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1.
Phys Med Biol ; 69(14)2024 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38876112

ABSTRACT

Objective. To fabricate and validate a novel focused collimator designed to spare normal tissue in a murine hemithoracic irradiation model using 250 MeV protons delivered at ultra-high dose rates (UHDRs) for preclinical FLASH radiation therapy (FLASH-RT) studies.Approach. A brass collimator was developed to shape 250 MeV UHDR protons from our Varian ProBeam. Six 13 mm apertures, of equivalent size to kV x-ray fields historically used to perform hemithorax irradiations, were precisely machined to match beam divergence, allowing concurrent hemithoracic irradiation of six mice while sparing the contralateral lung and abdominal organs. The collimated field profiles were characterized by film dosimetry, and a radiation survey of neutron activation was performed to ensure the safety of staff positioning animals.Main results. The brass collimator produced 1.2 mm penumbrae radiation fields comparable to kV x-rays used in preclinical studies. The penumbrae in the six apertures are similar, with full-width half-maxima of 13.3 mm and 13.5 mm for the central and peripheral apertures, respectively. The collimator delivered a similar dose at an average rate of 52 Gy s-1for all apertures. While neutron activation produces a high (0.2 mSv h-1) initial ambient equivalent dose rate, a parallel work-flow in which imaging and setup are performed without the collimator ensures safety to staff.Significance. Scanned protons have the greatest potential for future translation of FLASH-RT in clinical treatments due to their ability to treat deep-seated tumors with high conformality. However, the Gaussian distribution of dose in proton spots produces wider lateral penumbrae compared to other modalities. This presents a challenge in small animal pre-clinical studies, where millimeter-scale penumbrae are required to precisely target the intended volume. Offering high-throughput irradiation of mice with sharp penumbrae, our novel collimator-based platform serves as an important benchmark for enabling large-scale, cost-effective radiobiological studies of the FLASH effect in murine models.


Subject(s)
Proton Therapy , Animals , Mice , Proton Therapy/instrumentation , Proton Therapy/methods , Organs at Risk/radiation effects , Radiotherapy Dosage
2.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; : e14435, 2024 Jun 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38922754

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: A higher minimum monitor unit (minMU) for pencil-beam scanning proton beams in intensity-modulated proton therapy is preferred for more efficient delivery. However, plan quality may be compromised when the minMU is too large. This study aimed to identify the optimal minMU (OminMU) to improve plan delivery efficiency while maintaining high plan quality. METHODS: We utilized clinical plans including six anatomic sites (brain, head and neck, breast, lung, abdomen, and prostate) from 23 patients previously treated with the Varian ProBeam system. The minMU of each plan was increased from the current clinical minMU of 1.1 to 3-24 MU depending on the daily prescribed dose (DPD). The dosimetric parameters of the plans were evaluated for consistency against a 1.1-minMU plan for target coverage as well as organs-at-risk dose sparing. DPD/minMU was defined as the ratio of DPD to minMU (cGy/MU) to find the OminMU by ensuring that dosimetric parameters did not differ by >1% compared to those of the 1.1-minMU plan. RESULTS: All plans up to 5 minMU showed no significant dose differences compared to the 1.1-minMU plan. Plan qualities remained acceptable when DPD/minMU ≥35 cGy/MU. This suggests that the 35 cGy/MU criterion can be used as the OminMU, which implies that 5 MU is the OminMU for a conventional fraction dose of 180 cGy. Treatment times were decreased by an average of 32% (max 56%, min 7%) and by an average of 1.6 min when the minMU was increased from 1.1 to OminMU. CONCLUSION: A clinical guideline for OminMU has been established. The minMU can be increased by 1 MU for every 35 cGy of DPD without compromising plan quality for most cases analyzed in this study. Significant treatment time reduction of up to 56% was observed when the suggested OminMU is used.

3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38936634

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Pencil-beam scanning proton therapy has been considered as a potential modality for the 3D form of spatially-fractionated-radiation-therapy called lattice therapy. However, few practical solutions have been introduced in the clinic. Existing limitations include degradation in plan quality and robustness when using single-field versus multifield lattice plans, respectively. We propose a practical and robust proton lattice (RPL) planning method using multifield and evaluate its dosimetric characteristics compared to clinically acceptable photon lattice plans. METHODS: Seven cases previously treated with photon lattice therapy were used to evaluate a novel RPL planning technique using two-orthogonal beams: a primary beam (PB) and a robust complementary beam (RCB) that deliver 67% and 33%, respectively, of the prescribed dose to vertices inside the gross-target-volume (GTV). Only RCB is robustly optimized for setup and range uncertainties. The number and volume of vertices, peak-to-valley dose ratios (PVDRs), and volume of low dose to GTV of proton and photon plans were compared. The RPL technique was then used in treatment of two patients and their dosimetric parameters are reported. RESULTS: The RPL strategy was able to achieve the clinical planning goals. Compared to previously-treated photon plans, the average number of vertices increased by 30%, average vertex volume by 49% (18.2±25.9cc vs. 12.2±14.5cc, P=0.21), and higher PVDR (10.5±4.8 vs. 2.5±0.9, P<0.005) was achieved. In addition, RPL plans show more conformal dose with less low-dose to GTV (V30%: 60.9±7.2% vs. 81.6±13.9% and V10%: 88.3±4.5% vs. 98.6±3.6% [P<0.01]). The RPL plan for two treated patients showed PVDRs of 4.61 and 14.85 with vertices-to-GTV ratios of 1.52% and 1.30%, respectively. CONCLUSION: A novel RPL planning strategy using a pair of orthogonal beams was developed and successfully translated to the clinic. The proposed method can generate better quality plans, a higher number of vertices, and higher PVDRs than currently used photon lattice plans.

