Radiation Protection In Practice: Assessment Of Shielding Block Efficacy In External Beam Radiotherapy At A Leading Cancer Centre In Sub-Saharan Africa
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Journal of Radiotherapy in Practice
Abstract
Background: Radiotherapy aims to provide either curative treatment or palliation, with
radiation transmission through shielding blocks ideally not exceeding 5% of the incident dose.
Aim: This study assessed the attenuation efficacy of Cerrobend shielding blocks, determining
the thickness required for achieving 95% attenuation and evaluating the adequacy of currently
used blocks.
Methods: An experimental study was conducted using a 1·25 MeV cobalt-60 teletherapy
machine. Radiation intensities transmitted through Cerrobend blocks of varying thicknesses
(1–5 cm) were measured with a calibrated ionization chamber and electrometer. Measurements
were performed with a fixed field size of 10 cm × 10 cm at a 100-cm source-to-chamber
distance, minimizing scatter. Baseline and transmitted intensities were recorded, with each
measurement repeated five times for precision.
Results: The percentage transmission, linear attenuation coefficients and thickness required
for 5% transmission were calculated using regression analysis. Radiation intensity decreased
exponentially with increasing Cerrobend block thickness, from 15·01 nC (0 cm) to 0·939 nC
(5 cm thickness). Regression analysis showed a strong negative linear relationship
(y = −0·5386x þ 2·6705; R2 = 0·992). The thickness required for maximum transmission
of 5% was determined to be 6 cm, while the routinely used 5 cm blocks at the study site allowed
8% transmission, exceeding the recommended threshold. Minimal environmental variations
ensured measurement consistency.
Conclusion: The study demonstrated that 6 cm Cerrobend blocks were necessary to achieve the
recommended 95% attenuation, whereas the 5 cm blocks in use resulted in suboptimal
shielding. This highlights the need to revise shielding practices to improve radiation protection
and patient safety in resource-constrained radiotherapy settings.
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Daniels J and Kyei KA. (2025) Radiation protection in practice: assessment of shielding block efficacy in external beam radiotherapy at a leading cancer centre in sub Saharan Africa. Journal of Radiotherapy in Practice. 24(e25), 1–7. doi: 10.1017/ S1460396925100125
