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2021

Thibodeau-Antonacci, Alana; Vuong, Té; Bekerat, Hamed; Liang, Liheng; Enger, Shirin A.

Development of a Dynamic Shielding Intensity-Modulated Brachytherapy Applicator for the Treatment of Rectal Cancer award

2021.

Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Intensity Modulation, Intracavitary brachytherapy, Monte Carlo

@award{Thibodeau-Antonacci2021b,
title = {Development of a Dynamic Shielding Intensity-Modulated Brachytherapy Applicator for the Treatment of Rectal Cancer},
author = {Alana Thibodeau-Antonacci and Té Vuong and Hamed Bekerat and Liheng Liang and Shirin A. Enger},
url = {https://curietherapi.es/},
year = {2021},
date = {2021-05-23},
urldate = {2021-05-23},
organization = {Curietherapies},
abstract = {Oral presentation given online at the annual congress of Curietherapies https://curietherapi.es/},
howpublished = {Annual Congress of Curietherapies},
keywords = {Intensity Modulation, Intracavitary brachytherapy, Monte Carlo},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {award}
}

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Oral presentation given online at the annual congress of Curietherapies https://curietherapi.es/

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Journal Articles

2020

Famulari, Gabriel; Alfieri, Joanne; Duclos, Marie; Vuong, Té; Enger, Shirin A.

Can intermediate-energy sources lead to elevated bone doses for prostate and head & neck high-dose-rate brachytherapy? Journal Article

In: Brachytherapy, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 255–263, 2020, ISSN: 1873-1449.

Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Bone and Bones, Brachytherapy, Cobalt Radioisotopes, Computer Simulation, Computer-Assisted, Dose calculation, Gadolinium, Humans, Intermediate-energy source, Iridium Radioisotopes, Male, Monte Carlo, Prostatic Neoplasms, Radiation Dosage, Radioisotopes, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Selenium Radioisotopes, Tissue composition, Tongue Neoplasms, Ytterbium

@article{famulari_can_2020,
title = {Can intermediate-energy sources lead to elevated bone doses for prostate and head & neck high-dose-rate brachytherapy?},
author = {Gabriel Famulari and Joanne Alfieri and Marie Duclos and Té Vuong and Shirin A. Enger},
doi = {10.1016/j.brachy.2019.12.004},
issn = {1873-1449},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-04-01},
journal = {Brachytherapy},
volume = {19},
number = {2},
pages = {255--263},
abstract = {PURPOSE: Several radionuclides with high (60Co, 75Se) and intermediate (169Yb, 153Gd) energies have been investigated as alternatives to 192Ir for high-dose-rate brachytherapy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of tissue heterogeneities for these five high- to intermediate-energy sources in prostate and head & neck brachytherapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Treatment plans were generated for a cohort of prostate (n = 10) and oral tongue (n = 10) patients. Dose calculations were performed using RapidBrachyMCTPS, an in-house Geant4-based Monte Carlo treatment planning system. Treatment plans were simulated using 60Co, 192Ir, 75Se, 169Yb, and 153Gd as the active core of the microSelectron v2 source. Two dose calculation scenarios were presented: (1) dose to water in water (Dw,w), and (2) dose to medium in medium (Dm,m).
RESULTS: Dw,w overestimates planning target volume coverage compared with Dm,m, regardless of photon energy. The average planning target volume D90 reduction was ∼1% for high-energy sources, whereas larger differences were observed for intermediate-energy sources (1%-2% for prostate and 4%-7% for oral tongue). Dose differences were not clinically relevant (textless5%) for soft tissues in general. Going from Dw,w to Dm,m, bone doses were increased two- to three-fold for 169Yb and four- to five-fold for 153Gd, whereas the ratio was close to ∼1 for high-energy sources.
CONCLUSIONS: Dw,w underestimates the dose to bones and, to a lesser extent, overestimates the dose to soft tissues for radionuclides with average energies lower than 192Ir. Further studies regarding bone toxicities are needed before intermediate-energy sources can be adopted in cases where bones are in close vicinity to the tumor.},
keywords = {Bone and Bones, Brachytherapy, Cobalt Radioisotopes, Computer Simulation, Computer-Assisted, Dose calculation, Gadolinium, Humans, Intermediate-energy source, Iridium Radioisotopes, Male, Monte Carlo, Prostatic Neoplasms, Radiation Dosage, Radioisotopes, Radiotherapy Dosage, Radiotherapy Planning, Selenium Radioisotopes, Tissue composition, Tongue Neoplasms, Ytterbium},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

