Literature DB >> 21089768

Advanced treatment planning methods for efficient radiation therapy with laser accelerated proton and ion beams.

Stefan Schell1, Jan J Wilkens.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Laser plasma acceleration can potentially replace large and expensive cyclotrons or synchrotrons for radiotherapy with protons and ions. On the way toward a clinical implementation, various challenges such as the maximum obtainable energy still remain to be solved. In any case, laser accelerated particles exhibit differences compared to particles from conventional accelerators. They typically have a wide energy spread and the beam is extremely pulsed (i.e., quantized) due to the pulsed nature of the employed lasers. The energy spread leads to depth dose curves that do not show a pristine Bragg peak but a wide high dose area, making precise radiotherapy impossible without an additional energy selection system. Problems with the beam quantization include the limited repetition rate and the number of accelerated particles per laser shot. This number might be too low, which requires a high repetition rate, or it might be too high, which requires an additional fluence selection system to reduce the number of particles. Trying to use laser accelerated particles in a conventional way such as spot scanning leads to long treatment times and a high amount of secondary radiation produced when blocking unwanted particles.
METHODS: The authors present methods of beam delivery and treatment planning that are specifically adapted to laser accelerated particles. In general, it is not necessary to fully utilize the energy selection system to create monoenergetic beams for the whole treatment plan. Instead, within wide parts of the target volume, beams with broader energy spectra can be used to simultaneously cover multiple axially adjacent spots of a conventional dose delivery grid as applied in intensity modulated particle therapy. If one laser shot produces too many particles, they can be distributed over a wider area with the help of a scattering foil and a multileaf collimator to cover multiple lateral spot positions at the same time. These methods are called axial and lateral clustering and reduce the number of particles that have to be blocked in the beam delivery system. Furthermore, the optimization routine can be adjusted to reduce the number of dose spots and laser shots. The authors implemented these methods into a research treatment planning system for laser accelerated particles.
RESULTS: The authors' proposed methods can decrease the amount of secondary radiation produced when blocking particles with wrong energies or when reducing the total number of particles from one laser shot. Additionally, caused by the efficient use of the beam, the treatment time is reduced considerably. Both improvements can be achieved without extensively changing the quality of the treatment plan since conventional intensity modulated particle therapy usually includes a certain amount of unused degrees of freedom which can be used to adapt to laser specific properties.
CONCLUSIONS: The advanced beam delivery and treatment planning methods reduce the need to have a perfect laser-based accelerator reproducing the properties of conventional accelerators that might not be possible without increasing treatment time and secondary radiation to the patient. The authors show how some of the differences to conventional beams can be overcome and efficiently used for radiation treatment.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21089768     DOI: 10.1118/1.3491406

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


  6 in total

1.  Reduced side effects by proton microchannel radiotherapy: study in a human skin model.

Authors:  Olga Zlobinskaya; Stefanie Girst; Christoph Greubel; Volker Hable; Christian Siebenwirth; Dietrich W M Walsh; Gabriele Multhoff; Jan J Wilkens; Thomas E Schmid; Günther Dollinger
Journal:  Radiat Environ Biophys       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 1.925

Review 2.  Laser-driven beam lines for delivering intensity modulated radiation therapy with particle beams.

Authors:  Kerstin M Hofmann; Stefan Schell; Jan J Wilkens
Journal:  J Biophotonics       Date:  2012-08-29       Impact factor: 3.207

3.  Survival of tumor cells after proton irradiation with ultra-high dose rates.

Authors:  Susanne Auer; Volker Hable; Christoph Greubel; Guido A Drexler; Thomas E Schmid; Claus Belka; Günther Dollinger; Anna A Friedl
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2011-10-18       Impact factor: 3.481

4.  Dose- rather than fluence-averaged LET should be used as a single-parameter descriptor of proton beam quality for radiochromic film dosimetry.

Authors:  Andreas Franz Resch; Paul David Heyes; Hermann Fuchs; Niels Bassler; Dietmar Georg; Hugo Palmans
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2020-03-13       Impact factor: 4.071

5.  Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size.

Authors:  Matthias Sammer; Esther Zahnbrecher; Sophie Dobiasch; Stefanie Girst; Christoph Greubel; Katarina Ilicic; Judith Reindl; Benjamin Schwarz; Christian Siebenwirth; Dietrich W M Walsh; Stephanie E Combs; Günther Dollinger; Thomas E Schmid
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-11-25       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Optimizing proton minibeam radiotherapy by interlacing and heterogeneous tumor dose on the basis of calculated clonogenic cell survival.

Authors:  Matthias Sammer; Stefanie Girst; Günther Dollinger
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-02-11       Impact factor: 4.379

  6 in total

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