Hu Yue-Houng, Wan Chan Tseung Hok Seum, Mundy Daniel W
Department of Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Department of Radiation Oncology, Division of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Med Phys. 2022 May;49(5):2904-2913. doi: 10.1002/mp.15602. Epub 2022 Mar 21.
Dental fixtures are commonplace in an aging, radiation treatment population. The current, local standard of practice in particle therapy is to employ treatment geometries to avoid delivery through implanted dental fixtures. The present study aims to observe the physical effect of delivering therapeutic proton beams through common dental fixture materials as prelude to an eventual goal of assessing the feasibility of using treatment geometries not specified for avoidance of oral implants. A sampling of common dental materials was selected based on prosthodontic consult and was evaluated in terms of relative stopping power and three-dimensional (3D) dose perturbation.
Amalgams, porcelain-fused-to-metal (PFM) crowns consisting of zirconia and non-noble base metals, and lithium disilicate implants were chosen for analysis. Theoretical stopping power (S) and mass stopping power (S/ρ) were calculated using the Stopping and Range of Ions in Matter (SRIM) application, basing stoichiometric compositions of each fixture on published materials data. S and S/ρ were calculated for a range of historically available compositions of amalgams from 1900 until the current era. The perturbance of S and S/ρ as a function of clinically relevant ranges of amalgam compositions for the modern era was analyzed. Water equivalent thickness (WET) and relative stopping power (S ) of each material was measured for a clinical spot-scanning proton beam with monoenergies of 159.9 and 228.8 MeV with a multi-layer ionization chamber (MLIC). Subsequently, 3D dose perturbation was assessed by delivering proton beams through a custom phantom designed to simulate both en-face and on-edge treatment geometries through the selected materials. A treatment plan mimicking the experimental delivery was constructed in the institutional treatment planning system and calculated using TOPAS-based Monte Carlo simulation (MCS). Experimental results were used to validate the MCS. Finally, treatment planning system (TPS) outputs were compared to MCS to determine the accuracy of the dose calculation model.
Historical compositions of amalgams ranged in S from 44.8 to 42.9 MeV/cm, with the greatest deviation being observed for the 1900-1959 era. Deviation as a function of amalgam composition from the modern era was most sensitive to proportion of Hg, accounting for deviations up to -4.2% at the greatest clinically relevant concentration. S/ρ was not found to vary greatly between each porcelain and metal alloy material for PFM type crowns. Relative stopping powers ranged between 1.3 and 5.4 for all studied materials, suggesting substantial changes in proton range with respect to water. Film measurements of pristine spots confirm dose perturbance and shortening of proton range, with an upstream shift of each Bragg peak being observed directly behind the installed fixture. At high energies, cold spots were found in all cases directly behind each material feature with a medial fill-in of dose occurring distally. Qualitative agreement of spot perturbance was confirmed between film measurements and MCS. Finally, when comparing integrated depth doses (IDD) by summing over all axial directions, good agreement is observed between TPS and MCS.
All dental materials studied substantially perturbed the dosimetry of pristine proton spots both in terms of WET/S as well as the spatial distribution of dose. Proton range was quantifiably shortened, and each dental material affected a cold spot directly behind the object with medial dose back-filling was observed distally. MCS and Eclipse dose calculations exhibited good agreement with measurements, suggesting that treatment planning without employing avoidance strategies may be possible with further investigation.
在老龄化的放射治疗人群中,牙科固定装置很常见。粒子治疗当前的当地实践标准是采用治疗几何形状,以避免通过植入的牙科固定装置进行照射。本研究旨在观察通过常见牙科固定装置材料输送治疗性质子束的物理效应,作为评估使用未指定用于避免口腔植入物的治疗几何形状可行性这一最终目标的前奏。根据修复学咨询选择了常见牙科材料样本,并根据相对阻止本领和三维(3D)剂量扰动进行评估。
选择汞合金、由氧化锆和非贵金属基底金属组成的烤瓷熔附金属(PFM)冠以及二硅酸锂植入物进行分析。使用物质中离子的阻止和射程(SRIM)应用程序计算理论阻止本领(S)和质量阻止本领(S/ρ),根据已发表的材料数据确定每个固定装置的化学计量组成。计算了1900年至当前时期一系列历史上可用的汞合金组成的S和S/ρ。分析了现代汞合金组成临床相关范围内S和S/ρ的扰动情况。使用多层电离室(MLIC)对能量为159.9和228.8 MeV的临床点扫描质子束测量每种材料的水等效厚度(WET)和相对阻止本领(S )。随后,通过将质子束通过定制体模进行输送来评估3D剂量扰动,该体模设计用于模拟通过所选材料的正面和边缘治疗几何形状。在机构治疗计划系统中构建模拟实验输送的治疗计划,并使用基于TOPAS的蒙特卡罗模拟(MCS)进行计算。实验结果用于验证MCS。最后,将治疗计划系统(TPS)输出与MCS进行比较,以确定剂量计算模型的准确性。
汞合金的历史组成中S范围为44.8至42.9 MeV/cm,在1900 - 1959年期间观察到最大偏差。现代汞合金组成的偏差对汞比例最为敏感,在最大临床相关浓度下偏差高达 - 4.2%。对于PFM型冠,每种陶瓷和金属合金材料之间的S/ρ变化不大。所有研究材料的相对阻止本领在1.3至5.4之间,表明质子射程相对于水有显著变化。原始点的胶片测量证实了剂量扰动和质子射程缩短,在安装的固定装置正后方直接观察到每个布拉格峰的上游移动。在高能量下,在每种材料特征正后方的所有情况下都发现了冷点,并且在远端出现剂量的中间填充。胶片测量和MCS之间证实了点扰动的定性一致性。最后,通过在所有轴向方向上求和比较积分深度剂量(IDD)时,TPS和MCS之间观察到良好的一致性。
所有研究的牙科材料在WET/S以及剂量的空间分布方面都对原始质子点的剂量学产生了显著扰动。质子射程被定量缩短,并且每种牙科材料在物体正后方产生一个冷点,在远端观察到中间剂量回填。MCS和Eclipse剂量计算与测量结果显示出良好的一致性,表明在进一步研究的情况下,不采用回避策略进行治疗计划可能是可行的。