside (3 positions) the treatment room. Detectors included three TEPCs--tissue equivalent proportional counters (Hawk type from Far West Technology, Inc.) and six rem-counters (WENDI-II, LB 6411, RadEye™ NL, a regular and an extended-range NM2B). Meanwhile, the photon component of stray radiation was deduced from the low-lineal energy transfer part of TEPC spectra or measured using a Thermo Scientific™ FH-40G survey meter. Experiments involved a water tank phantom (60 × 30 × 30 cm(3)) representing the patient that was uniformly irradiated using a 3 mm spot diameter proton pencil beam with 10 cm modulation width, 19.95 cm distal beam range, and 10 × 10 cm(2) field size. RESULTS Neutron spectrometry around the target volume showed two main components at the thermal and fast energy ranges. The study also revealed the large dependence of the energy distribution of neutrons, and consequently of out-of-field doses, on the primary beam direction (directional emission of intranuclear cascade neutrons) and energy (spectral composition of secondary neutrons). In addition, neutron mapping within the facility was conducted and showed the highest H(∗)(10) value of ∼ 51 μSv Gy(-1); this was measured at 1.15 m along the beam axis. H(∗)(10) values significantly decreased with distance and angular position with respect to beam axis falling below 2 nSv Gy(-1) at the entrance of the maze, at the door outside the room and below detection limit in the gantry control room, and at an adjacent room (<0.1 nSv Gy(-1)). Finally, the agreement on H(∗)(10) values between all detectors showed a direct dependence on neutron spectra at the measurement position. While conventional rem-counters (LB 6411, RadEye™ NL, NM2-458) underestimated the H(∗)(10) by up to a factor of 4, Hawk TEPCs and the WENDI-II range-extended detector were found to have good performance (within 20%) even at the highest neutron fluence and energy range. Meanwhile, secondary photon dose equivalents were found to be up to five times lower than neutrons; remaining nonetheless of concern to the patient. CONCLUSIONS Extended-range BSS, TEPCs, and the WENDI-II enable accurate measurements of stray neutrons while other rem-counters are not appropriate considering the high-energy range of neutrons involved in proton therapy.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2016

A comprehensive spectrometry study of a stray neutron radiation field in scanning proton therapy.

Vladimir Mares; M. Romero-Expósito; J. Farah; Sebastian Trinkl; C. Domingo; Martin Dommert; Liliana Stolarczyk; Laurent Van Ryckeghem; Marek Wielunski; P. Olko; R M Harrison

The purpose of this study is to characterize the stray neutron radiation field in scanning proton therapy considering a pediatric anthropomorphic phantom and a clinically-relevant beam condition. Using two extended-range Bonner sphere spectrometry systems (ERBSS), Working Group 9 of the European Radiation Dosimetry Group measured neutron spectra at ten different positions around a pediatric anthropomorphic phantom irradiated for a brain tumor with a scanning proton beam. This study compares the different systems and unfolding codes as well as neutron spectra measured in similar conditions around a water tank phantom. The ten spectra measured with two ERBSS systems show a generally similar thermal component regardless of the position around the phantom while high energy neutrons (above 20 MeV) were only registered at positions near the beam axis (at 0°, 329° and 355°). Neutron spectra, fluence and ambient dose equivalent, H (*)(10), values of both systems were in good agreement (<15%) while the unfolding code proved to have a limited effect. The highest H (*)(10) value of 2.7 μSv Gy(-1) was measured at 329° to the beam axis and 1.63 m from the isocenter where high-energy neutrons (E  ⩾  20 MeV) contribute with about 53%. The neutron mapping within the gantry room showed that H (*)(10) values significantly decreased with distance and angular position with respect to the beam axis dropping to 0.52 μSv Gy(-1) at 90° and 3.35 m. Spectra at angles of 45° and 135° with respect to the beam axis measured here with an anthropomorphic phantom showed a similar peak structure at the thermal, fast and high energy range as in the previous water-tank experiments. Meanwhile, at 90°, small differences at the high-energy range were observed. Using ERBSS systems, neutron spectra mapping was performed to characterize the exposure of scanning proton therapy patients. The ten measured spectra provide precise information about the exposure of healthy organs to thermal, epithermal, evaporation and intra-nuclear cascade neutrons. This comprehensive spectrometry analysis can also help in understanding the tremendous literature data based rem-counters while also being of great value for general neutron shielding and radiation safety studies.


