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A Fast 3D Range-Modulator Delivery Approach: Validation of the FLUKA Model on a Varian ProBeam System Including a Robustness Analysis.

Authors :
Simeonov, Yuri
Weber, Ulrich
Krieger, Miriam
Schuy, Christoph
Folkerts, Michael
Paquet, Gerard
Lansonneur, Pierre
Penchev, Petar
Zink, Klemens
Source :
Cancers. Oct2024, Vol. 16 Issue 20, p3498. 17p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: Ultra-high dose rate radiotherapy with particle beams such as proton and carbon is a major technical challenge. Fast beam delivery and the concentration of the Bragg peak to the tumor must be achieved in the order of milliseconds and can therefore only be realized with 3D range-modulators (3D RM). This work analyzed the robustness of the dose distribution, resulting from a 3D RM for a cube target volume. Firstly, a high-precision dose measurement was performed, and a very good agreement was found between the measured and Monte Carlo simulated dose distribution. Further simulations were conducted to determine how sensitively the resulting dose distribution responds to misalignments of the 3D RM. The results show that the 3D RM must be aligned with accuracy less than 1° to preserve the planned desired dose distribution. As the research and pre-clinical adoption of 3D RMs in particle therapy has become more widespread recently, these results are of high general utility. A 3D range-modulator (RM), optimized for a single energy and a specific target shape, is a promising and viable solution for the ultra-fast dose delivery in particle therapy. The aim of this work was to investigate the impact of potential beam and modulator misalignments on the dose distribution. Moreover, the FLUKA Monte Carlo model, capable of simulating 3D RMs, was adjusted and validated for the 250 MeV single-energy proton irradiation from a Varian ProBeam system. A 3D RM was designed for a cube target shape rotated 45° around two axes using a Varian-internal research version of the Eclipse treatment planning software, and the resulting dose distribution was simulated in a water phantom. Deviations from the ideal alignment were introduced, and the dose distributions from the modified simulations were compared to the original unmodified one. Finally, the FLUKA model and the workflow were validated with base-line data measurements and dose measurements of the manufactured modulator prototype at the HollandPTC facility in Delft. The adjusted FLUKA model, optimized particularly in the scope of a single-energy FLASH irradiation with a PMMA pre-absorber, demonstrated very good agreement with the measured dose distribution resulting from the 3D RM. Dose deviations resulting from modulator-beam axis misalignments depend on the specific 3D RM and its shape, pin aspect ratio, rotation angle, rotation point, etc. A minor modulator shift was found to be more relevant for the distal dose distribution than for the spread-out Bragg Peak (SOBP) homogeneity. On the other hand, a modulator tilt (rotation away from the beam axis) substantially affected not only the depth dose profile, transforming a flat SOBP into a broad, Gaussian-like distribution with increasing rotation angle, but also shifted the lateral dose distribution considerably. This work strives to increase awareness and highlight potential pitfalls as the 3D RM method progresses from a purely research concept to pre-clinical studies and human trials. Ensuring that gantry rotation and the combined weight of RM, PMMA, and aperture do not introduce alignment issues is critical. Given all the other range and positioning uncertainties, etc., not related to the modulator, the RM must be aligned with an accuracy below 1° in order to preserve a clinically acceptable total uncertainty budget. Careful consideration of critical parameters like the pin aspect ratio and possibly a novel robust modulator geometry optimization are potential additional strategies to mitigate the impact of positioning on the resulting dose. Finally, even the rotated cube 3D modulator with high aspect ratio pin structures (~80 mm height to 3 mm pin base width) was found to be relatively robust against a slight misalignment of 0.5° rotation or a 1.5 mm shift in one dimension perpendicular to the beam axis. Given a reliable positioning and QA concept, the additional uncertainties introduced by the 3D RM can be successfully managed adopting the concept into the clinical routine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
20
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180558613
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16203498