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1.
Phys Med ; 104: 174-187, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36463582

ABSTRACT

At the Photo Injector Test facility at DESY in Zeuthen (PITZ), an R&D platform for electron FLASH and very high energy electron radiation therapy and radiation biology is being prepared (FLASHlab@PITZ). The beam parameters available at PITZ are worldwide unique. They are based on experiences from 20 + years of developing high brightness beam sources and an ultra-intensive THz light source demonstrator for ps scale electron bunches with up to 5 nC bunch charge at MHz repetition rate in bunch trains of up to 1 ms length, currently 22 MeV (upgrade to 250 MeV planned). Individual bunches can provide peak dose rates up to 1014 Gy/s, and 10 Gy can be delivered within picoseconds. Upon demand, each bunch of the bunch train can be guided to a different transverse location, so that either a "painting" with micro beams (comparable to pencil beam scanning in proton therapy) or a cumulative increase of absorbed dose, using a wide beam distribution, can be realized at the tumor. Full tumor treatment can hence be completed within 1 ms, mitigating organ movement issues. With extremely flexible beam manipulation capabilities, FLASHlab@PITZ will cover the current parameter range of successfully demonstrated FLASH effects and extend the parameter range towards yet unexploited short treatment times and high dose rates. A summary of the plans for FLASHlab@PITZ and the status of its realization will be presented.


Subject(s)
Electrons , Neoplasms , Humans , Radiobiology
2.
Biomed Phys Eng Express ; 9(1)2022 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36562508

ABSTRACT

In radiology, the photon fluence and the energy spectrum generated from an x-ray tube may depend on the anode tilt angle. In this contribution, a Monte Carlo investigation is performed to quantify this effect by modeling an x-ray tube based on published data Bujila R.et al(2020Physica. Med.7544-54). The GATE simulation code is used for this purpose. The calculations have moreover confirmed this dependence; the tilt of the anode could be used to increase the photon fluence. The thermal analysis has shown that the hot spot size is dependent as well on the anode tilt angle. The thermal focus temperature (ΔT) decreases when the anode tilt angle increases. Finally, by moving the acquisition angle from 293°-337° to 248°-292° and changing the anode tilt angle from 8° to 28°, the photon fluence can be increased by 55%.

3.
Biomed Phys Eng Express ; 8(2)2022 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35062008

ABSTRACT

Background and purpose.This work aims to present the strategy to simulate a clinical linear accelerator based on the geometry provided by the manufacturer and summarize the corresponding experimental validation. Simulations were performed with the Geant4 Monte Carlo code under a grid computing environment. The objective of this contribution is reproducing therapeutic dose distributions in a water phantom with an accuracy less than 2%.Materials and methods.A Geant4 Monte Carlo model of an Elekta Synergy linear accelerator has been established, the simulations were launched in a large grid computing platform. Dose distributions are calculated for a 6 MV photon beam with treatment fields ranging from 5 × 5 cm2to 20 × 20 cm2at a source-surface distance of 100 cm.Results.A high degree of agreement is achieved between the simulation results and the measured data, with dose differences of about 1.03% and 1.96% for the percentage depth dose curves and lateral dose profiles, respectively. This agreement is evaluated by the gamma index comparisons. Over 98% of the points for all simulations meet the restrictive acceptability criteria of 2%/2 mm.Conclusion.We have demonstrated the possibility to establish an accurate linac head Monte Carlo model for dose distribution simulations and quality assurance. Percentage depth dose curves and beam quality indices are in perfect agreement with the measured data with an accuracy of better than 2%.


Subject(s)
Particle Accelerators , Computer Simulation , Monte Carlo Method , Phantoms, Imaging , Radiotherapy Dosage
4.
Phys Med Biol ; 63(8): 085008, 2018 04 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29553478

ABSTRACT

The use of phase space in medical linear accelerator Monte Carlo (MC) simulations significantly improves the execution time and leads to results comparable to those obtained from full calculations. The classical representation of phase space stores directly the information of millions of particles, producing bulky files. This paper presents a virtual source model (VSM) based on a reconstruction algorithm, taking as input a compressed file of roughly 800 kb derived from phase space data freely available in the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) database. This VSM includes two main components; primary and scattered particle sources, with a specific reconstruction method developed for each. Energy spectra and other relevant variables were extracted from IAEA phase space and stored in the input description data file for both sources. The VSM was validated for three photon beams: Elekta Precise 6 MV/10 MV and a Varian TrueBeam 6 MV. Extensive calculations in water and comparisons between dose distributions of the VSM and IAEA phase space were performed to estimate the VSM precision. The Geant4 MC toolkit in multi-threaded mode (Geant4-[mt]) was used for fast dose calculations and optimized memory use. Four field configurations were chosen for dose calculation validation to test field size and symmetry effects, [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text], and [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] for squared fields, and [Formula: see text] [Formula: see text] for an asymmetric rectangular field. Good agreement in terms of [Formula: see text] formalism, for 3%/3 mm and 2%/3 mm criteria, for each evaluated radiation field and photon beam was obtained within a computation time of 60 h on a single WorkStation for a 3 mm voxel matrix. Analyzing the VSM's precision in high dose gradient regions, using the distance to agreement concept (DTA), showed also satisfactory results. In all investigated cases, the mean DTA was less than 1 mm in build-up and penumbra regions. In regards to calculation efficiency, the event processing speed is six times faster using Geant4-[mt] compared to sequential Geant4, when running the same simulation code for both. The developed VSM for 6 MV/10 MV beams widely used, is a general concept easy to adapt in order to reconstruct comparable beam qualities for various linac configurations, facilitating its integration for MC treatment planning purposes.


Subject(s)
Databases, Factual , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Algorithms , Computer Simulation , Humans , Monte Carlo Method , Normal Distribution , Particle Accelerators , Photons , Programming Languages , Reproducibility of Results , Software
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