Physica Medica | 2017

Measurement of stray neutron doses inside the treatment room from a proton pencil beam scanning system

Natalia Mojżeszek; J. Farah; Magdalena Kłodowska; Ondrej Ploc; Liliana Stolarczyk; Michael Patrick Russell Waligórski; P. Olko

PURPOSE To measure the environmental doses from stray neutrons in the vicinity of a solid slab phantom as a function of beam energy, field size and modulation width, using the proton pencil beam scanning (PBS) technique. METHOD Measurements were carried out using two extended range WENDI-II rem-counters and three tissue equivalent proportional counters. Detectors were suitably placed at different distances around the RW3 slab phantom. Beam irradiation parameters were varied to cover the clinical ranges of proton beam energies (100-220MeV), field sizes ((2×2)-(20×20)cm2) and modulation widths (0-15cm). RESULTS For pristine proton peak irradiations, large variations of neutron H∗(10)/D were observed with changes in beam energy and field size, while these were less dependent on modulation widths. H∗(10)/D for pristine proton pencil beams varied between 0.04μSvGy-1 at beam energy 100MeV and a (2×2)cm2 field at 2.25m distance and 90° angle with respect to the beam axis, and 72.3μSvGy-1 at beam energy 200MeV and a (20×20) cm2 field at 1m distance along the beam axis. CONCLUSIONS The obtained results will be useful in benchmarking Monte Carlo calculations of proton radiotherapy in PBS mode and in estimating the exposure to stray radiation of the patient. Such estimates may be facilitated by the obtained best-fitted simple analytical formulae relating the stray neutron doses at points of interest with beam irradiation parameters.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2018

Organic Scintillator for Real-Time Neutron Dosimetry

Kyle A Beyer; Angela Di Fulvio; Liliana Stolarczyk; Wiktor Parol; Natalia Mojżeszek; Renata Kopeć; Shaun D. Clarke; Sara A. Pozzi

We developed a radiation detector based on an organic scintillator for spectrometry and dosimetry of out-of-field secondary neutrons from clinical proton beams. The detector consists of an EJ-299-34 crystalline organic scintillator, coupled by fiber optic cable to a silicon photomultiplier (SiPM). Proof of concept measurements were taken with 137Cs and 252Cf, and corresponding simulations were performed in MCNPX-PoliMi. Despite its small size, the detector is able to discriminate between neutron and gamma-rays via pulse shape discrimination. We simulated the response function of the detector to monoenergetic neutrons in the 100 keV-0 MeV range using MCNPX-PoliMi. The measured unfolded 252Cf neutron spectrum is in good agreement with the theoretical Watt fission spectrum. We determined the ambient dose equivalent by folding the spectrum with the fluence-to-ambient dose conversion coefficient, with a 1.4% deviation from theory. Some preliminary proton beam experiments were preformed at the Bronowice Cyclotron Center patient treatment facility using a clinically relevant proton pencil beam for brain tumor and craino-spinal treatment directed at a child phantom.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2018

Dose distribution of secondary radiation in a water phantom for a proton pencil beam - EURADOS WG9 inter-comparison exercise

Liliana Stolarczyk; Sebastian Trinkl; M. Romero-Expósito; Natalia Mojżeszek; Iva Ambrozova; C. Domingo; Marie Davidkova; J. Farah; Magdalena Kłodowska; Željka Knežević; Małgorzata Liszka; Marija Majer; Saveta Miljanić; Ondrej Ploc; Marco Schwarz; R M Harrison; P. Olko

