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Immobilization Considerations for Proton Radiation Therapy
Author(s) -
Andrew Wroe,
David A. Bush,
Jerry D. Slater
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
technology in cancer research and treatment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.754
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1533-0346
pISSN - 1533-0338
DOI - 10.7785/tcrt.2012.500376
Subject(s) - proton therapy , bragg peak , radiation therapy , proton , radiation treatment planning , medicine , nuclear medicine , medical physics , radiology , physics , nuclear physics
Proton therapy is rapidly developing as a mainstream modality for external beam radiation therapy. This development is largely due to the ability of protons to deposit much of their energy in a region known as the Bragg peak, minimizing the number of treatment fields and hence integral dose delivered to the patient. Immobilization in radiation therapy is a key component in the treatment process allowing for precise delivery of dose to the target volume and this is certainly true in proton therapy. In proton therapy immobilization needs to not only immobilize the patient, placing them in a stable and reproducible position for each treatment, but its impact on the depth dose distribution and range uncertainty must also be considered. The impact of immobilization on range is not a primary factor in X-ray radiation therapy, but it is a governing factor in proton therapy. This contribution describes the immobilization considerations in proton therapy which have been developed at Loma Linda over twenty plus years of clinical operation as a hospital based proton center.

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