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PURPOSE: Several radionuclides with high (60Co, 75Se) and intermediate (169Yb, 153Gd) energies have been investigated as alternatives to 192Ir for high-dose-rate brachytherapy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of tissue heterogeneities for these five high- to intermediate-energy sources in prostate and head & neck brachytherapy. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Treatment plans were generated for a cohort of prostate (n = 10) and oral tongue (n = 10) patients. Dose calculations were performed using RapidBrachyMCTPS, an in-house Geant4-based Monte Carlo treatment planning system. Treatment plans were simulated using 60Co, 192Ir, 75Se, 169Yb, and 153Gd as the active core of the microSelectron v2 source. Two dose calculation scenarios were presented: (1) dose to water in water (Dw,w), and (2) dose to medium in medium (Dm,m).
RESULTS: Dw,w overestimates planning target volume coverage compared with Dm,m, regardless of photon energy. The average planning target volume D90 reduction was ∼1% for high-energy sources, whereas larger differences were observed for intermediate-energy sources (1%-2% for prostate and 4%-7% for oral tongue). Dose differences were not clinically relevant (textless5%) for soft tissues in general. Going from Dw,w to Dm,m, bone doses were increased two- to three-fold for 169Yb and four- to five-fold for 153Gd, whereas the ratio was close to ∼1 for high-energy sources.
CONCLUSIONS: Dw,w underestimates the dose to bones and, to a lesser extent, overestimates the dose to soft tissues for radionuclides with average energies lower than 192Ir. Further studies regarding bone toxicities are needed before intermediate-energy sources can be adopted in cases where bones are in close vicinity to the tumor.

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Famulari, Gabriel; Duclos, Marie; Enger, Shirin A.

A novel 169 Yb-based dynamic-shield intensity modulated brachytherapy delivery system for prostate cancer Journal Article

In: Medical Physics, vol. 47, no. 3, pp. 859–868, 2020, ISSN: 2473-4209.

Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Brachytherapy, Cohort Studies, Computer-Assisted, Humans, IMBT, Intensity-Modulated, Male, Monte Carlo, Monte Carlo Method, prostate cancer, Prostatic Neoplasms, Radioisotopes, Radiotherapy, Radiotherapy Planning, Uncertainty, Yb-169, Ytterbium

@article{famulari_novel_2020,
title = {A novel 169 Yb-based dynamic-shield intensity modulated brachytherapy delivery system for prostate cancer},
author = {Gabriel Famulari and Marie Duclos and Shirin A. Enger},
doi = {10.1002/mp.13959},
issn = {2473-4209},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-03-01},
journal = {Medical Physics},
volume = {47},
number = {3},
pages = {859--868},
abstract = {PURPOSE: Intensity modulated brachytherapy (IMBT) is a novel high dose rate brachytherapy (HDR BT) technique which incorporates static or dynamic shielding to increase tumor coverage and/or spare healthy tissues. The purpose of this study is to present a novel delivery system (AIM-Brachy) design that can enable dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer.
METHODS: The AIM-Brachy system dynamically controls the rotation of platinum shields, placed within interstitial catheters, which partially collimate the radiation emitted from an 169 Yb source. Conventional HDR BT (10 Ci 192 Ir) and IMBT (18 Ci 169 Yb) plans were generated for 12 patients using an in-house column generation-based optimizer, coupled to a Geant4-based dose calculation engine, RapidBrachyMC. Treatment plans were normalized to match the same PTV D90 coverage as the clinical plan. Intershield attenuation effects were taken into account. A sensitivity analysis was performed to evaluate the dosimetric impact of systematic longitudinal source positioning errors ( ± 1 mm, ± 2 mm, and ± 3 mm) and rotational errors ( ± 5 ∘ , ± 10 ∘ , and ± 15 ∘ ) on clinically relevant parameters (PTV D90 and urethra D10 ).
RESULTS: The platinum shield reduced the dose rate on the shielded side at 1 cm to 18.1% of the dose rate on the unshielded side. For equal PTV D90 coverage, the urethral D10 was reduced by 13.3% ± 4.7%, without change to other plan quality indices (PTV V100 , V150, V200 , bladder V75 , rectum V75 , HI, COIN). Delivery times for HDR BT and IMBT were 9.2 ± 1.6 min and 18.6 ± 4.0 min, respectively. In general, the PTV D90 was more sensitive to source positioning errors than rotational errors, while the urethral D10 was more sensitive to rotational errors than source positioning errors. For a typical range of positioning errors ( ± 1 mm, ± 5 ∘ ), the overall tolerance was textless2%.
CONCLUSIONS: The AIM-Brachy system was proposed to deliver dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer with the potential to create a low dose tunnel within the urethra. The urethra-sparing properties are desirable to minimize the occurrence and severity of urethral strictures or, alternatively, to provide a method for dose escalation.},
keywords = {Brachytherapy, Cohort Studies, Computer-Assisted, Humans, IMBT, Intensity-Modulated, Male, Monte Carlo, Monte Carlo Method, prostate cancer, Prostatic Neoplasms, Radioisotopes, Radiotherapy, Radiotherapy Planning, Uncertainty, Yb-169, Ytterbium},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

