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Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size

Proton radiotherapy using minibeams of sub-millimeter dimensions reduces side effects in comparison to conventional proton therapy due to spatial fractionation. Since the proton minibeams widen with depth, the homogeneous irradiation of a tumor can be ensured by adjusting the beam distances to tumor...

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Autores principales: Sammer, Matthias, Zahnbrecher, Esther, Dobiasch, Sophie, Girst, Stefanie, Greubel, Christoph, Ilicic, Katarina, Reindl, Judith, Schwarz, Benjamin, Siebenwirth, Christian, Walsh, Dietrich W. M., Combs, Stephanie E., Dollinger, Günther, Schmid, Thomas E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6876838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31765436
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224873
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author Sammer, Matthias
Zahnbrecher, Esther
Dobiasch, Sophie
Girst, Stefanie
Greubel, Christoph
Ilicic, Katarina
Reindl, Judith
Schwarz, Benjamin
Siebenwirth, Christian
Walsh, Dietrich W. M.
Combs, Stephanie E.
Dollinger, Günther
Schmid, Thomas E.
author_facet Sammer, Matthias
Zahnbrecher, Esther
Dobiasch, Sophie
Girst, Stefanie
Greubel, Christoph
Ilicic, Katarina
Reindl, Judith
Schwarz, Benjamin
Siebenwirth, Christian
Walsh, Dietrich W. M.
Combs, Stephanie E.
Dollinger, Günther
Schmid, Thomas E.
author_sort Sammer, Matthias
collection PubMed
description Proton radiotherapy using minibeams of sub-millimeter dimensions reduces side effects in comparison to conventional proton therapy due to spatial fractionation. Since the proton minibeams widen with depth, the homogeneous irradiation of a tumor can be ensured by adjusting the beam distances to tumor size and depth to maintain tumor control as in conventional proton therapy. The inherent advantages of protons in comparison to photons like a limited range that prevents a dosage of distal tissues are maintained by proton minibeams and can even be exploited for interlacing from different beam directions. A first animal study was conducted to systematically investigate and quantify the tissue-sparing effects of proton pencil minibeams as a function of beam size and dose distributions, using beam widths between σ = 95, 199, 306, 411, 561 and 883 μm (standard deviation) at a defined center-to-center beam distance (ctc) of 1.8 mm. The average dose of 60 Gy was distributed in 4x4 minibeams using 20 MeV protons (LET ~ 2.7 keV/μm). The induced radiation toxicities were measured by visible skin reactions and ear swelling for 90 days after irradiation. The largest applied beam size to ctc ratio (σ/ctc = 0.49) is similar to a homogeneous irradiation and leads to a significant 3-fold ear thickness increase compared to the control group. Erythema and desquamation was also increased significantly 3–4 weeks after irradiation. With decreasing beam sizes and thus decreasing σ/ctc, the maximum skin reactions are strongly reduced until no ear swelling or other visible skin reactions should occur for σ/ctc < 0.032 (extrapolated from data). These results demonstrate that proton pencil minibeam radiotherapy has better tissue-sparing for smaller σ/ctc, corresponding to larger peak-to-valley dose ratios PVDR, with the best effect for σ/ctc < 0.032. However, even quite large σ/ctc (e.g. σ/ctc = 0.23 or 0.31, i.e. PVDR = 10 or 2.7) show less acute side effects than a homogeneous dose distribution. This suggests that proton minibeam therapy spares healthy tissue not only in the skin but even for dose distributions appearing in deeper layers close to the tumor enhancing its benefits for clinical proton therapy.
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spelling pubmed-68768382019-12-08 Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size Sammer, Matthias Zahnbrecher, Esther Dobiasch, Sophie Girst, Stefanie Greubel, Christoph Ilicic, Katarina Reindl, Judith Schwarz, Benjamin Siebenwirth, Christian Walsh, Dietrich W. M. Combs, Stephanie E. Dollinger, Günther Schmid, Thomas E. PLoS One Research Article Proton radiotherapy using minibeams of sub-millimeter dimensions reduces side effects in comparison to conventional proton therapy due to spatial fractionation. Since the proton minibeams widen with depth, the homogeneous irradiation of a tumor can be ensured by adjusting the beam distances to tumor size and depth to maintain tumor control as in conventional proton therapy. The inherent advantages of protons in comparison to photons like a limited range that prevents a dosage of distal tissues are maintained by proton minibeams and can even be exploited for interlacing from different beam directions. A first animal study was conducted to systematically investigate and quantify the tissue-sparing effects of proton pencil minibeams as a function of beam size and dose distributions, using beam widths between σ = 95, 199, 306, 411, 561 and 883 μm (standard deviation) at a defined center-to-center beam distance (ctc) of 1.8 mm. The average dose of 60 Gy was distributed in 4x4 minibeams using 20 MeV protons (LET ~ 2.7 keV/μm). The induced radiation toxicities were measured by visible skin reactions and ear swelling for 90 days after irradiation. The largest applied beam size to ctc ratio (σ/ctc = 0.49) is similar to a homogeneous irradiation and leads to a significant 3-fold ear thickness increase compared to the control group. Erythema and desquamation was also increased significantly 3–4 weeks after irradiation. With decreasing beam sizes and thus decreasing σ/ctc, the maximum skin reactions are strongly reduced until no ear swelling or other visible skin reactions should occur for σ/ctc < 0.032 (extrapolated from data). These results demonstrate that proton pencil minibeam radiotherapy has better tissue-sparing for smaller σ/ctc, corresponding to larger peak-to-valley dose ratios PVDR, with the best effect for σ/ctc < 0.032. However, even quite large σ/ctc (e.g. σ/ctc = 0.23 or 0.31, i.e. PVDR = 10 or 2.7) show less acute side effects than a homogeneous dose distribution. This suggests that proton minibeam therapy spares healthy tissue not only in the skin but even for dose distributions appearing in deeper layers close to the tumor enhancing its benefits for clinical proton therapy. Public Library of Science 2019-11-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6876838/ /pubmed/31765436 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224873 Text en © 2019 Sammer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sammer, Matthias
Zahnbrecher, Esther
Dobiasch, Sophie
Girst, Stefanie
Greubel, Christoph
Ilicic, Katarina
Reindl, Judith
Schwarz, Benjamin
Siebenwirth, Christian
Walsh, Dietrich W. M.
Combs, Stephanie E.
Dollinger, Günther
Schmid, Thomas E.
Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
title Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
title_full Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
title_fullStr Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
title_full_unstemmed Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
title_short Proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
title_sort proton pencil minibeam irradiation of an in-vivo mouse ear model spares healthy tissue dependent on beam size
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6876838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31765436
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224873
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