Dose compensation based on biological effectiveness due to interruption time for photon radiation therapy

British Journal of Radiology Volume 93 Issue 1111 Page 20200125- published_at 2020-07
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Title ( eng )
Dose compensation based on biological effectiveness due to interruption time for photon radiation therapy
Creator
Nakano Hisashi
Source Title
British Journal of Radiology
Volume 93
Issue 1111
Start Page 20200125
Abstract
Objective:To evaluate the biological effectiveness of dose associated with interruption time; and propose the dose compensation method based on biological effectiveness when an interruption occurs during photon radiation therapy.
Methods:The lineal energy distribution for human salivary gland tumor was calculated by Monte Carlo simulation using a photon beam. The biological dose (Dbio) was estimated using the microdosimetric kinetic model. The dose compensating factor with the physical dose for the difference of the Dbio with and without interruption (Δ) was derived. The interruption time (τ) was varied to 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4, 0.5, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 75, and 120 min. The dose per fraction and dose rate varied from 2 to 8 Gy and 0.1 to 24 Gy/min, respectively.
Results:The maximum Δ with 1 Gy/min occurred when the interruption occurred at half the dose. The Δ with 1 Gy/min at half of the dose was over 3% for τ >= 20 min for 2 Gy, τ = 10 min for 5 Gy, and τ = 10 min for 8 Gy. The maximum difference of the Δ due to the dose rate was within 3% for 2 and 5 Gy, and achieving values of 4.0% for 8 Gy. The dose compensating factor was larger with a high dose per fraction and high-dose rate beams.
Conclusion:A loss of biological effectiveness occurs due to interruption. Our proposal method could correct for the unexpected decrease of the biological effectiveness caused by interruption time.
Advances in knowledge:For photon radiotherapy, the interruption causes the sublethal damage repair. The current study proposed the dose compensation method for the decrease of the biological effect by the interruption.
Language
eng
Resource Type journal article
Publisher
British Institute of Radiology
Date of Issued 2020-07
Rights
This is not the published version. Please cite only the published version. この論文は出版社版ではありません。引用の際には出版社版をご確認、ご利用ください。
Publish Type Author’s Original
Access Rights open access
Source Identifier
[ISSN] 0007-1285
[ISSN] 1748-880X
[DOI] 10.1259/bjr.20200125
[PMID] 32356450
[DOI] https://doi.org/10.1259/bjr.20200125
Remark Post-print version/PDF may be used in an institutional repository after an embargo period of 12 months.