研究目的
To investigate the effectiveness of a thin multi-leaf collimator for energy layer specific collimation in proton pencil beam scanning, combined with grid and contour scanning methods, to improve penumbra and reduce dose to normal tissue in patient geometries.
研究成果
Combining contour scanning with a thin multi-leaf collimator for energy-specific collimation reduces normal tissue dose (V30) by up to 8.0% and mean brainstem dose by up to 3.3% without compromising target dose homogeneity, demonstrating clinical benefits in PBS proton therapy.
研究不足
The analytical model may not fully represent the real multi-leaf collimator shape, leading to dose inaccuracies. The study is limited to specific patient cases and does not include range shifters or robustness evaluations for uncertainties.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The study employs an analytical model for collimated pencil beams based on treatment planning system data, optimized using an independent version of the clinical optimizer, and validated with Monte Carlo simulations using TOPAS.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Four patients with brain and skullbase treatments were selected, with CT data used for dose calculations.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
A thin tungsten multi-leaf collimator (4 cm thickness,
4:5 cm leaf width), treatment planning system, and TOPAS Monte Carlo toolkit. Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Pencil beam placements (grid and contour scanning) were defined, collimator leaf positions set per energy layer, plans optimized analytically, and recalculated with Monte Carlo. Dose metrics (V30, mean dose to brainstem) were analyzed.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Dose volume histograms, V30 reduction percentages, and equivalent uniform dose calculations were performed to compare scenarios.
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