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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38971383

RESUMO

Although rare cancers, ocular tumors are a threat to vision, quality of life, and potentially life expectancy of a patient. Ocular proton therapy (OPT) is a powerful tool for successfully treating this disease. The Particle Therapy Co-Operative Ocular Group (PTCOG Ocular) formulated an Evidence and Expert-Based Executive Summary of Current Practices and Future Developments in OPT: Comparative dosimetric and clinical analysis with the different OPT systems is essential to set up planning guidelines, implement best practices, and establish benchmarks for eye preservation, vision, and quality of life measures. Contemporary prospective trials in select subsets of patients (e.g., tumors near the optic disc and/or macula) may allow for dosimetric and clinical analysis between different radiation modalities and beamline systems to evaluate differences in radiation delivery and penumbra, and resultant tumor control, normal tissue complication rates, and overall clinical cost-effectiveness. To date, the combination of multimodal imaging (fundus photography, ultrasound, etc.), ophthalmologist assessment, and clip surgery with radiation planning have been keys to successful treatment. Increased use of 3D imaging (CT/MRI) is anticipated although its spatial resolution might be a limiting factor (e.g., detection of flat diffuse tumor parts). Commercially produced ocular treatment planning systems are under development and their future use is expected to expand across OPT centers. Future continuity of OPT will depend on (i) maintaining and upgrading existing older dedicated low-energy facilities, (ii) maintaining shared, degraded beamlines at large proton therapy centers, and (iii) developing adapted gantry beams of sufficient quality to maintain the clinical benefits of sharp beam conformity. Option (i) potentially offers the sharpest beams, minimizing impact on healthy tissues, whilst (ii) and (iii) potentially offer the advantage of substantial long-term technical support and development as well as the introduction of new approaches. Significant patient throughputs and close cooperation between medical physics, ophthalmology, and radiotherapy, underpinned by mutual understanding, is crucial for a successful OPT service.

2.
Phys Med Biol ; 69(11)2024 May 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38657625

RESUMO

Objective.The superior dose conformity provided by proton therapy relative to conventional x-ray radiotherapy necessitates more rigorous quality assurance (QA) procedures to ensure optimal patient safety. Practically however, time-constraints prevent comprehensive measurements to be made of the proton range in water: a key parameter in ensuring accurate treatment delivery.Approach.A novel scintillator-based device for fast, accurate water-equivalent proton range QA measurements for ocular proton therapy is presented. Experiments were conducted using a compact detector prototype, the quality assurance range calorimeter (QuARC), at the Clatterbridge cancer centre (CCC) in Wirral, UK for the measurement of pristine and spread-out Bragg peaks (SOBPs). The QuARC uses a series of 14 optically-isolated 100 × 100 × 2.85 mm polystyrene scintillator sheets, read out by a series of photodiodes. The detector system is housed in a custom 3D-printed enclosure mounted directly to the nozzle and a numerical model was used to fit measured depth-light curves and correct for scintillator light quenching.Main results.Measurements of the pristine 60 MeV proton Bragg curve found the QuARC able to measure proton ranges accurate to 0.2 mm and reduced QA measurement times from several minutes down to a few seconds. A new framework of the quenching model was deployed to successfully fit depth-light curves of SOBPs with similar range accuracy.Significance.The speed, range accuracy and simplicity of the QuARC make the device a promising candidate for ocular proton range QA. Further work to investigate the performance of SOBP fitting at higher energies/greater depths is warranted.


Assuntos
Calorimetria , Calorimetria/instrumentação , Controle de Qualidade , Terapia com Prótons/instrumentação , Humanos
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