4.
Med Phys ; 2024 May 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38820385

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Investigations on radiation-induced lung injury (RILI) have predominantly focused on local effects, primarily those associated with radiation damage to lung parenchyma. However, recent studies from our group and others have revealed that radiation-induced damage to branching serial structures such as airways and vessels may also have a substantial impact on post-radiotherapy (RT) lung function. Furthermore, recent results from multiple functional lung avoidance RT trials, although promising, have demonstrated only modest toxicity reduction, likely because they were primarily focused on dose avoidance to lung parenchyma. These observations emphasize the critical need for predictive dose-response models that effectively incorporate both local and distant RILI effects. PURPOSE: We develop and validate a predictive model for ventilation loss after lung RT. This model, referred to as P+A, integrates local (parenchyma [P]) and distant (central and peripheral airways [A]) radiation-induced damage, modeling partial (narrowing) and complete (collapse) obstruction of airways. METHODS: In an IRB-approved prospective study, pre-RT breath-hold CTs (BHCTs) and pre- and one-year post-RT 4DCTs were acquired from lung cancer patients treated with definitive RT. Up to 13 generations of airways were automatically segmented on the BHCTs using a research virtual bronchoscopy software. Ventilation maps derived from the 4DCT scans were utilized to quantify pre- and post-RT ventilation, serving, respectively, as input data and reference standard (RS) in model validation. To predict ventilation loss solely due to parenchymal damage (referred to as P model), we used a normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) model. Our model used this NTCP-based estimate and predicted additional loss due radiation-induced partial or complete occlusion of individual airways, applying fluid dynamics principles and a refined version of our previously developed airway radiosensitivity model. Predictions of post-RT ventilation were estimated in the sublobar volumes (SLVs) connected to the terminal airways. To validate the model, we conducted a k-fold cross-validation. Model parameters were optimized as the values that provided the lowest root mean square error (RMSE) between predicted post-RT ventilation and the RS for all SLVs in the training data. The performance of the P+A and the P models was evaluated by comparing their respective post-RT ventilation values with the RS predictions. Additional evaluation using various receiver operating characteristic (ROC) metrics was also performed. RESULTS: We extracted a dataset of 560 SLVs from four enrolled patients. Our results demonstrated that the P+A model consistently outperformed the P model, exhibiting RMSEs that were nearly half as low across all patients (13 ± 3 percentile for the P+A model vs. 24 ± 3 percentile for the P model on average). Notably, the P+A model aligned closely with the RS in ventilation loss distributions per lobe, particularly in regions exposed to doses ≥13.5 Gy. The ROC analysis further supported the superior performance of the P+A model compared to the P model in sensitivity (0.98 vs. 0.07), accuracy (0.87 vs. 0.25), and balanced predictions. CONCLUSIONS: These early findings indicate that airway damage is a crucial factor in RILI that should be included in dose-response modeling to enhance predictions of post-RT lung function.

5.
Adv Radiat Oncol ; 9(3): 101392, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38292885

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Breath-hold (BH) technique can mitigate target motion, minimize target margins, reduce normal tissue doses, and lower the effect of interplay effects with intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT). This study presents dosimetric comparisons between BH and nonbreath-hold (non-BH) IMPT plans and investigates the reproducibility of BH plans using frequent quality assurance (QA) computed tomography scans (CT). Methods and Materials: Data from 77 consecutive patients with liver (n = 32), mediastinal/lung (n = 21), nonliver upper abdomen (n = 20), and malignancies in the gastroesophageal junction (n = 4), that were treated with a BH spirometry system (SDX) were evaluated. All patients underwent both BH CT and 4-dimensional CT simulations. Clinically acceptable BH and non-BH plans were generated on each scan, and dose-volume histograms of the 2 plans were compared. Reproducibility of the BH plans for 30 consecutive patients was assessed using 1 to 3 QA CTs per patient and variations in dose-volume histograms for deformed target and organs at risk (OARs) volumes were compared with the initial CT plan. Results: Use of BH scans reduced initial and boost target volumes to 72% ± 20% and 70% ± 17% of non-BH volumes, respectively. Additionally, mean dose to liver, stomach, kidney, esophagus, heart, and lung V20 were each reduced to 71% to 79% with the BH technique. Similarly, small and large bowels, heart, and spinal cord maximum doses were each lowered to 68% to 84%. Analysis of 62 QA CT scans demonstrated that mean target and OAR doses using BH scans were reproducible to within 5% of their nominal plan values. Conclusions: The BH technique reduces the irradiated volume, leading to clinically significant reductions in OAR doses. By mitigating tumor motion, the BH technique leads to reproducible target coverage and OAR doses. Its use can reduce motion-related uncertainties that are normally associated with the treatment of thoracic and abdominal tumors and, therefore, optimize IMPT delivery.

