Ph.D. Thesis: Development of improved radiation therapy techniques using narrow scanned photon beams
by
Björn Andreassen(Stockholm University, Department of Physics)
→
Europe/Stockholm
KS, Cancer Centr. förel. sal. R8:00
KS, Cancer Centr. förel. sal. R8:00
Karolinska universitetssjukhuset
Description
The present thesis is focused on the development and application of narrow scanned high energy
photon beam for radiation therapy. The introduction of physically and biologically optimized
intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) requires a flexible and accurate dose delivery method
to maximize the treatment outcome. Narrow scanned photon beams is a fast option for IMRT since
it is not dependent on mechanically moving heavy collimator leafs and largely independent of the
complexity of the desired dose distribution. Scanned photon beams can be produced by scanning an
electron beam of low emittance, incident on a thin bremsstrahlung target of low atomic number. The
large fraction of high energy electrons that are transmitted through the target has to be removed by
a strong purging magnet. In the thesis a strong purging magnet, coupled with a magnetic scanning
magnet, is presented for an intrinsic electron energy of 50 - 75 MeV and a source to isocenter
distance of 75 cm. The available scan area at isocenter can be as large as 43 x 40 cm2 for an incident
electron energy of 50 MeV and 28 x 40 cm2 at 75 MeV.
By modifying the existing treatment head of the racetrack microtron MM50, it was possible to
experimentally produce relevant dose distributions with interesting properties from 50 MV scanned
narrow photon beams while deflecting the transmitted electrons onto a simplified electron stopper.
The deflection of the transmitted electrons was studied both experimentally and by the Monte Carlo
method. With high energy photons, treatment verification is possible through PET-CT imaging of
the positron annihilations induced by photonuclear reactions in the patient. Narrow scanned high
energy photon beams is the ideal beam quality since the activation efficiency and the effective
photon energy will be more uniform than the filtered photon beam from a full range bremsstrahlung
target.
The induced 11C activity 50 MV by scanned narrow photon beams was measured using PETCT
imaging and compared with Monte Carlo simulations. The combination of fast flexible dose
delivery with treatment verification using PET-CT imaging makes narrow high energy scanned
photon beams a very interesting treatment modality for biologically optimized adaptive radiation
therapy.