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Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material

The aim of this work was to use TOPAS Monte Carlo simulations to model the effect of magnetic fields on dose distributions in brachytherapy lung treatments, under ideal and clinical conditions. Idealistic studies were modeled consisting of either a monoenergetic electron source of 432 keV, or a poly...

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Autores principales: Moreno-Barbosa, Fernando, de Celis-Alonso, Benito, Moreno-Barbosa, Eduardo, Hernández-López, Javier Miguel, Geoghegan, Theodore, Ramos-Méndez, José
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7546478/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33035214
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238704
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author Moreno-Barbosa, Fernando
de Celis-Alonso, Benito
Moreno-Barbosa, Eduardo
Hernández-López, Javier Miguel
Geoghegan, Theodore
Ramos-Méndez, José
author_facet Moreno-Barbosa, Fernando
de Celis-Alonso, Benito
Moreno-Barbosa, Eduardo
Hernández-López, Javier Miguel
Geoghegan, Theodore
Ramos-Méndez, José
author_sort Moreno-Barbosa, Fernando
collection PubMed
description The aim of this work was to use TOPAS Monte Carlo simulations to model the effect of magnetic fields on dose distributions in brachytherapy lung treatments, under ideal and clinical conditions. Idealistic studies were modeled consisting of either a monoenergetic electron source of 432 keV, or a polyenergetic electron source using the spectrum of secondary electrons produced by (192)Ir gamma-ray irradiation. The electron source was positioned in the center of a homogeneous, lung tissue phantom (ρ = 0.26 g/cm(3)). Conversely, the clinical study was simulated using the VariSource VS2000 (192)Ir source in a patient with a lung tumor. Three contoured volumes were considered: the tumor, the planning tumor volume (PTV), and the lung. In all studies, dose distributions were calculated in the presence or absence of a constant magnetic field of 3T. Also, TG-43 parameters were calculated for the VariSource and compared with published data from EGS-brachy (EGSnrc) and PENELOPE. The magnetic field affected the dose distributions in the idealistic studies. For the monoenergetic and poly-energetic studies, the radial distance of the 10% iso-dose line was reduced in the presence of the magnetic field by 64.9% and 24.6%, respectively. For the clinical study, the magnetic field caused differences of 10% on average in the patient dose distributions. Nevertheless, differences in dose-volume histograms were below 2%. Finally, for TG-43 parameters, the dose-rate constant from TOPAS differed by 0.09% ± 0.33% and 0.18% ± 0.33% with respect to EGS-brachy and PENELOPE, respectively. The geometry and anisotropy functions differed within 1.2% ± 1.1%, and within 0.0% ± 0.3%, respectively. The Lorentz forces inside a 3T magnetic resonance machine during (192)Ir brachytherapy treatment of the lung are not large enough to affect the tumor dose distributions significantly, as expected. Nevertheless, large local differences were found in the lung tissue. Applications of this effect are therefore limited by the fact that meaningful differences appeared only in regions containing air, which is not abundant inside the human.
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spelling pubmed-75464782020-10-19 Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material Moreno-Barbosa, Fernando de Celis-Alonso, Benito Moreno-Barbosa, Eduardo Hernández-López, Javier Miguel Geoghegan, Theodore Ramos-Méndez, José PLoS One Research Article The aim of this work was to use TOPAS Monte Carlo simulations to model the effect of magnetic fields on dose distributions in brachytherapy lung treatments, under ideal and clinical conditions. Idealistic studies were modeled consisting of either a monoenergetic electron source of 432 keV, or a polyenergetic electron source using the spectrum of secondary electrons produced by (192)Ir gamma-ray irradiation. The electron source was positioned in the center of a homogeneous, lung tissue phantom (ρ = 0.26 g/cm(3)). Conversely, the clinical study was simulated using the VariSource VS2000 (192)Ir source in a patient with a lung tumor. Three contoured volumes were considered: the tumor, the planning tumor volume (PTV), and the lung. In all studies, dose distributions were calculated in the presence or absence of a constant magnetic field of 3T. Also, TG-43 parameters were calculated for the VariSource and compared with published data from EGS-brachy (EGSnrc) and PENELOPE. The magnetic field affected the dose distributions in the idealistic studies. For the monoenergetic and poly-energetic studies, the radial distance of the 10% iso-dose line was reduced in the presence of the magnetic field by 64.9% and 24.6%, respectively. For the clinical study, the magnetic field caused differences of 10% on average in the patient dose distributions. Nevertheless, differences in dose-volume histograms were below 2%. Finally, for TG-43 parameters, the dose-rate constant from TOPAS differed by 0.09% ± 0.33% and 0.18% ± 0.33% with respect to EGS-brachy and PENELOPE, respectively. The geometry and anisotropy functions differed within 1.2% ± 1.1%, and within 0.0% ± 0.3%, respectively. The Lorentz forces inside a 3T magnetic resonance machine during (192)Ir brachytherapy treatment of the lung are not large enough to affect the tumor dose distributions significantly, as expected. Nevertheless, large local differences were found in the lung tissue. Applications of this effect are therefore limited by the fact that meaningful differences appeared only in regions containing air, which is not abundant inside the human. Public Library of Science 2020-10-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7546478/ /pubmed/33035214 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238704 Text en © 2020 Moreno-Barbosa 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
Moreno-Barbosa, Fernando
de Celis-Alonso, Benito
Moreno-Barbosa, Eduardo
Hernández-López, Javier Miguel
Geoghegan, Theodore
Ramos-Méndez, José
Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
title Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
title_full Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
title_fullStr Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
title_full_unstemmed Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
title_short Monte Carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
title_sort monte carlo simulation of the effect of magnetic fields on brachytherapy dose distributions in lung tissue material
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7546478/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33035214
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238704
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