6.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; 25(2): e14186, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37974385

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Noncoplanar plans (NCPs) are commonly used for proton treatment of bilateral head and neck (HN) malignancies. NCP requires additional verification setup imaging between beams to correct residual errors of robotic couch motion, which increases imaging dose and total treatment time. This study compared the quality and robustness of NCPs with those of coplanar plans (CPs). METHODS AND MATERIALS: Under an IRB-approved study, CPs were created retrospectively for 10 bilateral HN patients previously treated with NCPs maintaining identical beam geometry of the original plan but excluding couch rotations. Plan robustness to the inter-fractional variation (IV) of both plans was evaluated through the Dose Volume Histograms (DVH) of weekly quality assurance CT (QACT) sets (39 total). In addition, delivery efficiency for both plans was compared using total treatment time (TTT) and beam-on time (BOT). RESULTS: No significant differences in plan quality were observed in terms of clinical target volume (CTV) coverage (D95) or organ-at-risk (OAR) doses (p > 0.4 for all CTVs and OARs). No significant advantage of NCPs in the robustness to IV was found over CP, either. Changes in D95 of QA plans showed a linear correlation (slope = 1.006, R2  > 0.99) between NCP and CP for three CTV data points (CTV1, CTV2, and CTV3) in each QA plan (117 data points for 39 QA plans). NCPs showed significantly higher beam delivery time than CPs for TTT (539 ± 50 vs. 897 ± 142 s; p < 0.001); however, no significant differences were observed for BOT. CONCLUSION: NCPs are not more robust to IV than CPs when treating bilateral HN tumors with pencil-beam scanning proton beams. CPs showed plan quality and robustness similar to NCPs while reduced treatment time (∼6 min). This suggests that CPs may be a more efficient planning technique for bilateral HN cancer proton therapy.


Subject(s)
Head and Neck Neoplasms , Proton Therapy , Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated , Humans , Protons , Proton Therapy/methods , Retrospective Studies , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated/methods , Organs at Risk
7.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys ; 119(3): 737-749, 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38110104

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The highly heterogeneous dose delivery of spatially fractionated radiation therapy (SFRT) is a profound departure from standard radiation planning and reporting approaches. Early SFRT studies have shown excellent clinical outcomes. However, prospective multi-institutional clinical trials of SFRT are still lacking. This NRG Oncology/American Association of Physicists in Medicine working group consensus aimed to develop recommendations on dosimetric planning, delivery, and SFRT dose reporting to address this current obstacle toward the design of SFRT clinical trials. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Working groups consisting of radiation oncologists, radiobiologists, and medical physicists with expertise in SFRT were formed in NRG Oncology and the American Association of Physicists in Medicine to investigate the needs and barriers in SFRT clinical trials. RESULTS: Upon reviewing the SFRT technologies and methods, this group identified challenges in several areas, including the availability of SFRT, the lack of treatment planning system support for SFRT, the lack of guidance in the physics and dosimetry of SFRT, the approximated radiobiological modeling of SFRT, and the prescription and combination of SFRT with conventional radiation therapy. CONCLUSIONS: Recognizing these challenges, the group further recommended several areas of improvement for the application of SFRT in cancer treatment, including the creation of clinical practice guidance documents, the improvement of treatment planning system support, the generation of treatment planning and dosimetric index reporting templates, and the development of better radiobiological models through preclinical studies and through conducting multi-institution clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Clinical Trials as Topic , Dose Fractionation, Radiation , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/standards , Prospective Studies , Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Radiation Oncology/standards , Multicenter Studies as Topic , Radiobiology , Consensus
8.
Med Phys ; 51(2): 786-798, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38103260

