Literature DB >> 7643797

The influence of heavy water on boron requirements for neutron capture therapy.

S A Wallace1, J N Mathur, B J Allen.   

Abstract

Neutron penetration in tissue is a major limitation of thermal NCT, as such much work has centered upon the epithermal neutron beam in an effort to improve this situation. Further gains in neutron flux penetration, and thus therapeutic ratios, are possible if natural water is replaced with heavy water prior to therapy. Applying MCNP to a heterogeneous ellipsoidal skull/brain model, advantage depth and therapeutic depth parameters are studied as a function of heavy water replacement for a range of tumor to blood boron ratios. Both thermal (0.025 eV) and epithermal (2-7 keV) ideal neutron beams are analyzed. Using 10B ratios in the range of documented human uptake, the thermal advantage depth improved by approximately 0.7 cm for 20% D2O replacement, however, the therapeutic depth increased by less than half this value. For the epithermal beam, both the advantage depth and the therapeutic depth increased by over 1 cm. Effects of heavy water replacement on 10B requirements to therapeutically treat the midline of the brain are also evaluated.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7643797     DOI: 10.1118/1.597585

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


  3 in total

Review 1.  Physical, dosimetric and clinical aspects and delivery systems in neutron capture therapy.

Authors:  Bagher Farhood; Hadi Samadian; Mahdi Ghorbani; Seyed Salman Zakariaee; Courtney Knaup
Journal:  Rep Pract Oncol Radiother       Date:  2018-08-01

2.  Deuterium oxide as a contrast medium for real-time MRI-guided endovascular neurointervention.

Authors:  Lin Chen; Jing Liu; Chengyan Chu; Zheng Han; Nirhbay Yadav; Jiadi Xu; Renyuan Bai; Verena Staedtke; Monica Pearl; Piotr Walczak; Peter van Zijl; Miroslaw Janowski; Guanshu Liu
Journal:  Theranostics       Date:  2021-04-15       Impact factor: 11.556

3.  Deuterium Oxide (D2O) Induces Early Stress Response Gene Expression and Impairs Growth and Metastasis of Experimental Malignant Melanoma.

Authors:  Jana Jandova; Anh B Hua; Jocelyn Fimbres; Georg T Wondrak
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2021-02-03       Impact factor: 6.639

  3 in total

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