Ion-beam radiotherapy is an advanced cancer treatment modality offering steep dose gradients and a high biological effectiveness. These gradients make the therapy vulnerable to patient-setup and anatomical changes between treatment fractions, which may go unnoticed. Charged fragments from nuclear interactions of the ion beam with the patient tissue may carry information about the treatment quality. Currently, the fragments escape the patient undetected. Inter-fractional in-vivo treatment monitoring based on these charged nuclear fragments could make ion-beam therapy safer and more efficient. We developed an ion-beam monitoring system based on 28 hybrid silicon pixel detectors (Timepix3) to measure the distribution of fragment origins in three dimensions. The system design choices as well as the ion-beam monitoring performance measurements are presented in this manuscript. A spatial resolution of 4mm along the beam axis was achieved for the measurement of individual fragment origins. Beam-range shifts of 1.5mm were identified in a clinically realistic treatment scenario with an anthropomorphic head phantom. The monitoring system is currently being used in a prospective clinical trial at the Heidelberg Ion Beam Therapy Centre for head-and-neck as well as central nervous system cancer patients.
- MeSH
- celková dávka radioterapie MeSH
- fantomy radiodiagnostické * MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- radioterapie těžkými ionty metody MeSH
- Check Tag
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
PURPOSE: Noninvasive methods to monitor carbon-ion beams in patients are desired to fully exploit the advantages of carbon-ion radiotherapy. Prompt secondary ions produced in nuclear fragmentations of carbon ions are of particular interest for monitoring purposes as they can escape the patient and thus be detected and tracked to measure the radiation field in the irradiated object. This study aims to evaluate the performance of secondary-ion tracking to detect, visualize, and localize an internal air cavity used to mimic inter-fractional changes in the patient anatomy at different depths along the beam axis. METHODS: In this work, a homogeneous head phantom was irradiated with a realistic carbon-ion treatment plan with a typical prescribed fraction dose of 3 Gy(RBE). Secondary ions were detected by a mini-tracker with an active area of 2 cm2 , based on the Timepix3 semiconductor pixel detector technology. The mini-tracker was placed 120 mm behind the center of the target at an angle of 30 degrees with respect to the beam axis. To assess the performance of the developed method, a 2-mm thick air cavity was inserted in the head phantom at several depths: in front of as well as at the entrance, in the middle, and at the distal end of the target volume. Different reconstruction methods of secondary-ion emission profile were studied using the FLUKA Monte Carlo simulation package. The perturbations in the emission profiles caused by the air cavity were analyzed to detect the presence of the air cavity and localize its position. RESULTS: The perturbations in the radiation field mimicked by the 2-mm thick cavity were found to be significant. A detection significance of at least three standard deviations in terms of spatial distribution of the measured tracks was found for all investigated cavity depths, while the highest significance (six standard deviations) was obtained when the cavity was located upstream of the tumor. For a tracker with an eight-fold sensitive area, the detection significance rose to at least nine standard deviations and up to 17 standard deviations, respectively. The cavity could be detected at all depths and its position measured within 6.5 ± 1.4 mm, which is sufficient for the targeted clinical performance of 10 mm. CONCLUSION: The presented systematic study concerning the detection and localization of small inter-fractional structure changes in a realistic clinical setting demonstrates that secondary ions carry a large amount of information on the internal structure of the irradiated object and are thus attractive to be further studied for noninvasive monitoring of carbon-ion treatments.
Radiotherapy with protons and carbon ions enables to deliver dose distributions of high conformation to the target. Treatment with helium ions has been suggested due to their physical and biological advantages. A reliable benchmarking of the employed physics models with experimental data is required for treatment planning. However, experimental data for helium interactions is limited, in part due to the complexity and large size of conventional experimental setups. We present a novel method for the investigation of helium interactions with matter using miniaturized instrumentation based on highly integrated pixel detectors. The versatile setup consisted of a monitoring detector in front of the PMMA phantom of varying thickness and a detector stack for investigation of outgoing particles. The ion type downstream from the phantom was determined by high-resolution pattern recognition analysis of the single particle signals in the pixelated detectors. The fractions of helium and hydrogen ions behind the used targets were determined. As expected for the stable helium nucleus, only a minor decrease of the primary ion fluence along the target depth was found. E.g. the detected fraction of hydrogen ions on axis of a 220MeV/u 4He beam was below 6% behind 24.5cm of PMMA. Monte-Carlo simulations using Geant4 reproduce the experimental data on helium attenuation and yield of helium fragments qualitatively, but significant deviations were found for some combinations of target thickness and beam energy. The presented method is promising to contribute to the reduction of the uncertainty of treatment planning for helium ion radiotherapy.
- MeSH
- design vybavení MeSH
- fantomy radiodiagnostické MeSH
- helium terapeutické užití MeSH
- ionty terapeutické užití MeSH
- metoda Monte Carlo MeSH
- miniaturizace * přístrojové vybavení MeSH
- plánování radioterapie pomocí počítače přístrojové vybavení metody MeSH
- počítačová simulace MeSH
- polymethylmethakrylát MeSH
- radiometrie přístrojové vybavení MeSH
- radioterapie těžkými ionty přístrojové vybavení metody MeSH
- vodík MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
BACKGROUND: We performed a survey using the modified EORTC Facility questionnaire (pFQ) to evaluate the human, technical and organizational resources of particle centers in Europe. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The modified pFQ consisted of 235 questions distributed in 11 sections accessible on line on an EORTC server. Fifteen centers from 8 countries completed the pFQ between May 2015 and December 2015. RESULTS: The average number of patients treated per year and per particle center was 221 (range, 40-557). The majority (66.7%) of centers had pencil beam or raster scanning capability. Four (27%) centers were dedicated to eye treatment only. An increase in the patients-health professional FTE ratio was observed for eye tumor only centers when compared to other centers. All centers treated routinely chordomas/chondrosarcomas, brain tumors and sarcomas but rarely breast cancer. The majority of centers treated pediatric cases with particles. Only a minority of the queried institutions treated non-static targets. CONCLUSIONS: As the number of particle centers coming online will increase, the experience with this treatment modality will rise in Europe. Children can currently be treated in these facilities in a majority of cases. The majority of these centers provide state of the art particle beam therapy.
- MeSH
- chondrosarkom radioterapie MeSH
- chordom radioterapie MeSH
- dítě MeSH
- elementární částice terapeutické užití MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- nádory kostí farmakoterapie MeSH
- nádory mozku radioterapie MeSH
- nádory oka radioterapie MeSH
- protonová terapie přístrojové vybavení metody statistika a číselné údaje MeSH
- protony MeSH
- průzkumy a dotazníky MeSH
- radioterapie těžkými ionty přístrojové vybavení metody statistika a číselné údaje MeSH
- uhlík chemie terapeutické užití MeSH
- Check Tag
- dítě MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- Geografické názvy
- Evropa MeSH