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The first clinical trials to assess the feasibility of FLASH radiotherapy in humans have started (FAST-01, FAST-02) and more trials are foreseen. To increase comparability between trials it is important to assure treatment quality and therefore establish a standard for machine quality assurance (QA). Currently, the AAPM TG-224 report is considered as the standard on machine QA for proton therapy, however, it was not intended to be used for ultra-high dose rate (UHDR) proton beams, which have gained interest due to the observation of the FLASH effect. PURPOSE: The aim of this study is to find consensus on practical guidelines on machine QA for UHDR proton beams in transmission mode in terms of which QA is required, how they should be done, which detectors are suitable for UHDR machine QA, and what tolerance limits should be applied. METHODS: A risk assessment to determine the gaps in the current standard for machine QA was performed by an international group of medical physicists. Based on that, practical guidelines on how to perform machine QA for UHDR proton beams were proposed. RESULTS: The risk assessment clearly identified the need for additional guidance on temporal dosimetry, addressing dose rate (constancy), dose spillage, and scanning speed. In addition, several minor changes from AAPM TG-224 were identified; define required dose rate levels, the use of clinically relevant dose levels, and the use of adapted beam settings to minimize activation of detector and phantom materials or to avoid saturation effects of specific detectors. The final report was created based on discussions and consensus. CONCLUSIONS: Consensus was reached on what QA is required for UHDR scanning proton beams in transmission mode for isochronous cyclotron-based systems and how they should be performed. However, the group discussions also showed that there is a lack of high temporal resolution detectors and sufficient QA data to set appropriate limits for some of the proposed QA procedures.


Subject(s)
Proton Therapy , Humans , Proton Therapy/methods , Cyclotrons , Protons , Consensus , Radiometry , Radiotherapy Dosage
9.
Med Phys ; 2023 Dec 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38043083

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Proton linear energy transfer (LET) is associated with the relative biological effectiveness of radiation on tissues. Monte Carlo (MC) simulations have been known to be the preferred method to calculate LET. Detectors have also been built to measure LET, but they need to be calibrated with MC simulations. PURPOSE: To propose and test a MC-free method for determining LET from the measured integral depth dose (LFI) of the protons of interest. METHOD AND MATERIALS: LFI consists of three steps: (1) IDD measurements, (2) extraction of energy spectrum (ES) from the IDD, and (3) LET determination from the extracted ES and the stopping power of each energy. To validate the accuracy of the extraction of ES, we use Gaussian ES to synthesize IDD, extract ES from the synthesized IDD, and then compare the original (ground truth) and extracted ES. LETs calculated from the original and extracted ES are also compared. To obtain the LET of protons of interest, we measure IDDs by a large-area plane-parallel ionization chamber in water. Finally, TOPAS MC is employed to simulate IDDs, ES, and LETs. From the simulated IDD, the extracted ES and LET are compared with the simulations from TOPAS MC. RESULTS: From the synthesized IDDs, the LETs agreed excellently when the peak energies ≥10 and 1.25 MeV with depth resolutions 0.1 and 0.01 mm, respectively. For energy <1.25 MeV, even higher depth resolution than 0.01 mm is required. From the MC simulated IDDs, our track-averaged LET excellently agreed with MC simulation, but not the LETd . Our LETd was smaller than MC simulated LETd in the shallow region but larger in the distal Bragg peak region. CONCLUSION: LET can be accurately determined from the IDD. This method can be used in the clinic to commission or validate LETs from other measurement methods or a treatment planning system.

10.
J Radiosurg SBRT ; 9(1): 43-52, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38029012

ABSTRACT

Background: Proton beam therapy (PBT) is a non-surgical treatment that spares adjacent tissues compared to photon radiation and useful for Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA). We present a single center experience in HCC and iCCA treated with Pencil Beam Scanning (PBS) PBT. Methods: Forty-four consecutive patients (22 patients in each group) receiving PBT were included and reviewed. PBT was delivered with hypofractionated or stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) using PBS. Tumor size was approximated by clinical target volume (CTV). Outcomes were evaluated with Kaplan-Meier and liver toxicity was determined by MELD-Na and albumin-bilirubin (ALBI) grade. Results: Median follow up was 38.7 months, fourteen (35%) had multifocal disease and median CTV was 232.5cc. Four (9%) and 40 (91%) patients received SBRT and hypofractionated radiation, respectively. Two year overall survival was statistically higher for HCC (entire group: 68.9% months [95% CI: 61.3 - 76.3%]; iCCA: 49.8% [95% CI: 38.5% - 61.1%]; HCC: 89.4% [95% CI: 82.3 - 96.5%]; P <0.005). There was no statistical difference in progression-free survival or freedom from local failure. Biologically Equivalent Dose (BED) was greater than or equal to 80.5Gy in 37 (84%) patients. All iCCA patients had stable or improved ALBI grade following treatment. ALBI grade was stable in 83% of HCC patients and average MELD-Na score remained stable. Tumor size, pretreatment liver function, and total radiation dose were not associated with liver toxicity. Conclusions: PBT for unresectable HCC and iCCA is safe and effective, even for large and multifocal tumors. Liver function was preserved even in those with baseline cirrhosis in this advanced population with large tumors.

