Radiotherapy calculations often involve complex geometries such as interfaces between materials of vastly differing atomic number, such as lung, bone and/or air interfaces. Monte Carlo methods have been used to calculate accurately the perturbation effects of the interfaces. However, these methods can be computationally expensive for routine clinical calculations. An alternative approach is to solve the Boltzmann equation deterministically. We present one such deterministic code, Attila. Further, we computed a brachytherapy example and an external beam benchmark to compare the results with data previously calculated by MCNPX and EGS4. Our data suggest that the presented deterministic code is as accurate as EGS4 and MCNPX for the transport geometries examined in this study.
Purpose-To investigate the potential of a novel deterministic solver, Attila, for external photon beam radiotherapy dose calculations.Methods and Materials-Two hypothetical cases for prostate and head and neck cancer photon beam treatment plans were calculated using Attila and EGSnrc Monte Carlo simulations. Open beams were modeled as isotropic photon point sources collimated to specified field sizes (100 cm SSD). The sources had a realistic energy spectrum calculated by Monte Carlo for a Varian Clinac 2100 operated in a 6MV photon mode. The Attila computational grids consisted of 106,000 elements, or 424,000 spatial degrees of freedom, for the prostate case, and 123,000 tetrahedral elements, or 492,000 spatial degrees of freedom, for the head and neck cases. Publisher's Disclaimer: This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final citable form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. Conclusions-The methods in Attila have the potential to be the basis for an efficient dose engine for patient specific treatment planning, providing accuracy similar to that obtained by Monte Carlo.
NIH Public Access
MammoSite is a high-dose rate brachytherapy procedure for partial breast irradiation, which uses a balloon filled with radiopaque iodine-based contrast solution and catheter for insertion of 192Ir high-dose-rate source. The radiopaque material helps visualizing the balloon contour, catheter, and source position within the balloon, which is essential for computerized tomography-based treatment planning and for daily QA using x-ray radiographs. Because of the high content of iodine in contrast media, increased absorption and attenuation of photons may take place within the balloon, which would affect the resultant dose rates outside the balloon. The impact of the concentration of the radiopaque solution on the physical dosimetry of this brachytherapy procedure is investigated in this study using MCNPX (version 2.4) Monte Carlo simulation. Calculations were based on a 30 cm diameter water sphere phantom. The source geometry was that of the Nucletron microSelectron HDR v2 192Ir source. Concentration of the iodine-based radiopaque solution was varied from 5% to 25% by volume, a range recommended by the balloon's manufacturer. Balloon diameters of 4, 5, and 6 cm were simulated. Dose rate per unit air-kerma strength was calculated in 1 mm scoring bin steps. The dose rate reduction at the typical prescription line of 1 cm away from the balloon surface ranged from - 0.8% for the smallest balloon diameter and contrast concentration to a maximum of - 5.7% for the largest balloon diameter and contrast concentration, relative to a water-filled balloon. Limiting the contrast concentration to 10% would insure less than 3% reduction in the prescription dose, regardless of balloon diameter.
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