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PURPOSE: Intensity modulated brachytherapy (IMBT) is a novel high dose rate brachytherapy (HDR BT) technique which incorporates static or dynamic shielding to increase tumor coverage and/or spare healthy tissues. The purpose of this study is to present a novel delivery system (AIM-Brachy) design that can enable dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer.
METHODS: The AIM-Brachy system dynamically controls the rotation of platinum shields, placed within interstitial catheters, which partially collimate the radiation emitted from an 169 Yb source. Conventional HDR BT (10 Ci 192 Ir) and IMBT (18 Ci 169 Yb) plans were generated for 12 patients using an in-house column generation-based optimizer, coupled to a Geant4-based dose calculation engine, RapidBrachyMC. Treatment plans were normalized to match the same PTV D90 coverage as the clinical plan. Intershield attenuation effects were taken into account. A sensitivity analysis was performed to evaluate the dosimetric impact of systematic longitudinal source positioning errors ( ± 1 mm, ± 2 mm, and ± 3 mm) and rotational errors ( ± 5 ∘ , ± 10 ∘ , and ± 15 ∘ ) on clinically relevant parameters (PTV D90 and urethra D10 ).
RESULTS: The platinum shield reduced the dose rate on the shielded side at 1 cm to 18.1% of the dose rate on the unshielded side. For equal PTV D90 coverage, the urethral D10 was reduced by 13.3% ± 4.7%, without change to other plan quality indices (PTV V100 , V150, V200 , bladder V75 , rectum V75 , HI, COIN). Delivery times for HDR BT and IMBT were 9.2 ± 1.6 min and 18.6 ± 4.0 min, respectively. In general, the PTV D90 was more sensitive to source positioning errors than rotational errors, while the urethral D10 was more sensitive to rotational errors than source positioning errors. For a typical range of positioning errors ( ± 1 mm, ± 5 ∘ ), the overall tolerance was textless2%.
CONCLUSIONS: The AIM-Brachy system was proposed to deliver dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer with the potential to create a low dose tunnel within the urethra. The urethra-sparing properties are desirable to minimize the occurrence and severity of urethral strictures or, alternatively, to provide a method for dose escalation.

Close

Famulari, Gabriel; Alfieri, Joanne; Duclos, Marie; Vuong, Té; Enger, Shirin A.

Can intermediate-energy sources lead to elevated bone doses for prostate and head & neck high-dose-rate brachytherapy? Journal Article

In: Brachytherapy, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 255–263, 2020, ISSN: 1538-4721.

Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Brachytherapy, Dose calculation, Intermediate-energy source, Monte Carlo, Tissue composition

@article{famulari_can_2020b,
title = {Can intermediate-energy sources lead to elevated bone doses for prostate and head & neck high-dose-rate brachytherapy?},
author = {Gabriel Famulari and Joanne Alfieri and Marie Duclos and Té Vuong and Shirin A. Enger},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1538472119306531},
doi = {10.1016/j.brachy.2019.12.004},
issn = {1538-4721},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-03-01},
urldate = {2021-09-08},
journal = {Brachytherapy},
volume = {19},
number = {2},
pages = {255--263},
abstract = {Purpose
Several radionuclides with high (60Co, 75Se) and intermediate (169Yb, 153Gd) energies have been investigated as alternatives to 192Ir for high-dose-rate brachytherapy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of tissue heterogeneities for these five high- to intermediate-energy sources in prostate and head & neck brachytherapy.
Methods and Materials Treatment plans were generated for a cohort of prostate (n = 10) and oral tongue (n = 10) patients. Dose calculations were performed using RapidBrachyMCTPS, an in-house Geant4-based Monte Carlo treatment planning system. Treatment plans were simulated using 60Co, 192Ir, 75Se, 169Yb, and 153Gd as the active core of the microSelectron v2 source. Two dose calculation scenarios were presented: (1) dose to water in water (Dw,w), and (2) dose to medium in medium (Dm,m).
Results
Dw,w overestimates planning target volume coverage compared with Dm,m, regardless of photon energy. The average planning target volume D90 reduction was ∼1% for high-energy sources, whereas larger differences were observed for intermediate-energy sources (1%–2% for prostate and 4%–7% for oral tongue). Dose differences were not clinically relevant (textless5%) for soft tissues in general. Going from Dw,w to Dm,m, bone doses were increased two- to three-fold for 169Yb and four- to five-fold for 153Gd, whereas the ratio was close to ∼1 for high-energy sources.
Conclusions
Dw,w underestimates the dose to bones and, to a lesser extent, overestimates the dose to soft tissues for radionuclides with average energies lower than 192Ir. Further studies regarding bone toxicities are needed before intermediate-energy sources can be adopted in cases where bones are in close vicinity to the tumor.},
keywords = {Brachytherapy, Dose calculation, Intermediate-energy source, Monte Carlo, Tissue composition},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

Close

Purpose
Several radionuclides with high (60Co, 75Se) and intermediate (169Yb, 153Gd) energies have been investigated as alternatives to 192Ir for high-dose-rate brachytherapy. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of tissue heterogeneities for these five high- to intermediate-energy sources in prostate and head & neck brachytherapy.
Methods and Materials Treatment plans were generated for a cohort of prostate (n = 10) and oral tongue (n = 10) patients. Dose calculations were performed using RapidBrachyMCTPS, an in-house Geant4-based Monte Carlo treatment planning system. Treatment plans were simulated using 60Co, 192Ir, 75Se, 169Yb, and 153Gd as the active core of the microSelectron v2 source. Two dose calculation scenarios were presented: (1) dose to water in water (Dw,w), and (2) dose to medium in medium (Dm,m).
Results
Dw,w overestimates planning target volume coverage compared with Dm,m, regardless of photon energy. The average planning target volume D90 reduction was ∼1% for high-energy sources, whereas larger differences were observed for intermediate-energy sources (1%–2% for prostate and 4%–7% for oral tongue). Dose differences were not clinically relevant (textless5%) for soft tissues in general. Going from Dw,w to Dm,m, bone doses were increased two- to three-fold for 169Yb and four- to five-fold for 153Gd, whereas the ratio was close to ∼1 for high-energy sources.
Conclusions
Dw,w underestimates the dose to bones and, to a lesser extent, overestimates the dose to soft tissues for radionuclides with average energies lower than 192Ir. Further studies regarding bone toxicities are needed before intermediate-energy sources can be adopted in cases where bones are in close vicinity to the tumor.

Close

Famulari, Gabriel; Duclos, Marie; Enger, Shirin A.

A novel 169Yb-based dynamic-shield intensity modulated brachytherapy delivery system for prostate cancer Journal Article

In: Medical Physics, vol. 47, no. 3, pp. 859–868, 2020, ISSN: 2473-4209, (_eprint: https://aapm.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/mp.13959).

Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Brachytherapy, IMBT, Monte Carlo, prostate cancer, Yb-169

@article{famulari_novel_2020b,
title = {A novel 169Yb-based dynamic-shield intensity modulated brachytherapy delivery system for prostate cancer},
author = {Gabriel Famulari and Marie Duclos and Shirin A. Enger},
url = {https://aapm.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/mp.13959},
doi = {10.1002/mp.13959},
issn = {2473-4209},
year = {2020},
date = {2020-01-01},
urldate = {2021-09-08},
journal = {Medical Physics},
volume = {47},
number = {3},
pages = {859--868},
abstract = {Purpose Intensity modulated brachytherapy (IMBT) is a novel high dose rate brachytherapy (HDR BT) technique which incorporates static or dynamic shielding to increase tumor coverage and/or spare healthy tissues. The purpose of this study is to present a novel delivery system (AIM-Brachy) design that can enable dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer. Methods The AIM-Brachy system dynamically controls the rotation of platinum shields, placed within interstitial catheters, which partially collimate the radiation emitted from an 169Yb source. Conventional HDR BT (10 Ci 192Ir) and IMBT (18 Ci 169Yb) plans were generated for 12 patients using an in-house column generation-based optimizer, coupled to a Geant4-based dose calculation engine, RapidBrachyMC. Treatment plans were normalized to match the same PTV D90 coverage as the clinical plan. Intershield attenuation effects were taken into account. A sensitivity analysis was performed to evaluate the dosimetric impact of systematic longitudinal source positioning errors (1 mm, 2 mm, and 3 mm) and rotational errors (5, 10 and 15) on clinically relevant parameters (PTV D90 and urethra D10). Results The platinum shield reduced the dose rate on the shielded side at 1 cm to 18.1% of the dose rate on the unshielded side. For equal PTV D90 coverage, the urethral D10 was reduced by 13.3% 4.7%, without change to other plan quality indices (PTV V100, V150, V200, bladder V75, rectum V75, HI, COIN). Delivery times for HDR BT and IMBT were 9.2 ± 1.6 min and 18.6 ± 4.0 min, respectively. In general, the PTV D90 was more sensitive to source positioning errors than rotational errors, while the urethral D10 was more sensitive to rotational errors than source positioning errors. For a typical range of positioning errors (1 mm, 5), the overall tolerance was textless2%. Conclusions The AIM-Brachy system was proposed to deliver dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer with the potential to create a low dose tunnel within the urethra. The urethra-sparing properties are desirable to minimize the occurrence and severity of urethral strictures or, alternatively, to provide a method for dose escalation.},
note = {_eprint: https://aapm.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/mp.13959},
keywords = {Brachytherapy, IMBT, Monte Carlo, prostate cancer, Yb-169},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}

Close

Purpose Intensity modulated brachytherapy (IMBT) is a novel high dose rate brachytherapy (HDR BT) technique which incorporates static or dynamic shielding to increase tumor coverage and/or spare healthy tissues. The purpose of this study is to present a novel delivery system (AIM-Brachy) design that can enable dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer. Methods The AIM-Brachy system dynamically controls the rotation of platinum shields, placed within interstitial catheters, which partially collimate the radiation emitted from an 169Yb source. Conventional HDR BT (10 Ci 192Ir) and IMBT (18 Ci 169Yb) plans were generated for 12 patients using an in-house column generation-based optimizer, coupled to a Geant4-based dose calculation engine, RapidBrachyMC. Treatment plans were normalized to match the same PTV D90 coverage as the clinical plan. Intershield attenuation effects were taken into account. A sensitivity analysis was performed to evaluate the dosimetric impact of systematic longitudinal source positioning errors (1 mm, 2 mm, and 3 mm) and rotational errors (5, 10 and 15) on clinically relevant parameters (PTV D90 and urethra D10). Results The platinum shield reduced the dose rate on the shielded side at 1 cm to 18.1% of the dose rate on the unshielded side. For equal PTV D90 coverage, the urethral D10 was reduced by 13.3% 4.7%, without change to other plan quality indices (PTV V100, V150, V200, bladder V75, rectum V75, HI, COIN). Delivery times for HDR BT and IMBT were 9.2 ± 1.6 min and 18.6 ± 4.0 min, respectively. In general, the PTV D90 was more sensitive to source positioning errors than rotational errors, while the urethral D10 was more sensitive to rotational errors than source positioning errors. For a typical range of positioning errors (1 mm, 5), the overall tolerance was textless2%. Conclusions The AIM-Brachy system was proposed to deliver dynamic-shield IMBT for prostate cancer with the potential to create a low dose tunnel within the urethra. The urethra-sparing properties are desirable to minimize the occurrence and severity of urethral strictures or, alternatively, to provide a method for dose escalation.

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