11.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; 24(2): e13831, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36593751

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To assess treatment planning system (TPS) accuracy in estimating the stopping-power ratio (SPR) of immobilization devices commonly used in proton therapy and to evaluate the dosimetric effect of SPR estimation error for a set of clinical treatment plans. METHODS: Computed tomography scans of selected clinical immobilization devices were acquired. Then, the water-equivalent thickness (WET) and SPR values of these devices based on the scans were estimated in a commercial TPS. The reference SPR of each device was measured using a multilayer ion chamber (MLIC), and the differences between measured and TPS-estimated SPRs were calculated. These findings were utilized to calculate corrected dose distributions of 15 clinical proton plans for three treatment sites: extremity, abdomen, and head-and-neck. The original and corrected dose distributions were compared using a set of target and organs-at-risk (OARs) dose-volume histogram (DVH) parameters. RESULTS: On average, the TPS-estimated SPR was 19.5% lower (range, -35.1% to 0.2%) than the MLIC-measured SPR. Due to the relatively low density of most immobilization devices used, the WET error was typically <1 mm, but up to 2.2 mm in certain devices. Overriding the SPR of the immobilization devices to the measured values did not result in significant changes in the DVH metrics of targets and most OARs. However, some critical OARs showed noticeable changes of up to 6.7% in maximum dose. CONCLUSIONS: The TPS tends to underestimate the SPR of selected proton immobilization devices by an average of about 20%, but this does not induce major WET errors because of the low density of the devices. The dosimetric effect of this SPR error was negligible for most treatment sites, although the maximum dose of a few OARs exhibited noticeable variations.


Subject(s)
Proton Therapy , Humans , Proton Therapy/methods , Protons , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Radiometry
12.
Int J Part Ther ; 9(2): 31-39, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36060416

ABSTRACT

Purpose: To investigate whether volumetric-modulated proton arc therapy (VPAT) plans generate comparable doses to organs at risk (OARs) compared with interstitial high-dose-rate (iHDR) brachytherapy for patients with gynecologic cancer with disease extension to parametrial/pelvic side wall, who are not eligible for the aggressive procedure. Materials and Methods: VPAT delivers proton arc beams by modulated energies at the beam nozzle while maintaining the same incident energy to the gantry during the arc rotation. Plans of 10 patients previously treated with iHDR brachytherapy for high-risk clinical treatment volumes (HRCTV; 31.8-110.6 cm3; lateral dimensions, 4.2-5.6 cm) were selected and compared with VPAT plans. VPAT plans for each patient were designed using a 152- to 245-MeV range of energy-modulated proton beams. Results: HRCTV coverage of the VPAT plans was comparable to that of the iHDR plans, with V150% showing no statistical differences. On average, the V100% and V90% of VPAT plans were higher than those of the iHDR plans, 95.0% vs 91.9% (P = .02) and 98.6% vs 97.5% (P = .02), respectively. D100 was also 17% higher for the VPAT plans (P = .03). On average, the D2cm3 of bladder, rectum, and small bowels in the VPAT plans were considerably lower than those in iHDR plans (by 17.4%, 35.2%, and 65.6%, respectively; P < .05 for all OARs). Conclusion: VPAT-generated plans were dosimetrically superior to those with HDR brachytherapy with interstitial needles for locally advanced gynecologic cancer with parametrial/pelvic side wall disease extension. Dosimetrically, VPAT provides a noninvasive alternative to iHDR brachytherapy with a superior dosimetric profile.

13.
J Appl Clin Med Phys ; 23(8): e13699, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35856943

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Well-designed routine multileaf collimator (MLC) quality assurance (QA) is important to assure external-beam radiation treatment delivery accuracy. This study evaluates the clinical necessity of a comprehensive weekly (C-Weekly) MLC QA program compared to the American Association of Physics in Medicinerecommended weekly picket fence test (PF-Weekly), based on our seven-year experience with weekly MLC QA. METHODS: The C-Weekly MLC QA program used in this study includes 5 tests to analyze: (1) absolute MLC leaf position; (2) interdigitation MLC leaf position; (3) picket fence MLC leaf positions at static gantry angle; (4) minimum leaf-gap setting; and (5) volumetric-modulated arc therapy delivery. A total of 20,226 QA images from 16,855 tests (3,371 tests × 5) for 11 linacs at 5 photon clinical sites from May 2014 to June 2021 were analyzed. Failure mode and effects analysis was performed with 5 failure modes related to the 5 tests. For each failure mode, a risk probability number (RPN) was calculated for a C-Weekly and a PF-Weekly MLC QA program. The probability of occurrence was evaluated from statistical analyses of the C-Weekly MLC QA. RESULTS: The total number of failures for these 16,855 tests was 143 (0.9%): 39 (27.3%) for absolute MLC leaf position, 13 (9.1%) for interdigitation position, 9 (6.3%) for static gantry picket fence, 2 (1.4%) for minimum leaf-gap setting, and 80 (55.9%) for VMAT delivery. RPN scores for PF-Weekly MLC QA ranged from 60 to 192 and from 48 to 96 for C-Weekly MLC QA. CONCLUSION: RPNs for the 5 failure modes of MLC QA tests were quantitatively determined and analyzed. A comprehensive weekly MLC QA is imperative to lower the RPNs of the 5 failure modes to the desired level (<125); those from the PF-Weekly MLC QA program were found to be higher (>125). This supports the clinical necessity for comprehensive weekly MLC QA.


