SDDRO-joint: simultaneous dose and dose rate optimization with the joint use of transmission beams and Bragg peaks for FLASH proton therapy

Cancer radiotherapy (RT) with the irradiation at ultra-high dose rates, namely FLASH-RT, can substantially reduce radiation-induced normal tissue toxicities while maintaining tumor response. Currently, clinical FLASH-RT on deep-seated tumors can only be performed with proton beams. One way to achiev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics in medicine & biology 2021-06, Vol.66 (12), p.125011, Article 125011
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Yuting, Lin, Bowen, Fu, Shujun, Folkerts, Michael M, Abel, Eric, Bradley, Jeffrey, Gao, Hao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cancer radiotherapy (RT) with the irradiation at ultra-high dose rates, namely FLASH-RT, can substantially reduce radiation-induced normal tissue toxicities while maintaining tumor response. Currently, clinical FLASH-RT on deep-seated tumors can only be performed with proton beams. One way to achieve ultra-high dose rates at depth is through the use of high-energy transmission beams (TB), where the Bragg peaks (BP) fall outside the body. However, planning with TB alone does not fully leverage the degrees of freedom for dose shaping as traditional intensity modulated proton therapy (IMPT) which uses the BP of multi-energy proton beams at the tumor target. This work will develop a simultaneous dose and dose rate optimization (SDDRO) method with the joint use of TB and BP, namely SDDRO-Joint. Specifically, BP are placed inside tumor targets to improve the target dose conformality and sparse the normal-tissue dose, while TB primarily cover the tumor boundary to achieve ultra-high dose rate coverage of organs-at-risk (OAR) close to tumor targets. The sparing of OAR and other normal tissues via SDDRO-Joint is jointly by TB and BP, i.e. the FLASH sparing by TB and the dose sparing by BP. The results suggest that the addition of BP substantially increased the target dose conformality for SDDRO. Noticeably SDDRO-Joint also provided slightly higher conformal index values than the conventional IMPT method with BP alone.
ISSN:0031-9155
1361-6560
1361-6560
DOI:10.1088/1361-6560/ac02d8