核碎裂和辐照情景对H、He、C、O和Ne离子的剂量平均LET、RBE的影响及其关系

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Medical physics Pub Date : 2025-03-18 DOI:10.1002/mp.17755
Alessio Parisi, Keith M. Furutani, Chris J. Beltran
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在体外加速离子放射治疗中,弹丸和靶标破碎是影响线性能量传递(LET)和相对生物效应(RBE)计算的核现象。这两个量之间的相关性通常在放射生物学实验中建立,以解释结果并开发和校准RBE模型。目的:本研究系统地评估了二次碎片和辐照情景对临床相关离子束照射下剂量平均LET、RBE的影响及其相关性。方法:利用蒙特卡罗代码PHITS模拟了57 600个微剂量线性能量谱和相应的LET分布,包括水影中1H、4He、12C、16O和20Ne离子的轨迹段计算、原始和扩展布拉格峰。分析LET分布以计算剂量平均LET,包括或排除与主光束不同的元素的二次离子的贡献。同样,将线性能量分布与佛罗里达州梅奥诊所的微剂量动力学模型结合起来计算两种理论细胞系(α/β = 2和6 MV x射线下10 Gy)的RBE。通过分析水影内的模拟结果,建立了RBE与剂量平均LET之间的相关性,并将其与轨迹段计算的相应趋势进行了比较。结果:排除二次碎片对剂量平均LET和RBE有显著影响,特别是在质子束入口区域和靠近重离子远端边缘的区域。RBE和剂量平均LET之间的相关性不是普遍存在的,而是高度依赖于辐照情景。仅对于质子束,氢离子的剂量平均LET可作为RBE的实用一阶描述符。轨道段模拟通常用于RBE模型的校准和基准测试,它为低能光束提供了合理的近似,但未能完全捕获多能辐射场的复杂性。结论:即使在质子束中,次级碎片也能显著影响剂量平均LET和RBE。剂量平均LET,包括或不包括次级片段的贡献,通常无法充分捕获不同情景下的RBE变化。一个更全面的方法,考虑到微剂量分布,是必要的,以准确地描述离子治疗中的RBE变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of nuclear fragmentation and irradiation scenarios on the dose-averaged LET, the RBE, and their relationship for H, He, C, O, and Ne ions

Background

Projectile and target fragmentation are nuclear phenomena that can influence the computation of the linear energy transfer (LET) and the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) in external radiotherapy with accelerated ions. Correlations between these two quantities are routinely established during radiobiological experiments to interpret the results and to develop and calibrate RBE models.

Purpose

This study systematically evaluates the impact of secondary fragments and irradiation scenarios on the dose-averaged LET, the RBE, and their correlation in the case of exposures to clinically relevant ion beams.

Methods

57 600 microdosimetric lineal energy spectra and corresponding LET distributions were simulated with the Monte Carlo code PHITS across different scenarios, including track segment calculations, pristine, and spread-out Bragg peaks of 1H, 4He, 12C, 16O, and 20Ne ions within water phantoms. The LET distributions were analyzed to calculate the dose-average LET, both including or excluding the contribution of secondary ions of an element different from the primary beam. Similarly, the lineal energy distributions were processed in conjunction with the Mayo Clinic Florida microdosimetric kinetic model to compute the RBE for two theoretical cell lines (α/β = 2 and 10 Gy in the case of 6 MV x-rays). Correlations between the RBE and dose-averaged LET were established by analyzing the simulation results within water phantoms and then compared to the corresponding trends from the track segment calculations.

Results

Excluding secondary fragments had a pronounced impact on the dose-averaged LET and the RBE, particularly in the entrance regions of proton beams and close to the distal edge of heavier ions. The correlations between the RBE and the dose-averaged LET were not universal, but highly dependent on the irradiation scenario. For proton beams only, the dose-averaged LET of hydrogen ions served as a practical first-order descriptor of the RBE. Track segment simulations, commonly used for calibrating and benchmarking RBE models, provided a reasonable approximation for low-energy beams but failed to fully capture the complexity of polyenergetic radiation fields.

Conclusions

Secondary fragments can substantially affect the dose-averaged LET and the RBE, even in proton beams. The dose-averaged LET, including or not the contributions from secondary fragments, was generally unable to adequately capture RBE variations across different scenarios. A more comprehensive approach, considering microdosimetric distributions, is necessary to accurately describe RBE variations in ion therapy.

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来源期刊
Medical physics
Medical physics 医学-核医学
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
15.80%
发文量
660
审稿时长
1.7 months
期刊介绍: Medical Physics publishes original, high impact physics, imaging science, and engineering research that advances patient diagnosis and therapy through contributions in 1) Basic science developments with high potential for clinical translation 2) Clinical applications of cutting edge engineering and physics innovations 3) Broadly applicable and innovative clinical physics developments Medical Physics is a journal of global scope and reach. By publishing in Medical Physics your research will reach an international, multidisciplinary audience including practicing medical physicists as well as physics- and engineering based translational scientists. We work closely with authors of promising articles to improve their quality.
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