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SU‐GG‐J‐05: Monte Carlo Investigation and Measurements of Distal Edge Degradation in Lung Phantoms with Therapeutic Proton Beams
Author(s) -
Perles L,
Sawakuchi G,
Mirkovic D,
Mohan R,
Titt U
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.3468228
Subject(s) - slab , monte carlo method , voxel , imaging phantom , beam (structure) , proton therapy , proton , materials science , physics , nuclear medicine , computational physics , optics , nuclear physics , mathematics , medicine , radiology , statistics , geophysics
Purpose : To validate a computational lung model and investigate distal edge degradation of therapeutic proton beams. Methods and Materials : We used the Monte Carlo code MCNPX to simulate therapeutic proton beams traversing a computational lung model. The computational lung model consisted of a slab constituted of randomly distributed voxels of air and plastic resin. Two computational lung slabs with different voxel resolutions were studied including: i) a high resolution slab (0.5 mm cubic voxels), which was assembled by randomly distributing the air and plastic resin voxels. This slab assembly reproduces the density gradient found in real lung‐equivalent plastic slabs (realistic lung‐equivalent slab); and ii) a low resolution slab (2 mm cubic voxels), which was generated by merging neighbor voxels and appropriately scaling the density and atomic fractions. This slab has a similar density distribution to a CT image (CT‐equivalent slab). All simulations were done using a validated MCNPX model of the passive scattering beam line from the Proton Therapy Center at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Our simulations were compared to measured depth doses of a therapeutic proton beam traversing a lung‐equivalent plastic slab. Results : The distal edge degradation predicted by the simulations of the realistic lung‐equivalent slab was in agreement with the experimental data. However simulations of proton doses from beams traversing the CT‐equivalent lung slab did not show any distal edge degradation. Conclusion : Our findings show that a computational lung phantom model with high resolution is needed to accurately predict the distal edge of proton dose distributions.

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