Literature DB >> 26716718

Dose assessment for the fetus considering scattered and secondary radiation from photon and proton therapy when treating a brain tumor of the mother.

Changran Geng1, Maryam Moteabbed, Joao Seco, Yiming Gao, X George Xu, José Ramos-Méndez, Bruce Faddegon, Harald Paganetti.   

Abstract

The goal of this work was to determine the scattered photon dose and secondary neutron dose and resulting risk for the sensitive fetus from photon and proton radiotherapy when treating a brain tumor during pregnancy. Anthropomorphic pregnancy phantoms with three stages (3-, 6-, 9-month) based on ICRP reference parameters were implemented in Monte Carlo platform TOPAS, to evaluate the scattered dose and secondary neutron dose and dose equivalent. To evaluate the dose equivalent, dose averaged quality factors were considered for neutrons. This study compared three treatment modalities: passive scattering and pencil beam scanning proton therapy (PPT and PBS) and 6-MV 3D conformal photon therapy. The results show that, for 3D conformal photon therapy, the scattered photon dose equivalent to the fetal body increases from 0.011 to 0.030 mSv per treatment Gy with increasing stage of gestation. For PBS, the neutron dose equivalent to the fetal body was significantly lower, i.e. increasing from 1.5 × 10(-3) to 2.5 × 10(-3) mSv per treatment Gy with increasing stage of gestation. For PPT, the neutron dose equivalent of the fetus decreases from 0.17 to 0.13 mSv per treatment Gy with the growing fetus. The ratios of dose equivalents to the fetus for a 52.2 Gy(RBE) course of radiation therapy to a typical CT scan of the mother's head ranged from 3.4-4.4 for PBS, 30-41 for 3D conformal photon therapy and 180-500 for PPT, respectively. The attained dose to a fetus from the three modalities is far lower than the thresholds of malformation, severe mental retardation and lethal death. The childhood cancer excessive absolute risk was estimated using a linear no-threshold dose-response relationship. The risk would be 1.0 (95% CI: 0.6, 1.6) and 0.1 (95% CI: -0.01, 0.52) in 10(5) for the 9-month fetus for PBS with a prescribed dose of 52.2 Gy(RBE). The increased risks for PPT and photon therapy are about two and one orders of magnitude larger than that for PBS, respectively. We can conclude that a pregnant woman with a brain tumor could be treated with pencil beam scanning with acceptable risks to the fetus.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26716718     DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/61/2/683

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Med Biol        ISSN: 0031-9155            Impact factor:   3.609


  3 in total

1.  Validation of a Monte Carlo Framework for Out-of-Field Dose Calculations in Proton Therapy.

Authors:  Marijke De Saint-Hubert; Nico Verbeek; Christian Bäumer; Johannes Esser; Jörg Wulff; Racell Nabha; Olivier Van Hoey; Jérémie Dabin; Florian Stuckmann; Fabiano Vasi; Stephan Radonic; Guillaume Boissonnat; Uwe Schneider; Miguel Rodriguez; Beate Timmermann; Isabelle Thierry-Chef; Lorenzo Brualla
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-06-08       Impact factor: 5.738

2.  The TOPAS tool for particle simulation, a Monte Carlo simulation tool for physics, biology and clinical research.

Authors:  Bruce Faddegon; José Ramos-Méndez; Jan Schuemann; Aimee McNamara; Jungwook Shin; Joseph Perl; Harald Paganetti
Journal:  Phys Med       Date:  2020-04-03       Impact factor: 2.685

3.  Spot scanning proton therapy minimizes neutron dose in the setting of radiation therapy administered during pregnancy.

Authors:  Xin Wang; Falk Poenisch; Narayan Sahoo; Ronald X Zhu; MingFwu Lii; Michael T Gillin; Jing Li; David Grosshans
Journal:  J Appl Clin Med Phys       Date:  2016-09-08       Impact factor: 2.102

  3 in total

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