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Design and validation of a dosimetric comparison scheme tailored for ultra-high dose-rate electron beams to support multicenter FLASH preclinical studies

Authors :
Patrik Gonçalves Jorge
Stavros Melemenidis
Veljko Grilj
Thierry Buchillier
Rakesh Manjappa
Vignesh Viswanathan
Maude Gondré
Marie-Catherine Vozenin
Jean-François Germond
François Bochud
Raphaël Moeckli
Charles Limoli
Lawrie Skinner
Hyunsoo Joshua No
Yufan Fred Wu
Murat Surucu
Amy S. Yu
Brianna Lau
Jinghui Wang
Emil Schüler
Karl Bush
Edward E. Graves
Peter G. Maxim
Billy W. Loo
Claude Bailat
Source :
Radiotherapy and oncology, vol. 175, pp. 203-209
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We describe a multicenter cross validation of ultra-high dose rate (UHDR) (>= 40 Gy/s) irradiation in order to bring a dosimetric consensus in absorbed dose to water. UHDR refers to dose rates over 100-1000 times those of conventional clinical beams. UHDR irradiations have been a topic of intense investigation as they have been reported to induce the FLASH effect in which normal tissues exhibit reduced toxicity relative to conventional dose rates. The need to establish optimal beam parameters capable of achieving the in vivo FLASH effect has become paramount. It is therefore necessary to validate and replicate dosimetry across multiple sites conducting UHDR studies with distinct beam configurations and experimental set-ups. Using a custom cuboid phantom with a cylindrical cavity (5 mm diameter by 10.4 mm length) designed to contain three type of dosimeters (thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLDs), alanine pellets, and Gafchromic films), irradiations were conducted at expected doses of 7.5 to 16 Gy delivered at UHDR or conventional dose rates using various electron beams at the Radiation Oncology Departments of the CHUV in Lausanne, Switzerland and Stanford University, CA. Data obtained between replicate experiments for all dosimeters were in excellent agreement (±3%). In general, films and TLDs were in closer agreement with each other, while alanine provided the closest match between the expected and measured dose, with certain caveats related to absolute reference dose. In conclusion, successful cross-validation of different electron beams operating under different energies and configurations lays the foundation for establishing dosimetric consensus for UHDR irradiation studies, and, if widely implemented, decrease uncertainty between different sites investigating the mechanistic basis of the FLASH effect.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Radiotherapy and oncology, vol. 175, pp. 203-209
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17ebf4953ab861d9440faa6306433ea7