Subject(s)
Particle Accelerators , Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated , Electrical Equipment and Supplies , Humans , Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated/methods
14.
Med Phys ; 49(7): 4682-4692, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35462420

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Although flash radiation therapy (FLASH-RT) is a promising novel technique that has the potential to achieve a better therapeutic ratio between tumor control and normal tissue complications, the ultrahigh pulsed dose rates (UHPDR) mean that experimental dosimetry is very challenging. There is a need for real-time dosimeters in the development and implementation of FLASH-RT. In this work, we characterize a novel plastic scintillator capable of temporal resolution short enough (2.5 ms) to resolve individual pulses. METHODS: We characterized a novel plastic dosimeter for use in a linac converter to deliver 16-MeV electrons at 100-Gy/s UHPDR average dose rates. The linearity and reproducibility were established by comparing relative measurements with a pinpoint ionization chamber placed at 10-cm water-equivalent depth where the electrometer is not saturated by the high dose per pulse. The accuracy was established by comparing the plastic scintillator dose measurements with EBT-XD Gafchromic radiochromic films, the current reference dosimeter for UHPDR. Finally, the plastic scintillator was compared against EBT-XD films for online dosimetry of two in vitro experiments performed at UHPDR. RESULTS: Relative ion chamber measurements were linear with plastic scintillator response within ≤1% over 4-20 Gy and pulse frequencies (18-180 Hz). When characterized under reference conditions with NIST-traceability, the plastic scintillator maintained its dose response under UHPDR conditions and agreed with EBT-XD film dose measurements within 4% under reference conditions and 6% for experimental online dosimetry. CONCLUSION: The plastic scintillator shows a linear and reproducible response and is able to accurately measure the radiation absorbed dose delivered by 16-MeV electrons at UHPDR. The dose is measured accurately in real time with a greater level of precision than that achieved with a radiochromic film.


Subject(s)
Plastics , Radiometry , Electrons , Film Dosimetry/methods , Radiation Dosage , Reproducibility of Results
15.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys ; 113(2): 456-468, 2022 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35279324

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Functional lung avoidance (FLA) radiation therapy (RT) aims to minimize post-RT pulmonary toxicity by preferentially avoiding dose to high-functioning lung (HFL) regions. A common limitation is that FLA approaches do not consider the conducting architecture for gas exchange. We previously proposed the functionally weighted airway sparing (FWAS) method to spare airways connected to HFL regions, showing that it is possible to substantially reduce risk of radiation-induced airway injury. Here, we compare the performance of FLA and FWAS and propose a novel method combining both approaches. METHODS: We used breath-hold computed tomography (BHCT) and simulation 4-dimensional computed tomography (4DCT) from 12 lung stereotactic ablative radiation therapy patients. Four planning strategies were examined: (1) Conventional: no sparing other than clinical dose-volume constraints; (2) FLA: using a 4DCT-based ventilation map to delineate the HFL, plans were optimized to reduce mean dose and V13.50 in HFL; (3) FWAS: we autosegemented 11 to 13 generations of individual airways from each patient's BHCT and assigned priorities based on the relative contribution of each airway to total ventilation. We used these priorities in the optimization along with airway dose constraints, estimated as a function of airway diameter and 5% probability of collapse; and (4) FLA + FWAS: we combined information from the 2 strategies. We prioritized clinical dose constraints for organs at risk and planning target volume in all plans. We performed the evaluation in terms of ventilation preservation accounting for radiation-induced damage to both lung parenchyma and airways. RESULTS: We observed average ventilation preservation for FLA, FWAS, and FLA + FWAS as 3%, 8.5%, and 14.5% higher, respectively, than for Conventional plans for patients with ventilation preservation in Conventional plans <90%. Generalized estimated equations showed that all improvements were statistically significant (P ≤ .036). We observed no clinically relevant improvements in outcomes of the sparing techniques in patients with ventilation preservation in Conventional plans ≥90%. CONCLUSIONS: These initial results suggest that it is crucial to consider the parallel and the serial nature of the lung to improve post-radiation therapy lung function and, consequently, quality of life for patients.


