Literature DB >> 17513897

Irradiation System for HIMAC.

Masami Torikoshi1, Shinichi Minohara, Nobuyuki Kanematsu, Masataka Komori, Mitsukata Kanazawa, Koji Noda, Nobuyuki Miyahara, Hiroko Itoh, Masahiro Endo, Tatsuaki Kanai.   

Abstract

Clinical trials of carbon radiotherapy started at HIMAC in 1994 using three treatment rooms and four beam ports, two horizontal and two vertical. The broad beam method was adopted to make a three-dimensionally uniform field at an isocenter. A spot beam extracted from an accelerator was laterally spread out by using a pair of wobbler magnets and a scatterer. A bar ridge filter modulated the beam energy to obtain the spread out Bragg peak (SOBP). The SOBP was designed to be flat in terms of the biological dose based on the consideration that the field consisted of various beams with different LET. Finally, the field of 20 cm in diameter with +/- 2.5% uniformity was formed at the isocenter. The width of the maximum SOBP was 15 cm. When treating the lung or liver, organs that move due to breathing, the beam was irradiated only during the expiration period in a respiration-gated irradiation method. This reduced the treatment margin of the moving target. In order to prevent normal tissues adjacent to the target volume from irradiation by an unwanted dose, a layer-stacking method was developed. In this method, thin SOBP layers which have different ranges were piled up step by step from the distal end to the entrance of the target volume. At the same time, a multi-leaf collimator was used to change the aperture shape to match the shape of each layer to the cross-sectional shape of the target. This method has been applied to rather large volume cancers including bone and soft-tissue cancers. Only a few serious problems in the irradiation systems have been encountered since the beginning of the clinical trials. Overall the systems have been working stably and reliably.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17513897     DOI: 10.1269/jrr.48.a15

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Radiat Res        ISSN: 0449-3060            Impact factor:   2.724


  20 in total

1.  The effect of post-irradiation tumor oxygenation status on recovery from radiation-induced damage in vivo: with reference to that in quiescent cell populations.

Authors:  Shin-ichiro Masunaga; Ryoichi Hirayama; Akiko Uzawa; Genro Kashino; Minoru Suzuki; Yuko Kinashi; Yong Liu; Sachiko Koike; Koichi Ando; Koji Ono
Journal:  J Cancer Res Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-02-12       Impact factor: 4.553

2.  Influence of manipulating hypoxia in solid tumors on the radiation dose-rate effect in vivo, with reference to that in the quiescent cell population.

Authors:  Shin-ichiro Masunaga; Ryoichi Hirayama; Akiko Uzawa; Genro Kashino; Takushi Takata; Hiroki Tanaka; Minoru Suzuki; Yuko Kinashi; Yong Liu; Sachiko Koike; Koichi Ando; Koji Ono
Journal:  Jpn J Radiol       Date:  2010-02-26       Impact factor: 2.374

3.  Four-dimensional layer-stacking carbon-ion beam dose distribution by use of a lung numeric phantom.

Authors:  Shinichiro Mori; Motoki Kumagai; Kentaro Miki
Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2015-04-02

Review 4.  Current status and future prospects of multi-dimensional image-guided particle therapy.

Authors:  Shinichiro Mori; Silvan Zenklusen; Antje-Christin Knopf
Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2013-02-19

5.  Microdosimetric calculation of penumbra for biological dose in wobbled carbon-ion beams with Monte Carlo Method.

Authors:  Mikoto Tamura; Masataka Komori; Hiroshi Oguchi; Yasushi Iwamoto; Toshiya Rachi; Kenji Ota; Atsushi Hemmi; Tomohiro Shimozato; Yasunori Obata
Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2013-04-25

6.  Estimation of linear energy transfer distribution for broad-beam carbon-ion radiotherapy at the National Institute of Radiological Sciences, Japan.

Authors:  Nobuyuki Kanematsu; Naruhiro Matsufuji; Taku Inaniwa
Journal:  Radiol Phys Technol       Date:  2018-02-22

7.  Responses of total and quiescent cell populations in solid tumors to carbon ion beam irradiation (290 MeV/u) in vivo.

Authors:  Shin-Ichiro Masunaga; Koichi Ando; Akiko Uzawa; Ryoichi Hirayama; Yoshiya Furusawa; Sachiko Koike; Koji Ono
Journal:  Radiat Med       Date:  2008-07-27

8.  The influence of beam delivery uncertainty on dose uniformity and penumbra for pencil beam scanning in carbon-ion radiotherapy.

Authors:  Yue Li; Yunzhe Gao; Xinguo Liu; Jian Shi; Jiawen Xia; Jiancheng Yang; Lijun Mao
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-04-01       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  Co-visualization of DNA damage and ion traversals in live mammalian cells using a fluorescent nuclear track detector.

Authors:  Satoshi Kodaira; Teruaki Konishi; Alisa Kobayashi; Takeshi Maeda; Tengku Ahbrizal Farizal Tengku Ahmad; Gen Yang; Mark S Akselrod; Yoshiya Furusawa; Yukio Uchihori
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2014-10-16       Impact factor: 2.724

10.  First clinical experience in carbon ion scanning beam therapy: retrospective analysis of patient positional accuracy.

Authors:  Shinichiro Mori; Kouichi Shibayama; Katsuyuki Tanimoto; Motoki Kumagai; Yuka Matsuzaki; Takuji Furukawa; Taku Inaniwa; Toshiyuki Shirai; Koji Noda; Hiroshi Tsuji; Tadashi Kamada
Journal:  J Radiat Res       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 2.724

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