Neutron scattered dose equivalent to a fetus from proton radiotherapy of the mother
Scattered neutron dose equivalent to a representative point for a fetus is evaluated in an anthropomorphic phantom of the mother undergoing proton radiotherapy. The effect on scattered neutron dose equivalent to the fetus of changing the incident proton beam energy, aperture size, beam location, and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medical physics (Lancaster) 2006-07, Vol.33 (7), p.2479-2490 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Scattered neutron dose equivalent to a representative point for a fetus is evaluated in an anthropomorphic phantom of the mother undergoing proton radiotherapy. The effect on scattered neutron dose equivalent to the fetus of changing the incident proton beam energy, aperture size, beam location, and air gap between the beam delivery snout and skin was studied for both a small field snout and a large field snout. Measurements of the fetus scattered neutron dose equivalent were made by placing a neutron bubble detector
10
cm
below the umbilicus of an anthropomorphic
Rando
®
phantom enhanced by a wax bolus to simulate a second trimester pregnancy. The neutron dose equivalent in milliSieverts (mSv) per proton treatment Gray increased with incident proton energy and decreased with aperture size, distance of the fetus representative point from the field edge, and increasing air gap. Neutron dose equivalent to the fetus varied from 0.025 to
0.450
mSv
per proton Gray for the small field snout and from 0.097 to
0.871
mSv
per proton Gray for the large field snout. There is likely to be no excess risk to the fetus of severe mental retardation for a typical proton treatment of 80 Gray to the mother since the scattered neutron dose to the fetus of
69.7
mSv
is well below the lower confidence limit for the threshold of
300
mGy
observed for the occurrence of severe mental retardation in prenatally exposed Japanese atomic bomb survivors. However, based on the linear no threshold hypothesis, and this same typical treatment for the mother, the excess risk to the fetus of radiation induced cancer death in the first 10 years of life is 17.4 per
10
000
children. |
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ISSN: | 0094-2405 2473-4209 |
DOI: | 10.1118/1.2207147 |