Subject(s)
Lung Neoplasms , Radiation Injuries , Radiosurgery , Four-Dimensional Computed Tomography/methods , Humans , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Lung Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Lung Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Quality of Life , Radiation Injuries/prevention & control , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods
16.
Int J Radiat Biol ; 97(12): 1675-1686, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34495790

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Chordoma is a locally aggressive tumor that most commonly affects the base of the skull/clivus, cervical, and sacral spine. Conventional radiotherapy (RT), cannot be safely increased further to improve disease control due to the risk of toxicity to the surrounding critical structures. Tumor-targeted hyperthermia (HT) combined with Proton Beam Radiation Therapy (PBRT) is known to act as a potent radiosensitizer in cancer control. In this study, we investigated whether PBRT efficacy for chordoma can be enhanced in combination with HT as a radiosensitizer. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Human chordoma cell lines, U-CH2 and Mug-chor1 were treated in vitro with HT followed by PBRT with variable doses. The colony-forming assay was performed, and dose-response was characterized by linear-quadratic model fits. HSP-70 and Brachyury (TBXT) biomarkers for chordoma aggression levels were quantified by western blot analysis. Gene microarray analysis was performed by U133 Arrays. Pathway Analysis was also performed using IPA bioinformatic software. RESULTS: Our findings in both U-CH2 and Mug-Chor1 cell lines demonstrate that hyperthermia followed by PBRT has an enhanced cell killing effect when compared with PBRT-alone (p < .01). Western blot analysis showed HT decreased the expression of Brachyury protein (p < .05), which is considered a biomarker for chordoma tumor aggression. HT with PBRT also exhibited an RT-dose-dependent decrease of Brachyury expression (p < .05). We also observed enhanced HSP-70 expression due to HT, RT, and HT + RT combined in both cell lines. Interestingly, genomic data showed 344 genes expressed by the treatment of HT + RT compared to HT (68 genes) or RT (112 genes) as individual treatment. We also identified activation of death receptor and apoptotic pathway in HT + RT treated cells. CONCLUSION: We found that Hyperthermia (HT) combined with Proton Beam Radiation (PBRT) could significantly increase chordoma cell death by activating the death receptor pathway and apoptosis which has the promise to treat metastatic chordoma.


Subject(s)
Chordoma , Hyperthermia, Induced , Proton Therapy , Radiation-Sensitizing Agents , Apoptosis , Chordoma/radiotherapy , Humans , Protons , Receptors, Death Domain
17.
Med Phys ; 48(9): 5396-5405, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34287938

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Due to their finite range, electrons are typically ignored when calculating shielding requirements in megavoltage energy linear accelerator vaults. However, the assumption that 16 MeV electrons need not be considered does not hold when operated at FLASH-RT dose rates (~200× clinical dose rate), where dose rate from bremsstrahlung photons is an order of magnitude higher than that from an 18 MV beam for which shielding was designed. We investigate the shielding and radiation protection impact of converting a Varian 21EX linac to FLASH-RT dose rates. METHODS: We performed a radiation survey in all occupied areas using a Fluke Biomedical Inovision 451P survey meter and a Wide Energy Neutron Detection Instrument (Wendi)-2 FHT 762 neutron detector. The dose rate from activated linac components following a 1.8-min FLASH-RT delivery was also measured. RESULTS: When operated at a gantry angle of 180° such as during biology experiments, the 16 MeV FLASH-RT electrons deliver ~10 µSv/h in the controlled areas and 780 µSv/h in the uncontrolled areas, which is above the 20 µSv in any 1-h USNRC limit. However, to exceed 20 µSv, the unit must be operated continuously for 92 s, which corresponds in this bunker and FLASH-RT beam to a 3180 Gy workload at isocenter, which would be unfeasible to deliver within that timeframe due to experimental logistics. While beam steering and dosimetry activities can require workloads of that magnitude, during these activities, the gantry is positioned at 0° and the dose rate in the uncontrolled area becomes undetectable. Likewise, neutron activation of linac components can reach 25 µSv/h near the isocenter following FLASH-RT delivery, but dissipates within minutes, and total doses within an hour are below 20 µSv. CONCLUSION: Bremsstrahlung photons created by a 16 MeV FLASH-RT electron beam resulted in consequential dose rates in controlled and uncontrolled areas, and from activated linac components in the vault. While our linac vault shielding proved sufficient, other investigators would be prudent to confirm the adequacy of their radiation safety program, particularly if operating in vaults designed for 6 MV.


Subject(s)
Radiation Protection , Electrons , Neutrons , Particle Accelerators , Radiation Dosage , Radiometry
18.
Radiother Oncol ; 164: 289-298, 2021 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34280402