Systematic 3D mapping of out-of-field doses induced by a therapeutic proton pencil scanning beam in a 300  ×  300  ×  600 mm3 water phantom was performed using a set of thermoluminescence detectors (TLDs): MTS-7 (7LiF:Mg,Ti), MTS-6 (6LiF:Mg,Ti), MTS-N (natLiF:Mg,Ti) and TLD-700 (7LiF:Mg,Ti), radiophotoluminescent (RPL) detectors GD-352M and GD-302M, and polyallyldiglycol carbonate (PADC)-based (C12H18O7) track-etched detectors. Neutron and gamma-ray doses, as well as linear energy transfer distributions, were experimentally determined at 200 points within the phantom. In parallel, the Geant4 Monte Carlo code was applied to calculate neutron and gamma radiation spectra at the position of each detector. For the cubic proton target volume of 100  ×  100  ×  100 mm3 (spread out Bragg peak with a modulation of 100 mm) the scattered photon doses along the main axis of the phantom perpendicular to the primary beam were approximately 0.5 mGy Gy-1 at a distance of 100 mm and 0.02 mGy Gy-1 at 300 mm from the center of the target. For the neutrons, the corresponding values of dose equivalent were found to be ~0.7 and ~0.06 mSv Gy-1, respectively. The measured neutron doses were comparable with the out-of-field neutron doses from a similar experiment with 20 MV x-rays, whereas photon doses for the scanning proton beam were up to three orders of magnitude lower.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2017

OUT-OF-FIELD DOSE MEASUREMENTS FOR 3D CONFORMAL AND INTENSITY MODULATED RADIOTHERAPY OF A PAEDIATRIC BRAIN TUMOUR

Marija Majer; Liliana Stolarczyk; Marijke De Saint-Hubert; Damian Kabat; Željka Knežević; Saveta Miljanić; Natalia Mojżeszek; R M Harrison

The purpose of this study was to measure out-of-field organ doses in clinical conditions in anthropomorphic paediatric phantoms which received a simulated treatment of a brain tumour with intensity modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) and 3D conformal radiotherapy (3D CRT). Organ doses measured with radiophotoluminescent and thermoluminescent dosemeters were on average 1.6 and 3.0 times higher for the 5 y-old than for the 10 y-old phantom for IMRT and 3D CRT, respectively. A larger 5-y to 10-y organ dose ratio for 3D CRT can be explained because the use of a mechanical wedge for the 5-y-old 3D CRT phantom treatment increased out-of-field doses. Due to different configurations of the radiation fields, for both phantoms, the IMRT technique resulted in a higher non-target brain dose and higher eye doses but lower thyroid doses compared to 3D CRT. For 3D CRT (which used a non-coplanar field configuration), eye doses were 3-6% and for IMRT (which used a coplanar field configuration) 27-30% of the treatment dose, respectively. For thyroid and more distant organs, doses were less than 1% of the treatment dose. Comparison of measured doses and doses calculated by the treatment planning system (TPS) showed that the TPS underestimated out-of-field doses both for IMRT and 3D CRT.


Nukleonika | 2016

Ambient dose equivalent measurements in secondary radiation fields at proton therapy facility CCB IFJ PAN in Krakow using recombination chambers

Edyta Jakubowska; M. A. Gryziński; Natalia Golnik; Piotr Tulik; Liliana Stolarczyk; Tomasz Horwacik; Katarzyna Zbroja; Łukasz Góra

Abstract This work presents recombination methods used for secondary radiation measurements at the Facility for Proton Radiotherapy of Eye Cancer at the Institute for Nuclear Physics, IFJ, in Krakow (Poland). The measurements of H*(10) were performed, with REM-2 tissue equivalent chamber in two halls of cyclotrons AIC-144 and Proteus C-235 and in the corridors close to treatment rooms. The measurements were completed by determination of gamma radiation component, using a hydrogen-free recombination chamber. The results were compared with the measurements using rem meter types FHT 762 (WENDI-II) and NM2 FHT 192 gamma probe and with stationary dosimetric system.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2008

Radiation exposure at the proton eye therapy facility at IFJ in Kraków

Tomasz Horwacik; Jan Swakoń; Liliana Stolarczyk; Katarzyna Zbroja; Tomasz Nowak; Barbara Michalec; T. Cywicka-Jakiel; P. Olko; Barbara Dulny; Marta Ptaszkiewicz

