Literature DB >> 19610300

Photoelectric-enhanced radiation therapy with quasi-monochromatic computed tomography.

Gregor Jost1, Tristan Mensing, Sven Golfier, Rüdiger Lawaczeck, Hubertus Pietsch, Joachim Hütter, Levent Cibik, Martin Gerlach, Michael Krumrey, Daniel Fratzscher, Vladimir Arkadiev, Reiner Wedell, Michael Haschke, Norbert Langhoff, Peter Wust, Lutz Lüdemann.   

Abstract

Photoelectric-enhanced radiation therapy is a bimodal therapy, consisting of the administration of highly radiation-absorbing substances into the tumor area and localized regional irradiation with orthovoltage x-rays. Irradiation can be performed by a modified computed tomography (CT) unit equipped with an additional x-ray optical module which converts the polychromatic, fan-shaped CT beam into a monochromatized and focused beam for energy-tuned photoelectric-enhanced radiotherapy. A dedicated x-ray optical module designed for spatial collimation, focusing, and monochromatization was mounted at the exit of the x-ray tube of a clinical CT unit. Spectrally resolved measurements of the resulting beam were performed using an energy-dispersive detection system calibrated by synchrotron radiation. The spatial photon fluence was determined by film dosimetry. Depth-dose measurements were performed and compared to the polychromatic CT and a therapeutic 6 MV beam. The spatial dose distribution in phantoms using a rotating radiation source (quasimonochromatic CT and 6 MV, respectively) was investigated by gel dosimetry. The photoelectric dose enhancement for an iodine fraction of 1% in tissue was calculated and verified experimentally. The x-ray optical module selectively filters the energy of the tungsten Kalpha emission line with an FWHM of 5 keV. The relative photon fluence distribution demonstrates the focusing characteristic of the x-ray optical module. A beam width of about 3 mm was determined at the isocenter of the CT gantry. The depth-dose measurements resulted in a half-depth value of approximately 36 mm for the CT beams (quasi-monochromatic, polychromatic) compared to 154 mm for the 6 MV beam. The rotation of the radiation source leads to a steep dose gradient at the center of rotation; the gel dosimetry yields an entrance-to-peak dose ratio of 1:10.8 for the quasi-monochromatic CT and 1:37.3 for a 6 MV beam of the same size. The photoelectric dose enhancement factor increases from 2.2 to 2.4 by using quasi-monochromatic instead of polychromatic radiation. An additional increase in the radiation dose by a factor of 1.4 due to the focusing characteristic of the x-ray optical module was calculated. Photoelectric-enhanced radiation therapy based on a clinical CT unit combined with an x-ray optical module is a novel therapy option in radiation oncology. The optimized quasi-monochromatic radiation is strongly focused and ensures high photoelectric dose enhancement for iodine.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19610300     DOI: 10.1118/1.3125137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  3 in total

1.  Measurements and simulations of focused beam for orthovoltage therapy.

Authors:  Hassan Abbas; Dip N Mahato; Jahangir Satti; C A MacDonald
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 4.071

2.  Improving x-ray fluorescence signal for benchtop polychromatic cone-beam x-ray fluorescence computed tomography by incident x-ray spectrum optimization: a Monte Carlo study.

Authors:  Nivedh Manohar; Bernard L Jones; Sang Hyun Cho
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 4.071

3.  Development of XFCT imaging strategy for monitoring the spatial distribution of platinum-based chemodrugs: instrumentation and phantom validation.

Authors:  Yu Kuang; Guillem Pratx; Magdalena Bazalova; Jianguo Qian; Bowen Meng; Lei Xing
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2013-03       Impact factor: 4.071

  3 in total

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