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Following mastectomy, immediate breast reconstruction often involves the use of temporary tissue expanders (TEs). TEs contain metallic ports (MPs), which complicate proton pencil-beam scanning (PBS) planning. A technique was implemented for delivering PBS post-mastectomy radiation (PMRT) to patients with TEs and MPs. METHODS: A protocol utilizing a hybrid single- and multi-field optimization (SFO, MFO) technique was developed. Plans were robustly optimized using a Monte Carlo algorithm. A CTV_eval structure including chest wall (CW) and regional nodal (RNI) targets and excluding the TE was evaluated. Organ at risk (OAR) dosimetry and acute toxicities were analyzed. RESULTS: Twenty-nine women were treated with this technique. A 2-field SFO technique was used superior and inferior to the MP, with a 3 or 4-field MFO technique used at the level of the MP. Virtual blocks were utilized so that beams did not travel through the MP. A port-to-CW distance of 1 cm was required. Patients underwent daily image-guidance to ensure the port remained within a 0.5 cm internal planning volume (ITV). Median RT dose to CTV_eval was 50.4 Gy (45.0-50.4). Median 95% CTV_eval coverage was 99.5% (95-100). Optically stimulated luminescent dosimeter (OSLD) readings were available for 8 patients and correlated to the dose measurements in the treatment planning system (TPS); median OSLD ratio was 0.99 (range, 0.93-1.02). CONCLUSIONS: Delivering PMRT with PBS for women with metal-containing TEs using a hybrid SFO/MFO technique is feasible, reproducible, and achieves excellent dose distributions. Specialized planning and image-guidance techniques are required to safely utilize this treatment in the clinic.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms , Proton Therapy , Breast Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Breast Neoplasms/surgery , Female , Humans , Mastectomy , Protons , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted , Tissue Expansion Devices
19.
Radiother Oncol ; 160: 18-24, 2021 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33753157

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE(S): With reports of CNS toxicity in patients treated with proton therapy at doses lower than would be expected based on photon data, it has been proposed that heavy monitor unit (MU) weighting of pencil beam scanning (PBS) proton therapy spots may potentially increase the risk of toxicity. We evaluated the impact of maximum MU weighting per spot (maxMU/spot) restrictions on PBS plan quality, prior to implementing clinic-wide maxMU/spot restrictions. MATERIALS/METHODS: PBS plans of 11 patients, of which 3 plans included boosts, for a total of 14 PBS sample cases were included. Per sample case, a single dosimetrist created 4 test plans, gradually reducing the maxMU/spot in the plan. Test Plan 1, unrestricted in maxMU/spot, was the reference for all restricted plan comparisons (comparison sets 2 vs. 1; 3 vs. 1; and 4 vs. 1). The impact of MU/spot restrictions on plan quality metrics were analyzed with Wilcoxon signed rank test analyses. Treatment delivery time was modeled for a representative case. RESULTS: A total of 14 PBS sample cases, 7 (50%) single-field optimized, 7 (50%) multi-field optimized, 9 (64%) delivering > 3500 cGy, 9 (64%) with 3 beams, and 7 (50%) without a range shifter were included. There were no differences in plan quality metrics of target coverage (V95% and V100% prescription), conformality and gradient indices, hot spot volume (V105% prescription), and dose to normal brain (V10%/30%/50%/70%/90%/100% prescription) with reductions of allowable maxMU/spot across all comparison sets (p > 0.05). Max MU/spot restrictions did not increase treatment delivery time when analyzed for a representative case. CONCLUSION: MaxMU/spot restrictions within the thresholds evaluated in this study did not degrade overall plan quality metrics. Future studies should evaluate spot weighting with linear energy transfer/relative biologic effectiveness-informed planning to determine if spot weighting manipulation impacts clinical outcomes and mitigates toxicity.


Subject(s)
Proton Therapy , Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated , Skull Base Neoplasms , Central Nervous System , Humans , Linear Energy Transfer , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted , Skull Base Neoplasms/radiotherapy
20.
Int J Part Ther ; 7(2): 51-61, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33274257

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To investigate and quantify the potential benefits associated with the use of stopping-power-ratio (SPR) images created from dual-energy computed tomography (DECT) images for proton dose calculation in a clinical proton treatment planning system (TPS). MATERIALS AND METHODS: The DECT and single-energy computed tomography (SECT) scans obtained for 26 plastic tissue surrogate plugs were placed individually in a tissue-equivalent plastic phantom. Relative-electron density (ρe) and effective atomic number (Z eff) images were reconstructed from the DECT scans and used to create an SPR image set for each plug. Next, the SPR for each plug was measured in a clinical proton beam for comparison of the calculated values in the SPR images. The SPR images and SECTs were then imported into a clinical TPS, and treatment plans were developed consisting of a single field delivering a 10 × 10 × 10-cm3 spread-out Bragg peak to a clinical target volume that contained the plugs. To verify the accuracy of the TPS dose calculated from the SPR images and SECTs, treatment plans were delivered to the phantom containing each plug, and comparisons of point-dose measurements and 2-dimensional γ-analysis were performed. RESULTS: For all 26 plugs considered in this study, SPR values for each plug from the SPR images were within 2% agreement with measurements. Additionally, treatment plans developed with the SPR images agreed with the measured point dose to within 2%, whereas a 3% agreement was observed for SECT-based plans. γ-Index pass rates were > 90% for all SECT plans and > 97% for all SPR image-based plans. CONCLUSION: Treatment plans created in a TPS with SPR images obtained from DECT scans are accurate to within guidelines set for validation of clinical treatment plans at our center. The calculated doses from the SPR image-based treatment plans showed better agreement to measured doses than identical plans created with standard SECT scans.

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