Literature DB >> 22320816

Fast patient-specific Monte Carlo brachytherapy dose calculations via the correlated sampling variance reduction technique.

Andrew Sampson1, Yi Le, Jeffrey F Williamson.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To demonstrate potential of correlated sampling Monte Carlo (CMC) simulation to improve the calculation efficiency for permanent seed brachytherapy (PSB) implants without loss of accuracy.
METHODS: CMC was implemented within an in-house MC code family (PTRAN) and used to compute 3D dose distributions for two patient cases: a clinical PSB postimplant prostate CT imaging study and a simulated post lumpectomy breast PSB implant planned on a screening dedicated breast cone-beam CT patient exam. CMC tallies the dose difference, ΔD, between highly correlated histories in homogeneous and heterogeneous geometries. The heterogeneous geometry histories were derived from photon collisions sampled in a geometrically identical but purely homogeneous medium geometry, by altering their particle weights to correct for bias. The prostate case consisted of 78 Model-6711 (125)I seeds. The breast case consisted of 87 Model-200 (103)Pd seeds embedded around a simulated lumpectomy cavity. Systematic and random errors in CMC were unfolded using low-uncertainty uncorrelated MC (UMC) as the benchmark. CMC efficiency gains, relative to UMC, were computed for all voxels, and the mean was classified in regions that received minimum doses greater than 20%, 50%, and 90% of D(90), as well as for various anatomical regions.
RESULTS: Systematic errors in CMC relative to UMC were less than 0.6% for 99% of the voxels and 0.04% for 100% of the voxels for the prostate and breast cases, respectively. For a 1 × 1 × 1 mm(3) dose grid, efficiency gains were realized in all structures with 38.1- and 59.8-fold average gains within the prostate and breast clinical target volumes (CTVs), respectively. Greater than 99% of the voxels within the prostate and breast CTVs experienced an efficiency gain. Additionally, it was shown that efficiency losses were confined to low dose regions while the largest gains were located where little difference exists between the homogeneous and heterogeneous doses. On an AMD 1090T processor, computing times of 38 and 21 sec were required to achieve an average statistical uncertainty of 2% within the prostate (1 × 1 × 1 mm(3)) and breast (0.67 × 0.67 × 0.8 mm(3)) CTVs, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: CMC supports an additional average 38-60 fold improvement in average efficiency relative to conventional uncorrelated MC techniques, although some voxels experience no gain or even efficiency losses. However, for the two investigated case studies, the maximum variance within clinically significant structures was always reduced (on average by a factor of 6) in the therapeutic dose range generally. CMC takes only seconds to produce an accurate, high-resolution, low-uncertainly dose distribution for the low-energy PSB implants investigated in this study.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22320816      PMCID: PMC3281974          DOI: 10.1118/1.3679018

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


  44 in total

1.  Monte Carlo modeling of the transverse-axis dose distribution of the model 200 103Pd interstitial brachytherapy source.

Authors:  J F Williamson
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 4.071

2.  Monte Carlo-aided dosimetry of the Symmetra model I25.S06 125I, interstitial brachytherapy seed.

Authors:  H Hedtjärn; G A Carlsson; J F Williamson
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3.  CT-based dosimetry calculations for 125I prostate implants.

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Authors:  M J Yaffe; J M Boone; N Packard; O Alonzo-Proulx; S Y Huang; C L Peressotti; A Al-Mayah; K Brock
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7.  Monte Carlo study of LDR seed dosimetry with an application in a clinical brachytherapy breast implant.

Authors:  C Furstoss; B Reniers; M J Bertrand; E Poon; J-F Carrier; B M Keller; J P Pignol; L Beaulieu; F Verhaegen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2009-05       Impact factor: 4.071

8.  Simulation study on potential accuracy gains from dual energy CT tissue segmentation for low-energy brachytherapy Monte Carlo dose calculations.

Authors:  Guillaume Landry; Patrick V Granton; Brigitte Reniers; Michel C Ollers; Luc Beaulieu; Joachim E Wildberger; Frank Verhaegen
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2011-09-06       Impact factor: 3.609

9.  Dosimetric accuracy of a deterministic radiation transport based 192Ir brachytherapy treatment planning system. Part I: single sources and bounded homogeneous geometries.

Authors:  K Zourari; E Pantelis; A Moutsatsos; L Petrokokkinos; P Karaiskos; L Sakelliou; E Georgiou; P Papagiannis
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2010-02       Impact factor: 4.071

10.  Sensitivity of low energy brachytherapy Monte Carlo dose calculations to uncertainties in human tissue composition.

Authors:  Guillaume Landry; Brigitte Reniers; Lars Murrer; Ludy Lutgens; Esther Bloemen-Van Gurp; Jean-Philippe Pignol; Brian Keller; Luc Beaulieu; Frank Verhaegen
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 4.071

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1.  Dosimetric impact of gold markers implanted closely to lung tumors: a Monte Carlo simulation.

Authors:  Takehiro Shiinoki; Akira Sawada; Yoshitomo Ishihara; Yuki Miyabe; Yukinori Matsuo; Takashi Mizowaki; Masaki Kokubo; Masahiro Hiraoka
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2014-05-08       Impact factor: 2.102

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