Lab Keeps Cancer Treatment Radiation Machines Honest

Facility provides calibration to approximately 60 percent of the U.S. medical physics market

Written byUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison
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As radiation sources used to map disease and attack cancer grow in number and complexity, a University of Wisconsin—Madison center continues to offer the last word on accurate radiation doses.

From its headquarters in the basement of the Wisconsin Institutes for Medical Research, the University of Wisconsin Radiation Calibration Laboratory fine-tunes instruments used by clinics to measure radiation doses from X-ray machines, CAT scanners and medical linear accelerators used to treat cancer.

“We are one of three institutions in the United States that base our accuracy on devices verified by NIST (the National Institute of Standards and Technology),” says director Larry DeWerd, a UW–Madison professor of medical physics. “And we provide calibration to approximately 60 percent of the U.S. medical physics market.”

By measuring an unknown instrument against a known one, the process of calibration creates a correction factor that clinics can use to ensure safety and accuracy of the dose, says DeWerd.

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