The proton radiotherapy facility for the treatment of eye tumors is under development at the Institute of Nuclear Physics (IFJ) in Kraków. The optical line installed at the treatment room is applied to form and monitor the 60 MeV proton beam provided by the AIC-144 isochronous cyclotron. Typical proton dose rates measured at the isocentre varied between 0.01 and 0.5 Gy/s. The intensities of the secondary radiation field inside and around the treatment room have been measured with a stationary monitoring system. Four sets of radiation monitors provide the continuous monitoring of gamma and neutron radiation during the operation of the facility. Monte Carlo calculations have been performed for understanding the structure of the radiation field inside the treatment room. Typical ambient dose equivalent rates inside the treatment room vary between 100 and 800 μSv/h for neutrons and between 10 and 130 μSv/h for gamma rays. The maximum values were found to be 2.5 mSv/h and 0.3 mSv/h respectively. The ambient dose equivalent rates outside the therapy room were not higher than 2.5 μSv/h for neutrons and 0.35 μSv/h for gamma rays. The end of the beam line, the optical line and the beam scattering system are main sources of the secondary radiation. Optimisation and shielding of these elements will reduce the patient and facility personnel exposure to the secondary radiation.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2018

OUT-OF-FIELD DOSES IN CHILDREN TREATED FOR LARGE ARTERIOVENOUS MALFORMATIONS USING HYPOFRACTIONATED GAMMA KNIFE RADIOSURGERY AND INTENSITY-MODULATED RADIATION THERAPY

Marijke De Saint-Hubert; Marija Majer; Zdravko Heinrich; Željka Knežević; Saveta Miljanić; Paulina Porwol; Liliana Stolarczyk; Filip Vanhavere; R M Harrison

The purpose of this study was to measure out-of-field organ doses in two anthropomorphic child phantoms for the treatment of large brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) using hypofractionated gamma knife (GK) radiosurgery and to compare these with an alternative treatment using intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT). Target volume was identical in size and shape in all cases. Radiophotoluminescent (RPL), thermoluminescent (TL) and optically stimulated luminescent (OSL) dosimeters were used for out-of-field dosimetry during GK treatment and a good agreement within 1-2% between results was shown. In addition, the use of multiple dosimetry systems strengthens the reliability of the findings. The number of GK isocentres was confirmed to be important for the magnitude of out-of-field doses. Measured GK doses for the same distance from the target, when expressed per target dose and isocentre, were comparable in both phantoms. GK out-of-field doses averaged for both phantoms were evaluated to be 120 mGy/Gy for eyes then sharply reduced to 20 mGy/Gy for mandible and slowly reduced up to 0.8 mGy/Gy for testes. Taking into account the fractionation regimen used to treat AVM patients, the total treatment organ doses to the out-of-field organs were calculated and compared with IMRT. The eyes were better spared with GK whilst for more distant organs doses were up to a factor of 2.8 and 4 times larger for GK compared to IMRT in 5-year and 10-year old phantoms, respectively. Presented out-of-field dose values are specific for the investigated AVM case, phantoms and treatment plans used for GK and IMRT, but provide useful information about out-of-field dose levels and emphasise their importance.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2018

RADIOTHERAPY PROTON BEAM PROFILOMETRY WITH scCVD DIAMOND DETECTOR IN SINGLE PARTICLE MODE

Marzena Rydygier; Marcin Jastrząb; Dawid Krzempek; Tomasz Nowak; Leszek Grzanka; P. Bednarczyk; Liliana Stolarczyk

Proton radiotherapy requires precise knowledge of the volumetric dose distribution. In proton beam delivery systems, based on narrow pencil beams, a contribution from small doses in low-intensity regions, consisting mainly of scattered protons, may have not negligible influence on total dose delivered to patient. Insufficient information about dose profile can cause underestimation of dose and potential delivery of inflated dose during hadrontherapy treatment. Presented work aims to verify applicability of diamond detectors, produced by Chemical Vapor Deposition method, for therapeutic proton beam profilometry at large fields. This requires the capability of measuring the core of the beam intensity profile (wide dynamic range) as well as its lateral spread (very high sensitivity) with a single device.

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Dive into the Liliana Stolarczyk's collaboration.

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P. Olko

Polish Academy of Sciences

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C. Domingo

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Jan Swakoń

Polish Academy of Sciences

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J. Farah

Institut de radioprotection et de sûreté nucléaire

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T. Cywicka-Jakiel

Polish Academy of Sciences

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Tomasz Horwacik

Polish Academy of Sciences

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M. Romero-Expósito

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Ondrej Ploc

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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