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A cell-based dosimetry model for radium-223 dichloride therapy using bone micro-CT images and GATE simulations.

Authors :
Pinto, Gabriella M
Bonifacio, Daniel A B
de Sá, Lidia V
Lima, Luis Felipe C
Vieira, Igor F
Lopes, Ricardo T
Source :
Physics in Medicine & Biology. 2/15/2020, Vol. 65 Issue 4, p1-16. 16p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Dosimetry at the cellular level has outperformed macrodosimetry in terms of agreement with toxicity effects in clinical studies. This fact has encouraged dosimetry studies aiming to quantify the absorbed doses needed to reach radiotoxicity at the cellular level and to inform recommendations on the administration of radium-223. The aim of this work is to qualitatively and quantitatively evaluate the absorbed doses of radium-223 and the interactions of the doses at the cellular level. The analysis was performed by Monte Carlo simulations in GATE using micro-CT image of a mouse. Two physics lists available in the GATE code were tested. The influence of single and multiple scattering models on the absorbed dose distribution and number of particle hits was also studied. In addition, the fuzzy c-means clustering method was used for data segmentation. The segmentation method was suitable for these analyses, particularly given that it was unsupervised. There was no significant difference in the estimated absorbed dose between the two proposed physics lists. The absorbed dose values were not significantly influenced by scattering, although single scattering resulted in twice as many interactions as multiple scattering. The absorbed dose histogram at the voxel level shows heterogeneous absorbed dose values within each shell, but the observations from the graph of the medians were comparable to those in the literature. The interaction histogram indicates 104 events, although some voxels had no interactions with alpha particles. However, the voxels did not show absorbed doses capable of deterministic effects in the deepest part of the bone marrow. The absorbed dose distribution in images of mouse trabecular bone was compatible with simple geometric models, with absorbed doses capable of deterministic effects near the bone surface. The interaction distributions need to be correlated with in vivo studies for better interpretation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00319155
Volume :
65
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Physics in Medicine & Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152287577
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/ab6b42