Practical Challenges and Opportunities for Proton Beam Therapy M. F. Moyers Loma Linda University Medical Center Outline I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. Introduction Registration and Immobilization Beam Shaping Localization Uncertainties, Margins, and Motion Interoperability Summary References O O O O Moyers, M. F. “Proton Therapy” The Modern Technology of Radiation Oncology: A Compendium for Medical Physicists and Radiation Oncologists ed. van Dyk, J. (Wisconsin: Medical Physics Publishing, 1999) p. 823 - 869. Moyers, M. F. Miller, D. W. Bush, D. A. Slater, J. D. Slater, J. M. “Methodologies and tools for proton beam design for lung tumors” International Journal of Radiation Oncology, Biology, Physics 49(5) (2001) p. 1431 - 1440. Moyers, M. F. "LLUPTF: eleven years and beyond" Nuclear Physics in the 21st Century (New York: American Institute of Physics, 2002) p. 305 - 309. Shanazi, K. Moyers, M. F. Yuh, G. Miller, D. Slater, J. Loredo, L. "Cerebrospinal irradiation using proton beams for the treatment of medulloblastoma" Medical Physics 29(6) (2002) p. 1216. LOMA LINDA UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER COMPLETED PROTON PATIENT SUMMARY FROM INCEPTION THROUGH JANUARY TO MARCH 2003 DIAGNOSIS CATEGORY 1990 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 1991 Choroidal Melanoma Pituitary Acoustic Neuroma Meningioma Astrocytoma Other Brain Head & Neck Prostate Other Pelvis Craniopharyngioma Orbital Paraspinal Tumors Chordoma/Chondrosarcoma Sarcoma Other Chest AVM Other Abdominal SNVM 3 TOTAL BY YEAR 3 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 TOTAL 7 10 3 8 4 6 3 4 1 0 3 1 0 3 0 13 17 3 16 26 6 26 198 8 3 2 11 13 3 0 4 6 0 8 4 7 20 234 10 0 0 8 26 3 7 1 13 5 3 8 6 9 26 234 4 1 0 6 21 12 11 31 5 21 8 1 3 7 5 15 27 308 0 1 1 4 25 2 34 17 7 29 8 7 4 7 17 3 49 476 8 2 2 7 28 4 16 14 9 20 13 2 2 19 9 17 41 507 3 4 11 7 38 8 34 6 4 35 9 2 2 12 7 31 43 631 8 4 13 12 51 15 44 21 9 30 1 7 9 9 10 36 55 447 5 2 12 15 44 9 27 12 23 57 10 6 7 17 13 41 65 491 7 2 0 14 34 17 49 12 13 101 13 13 10 9 18 30 75 649 12 16 2 10 9 11 39 64 694 15 3 9 6 193 3 5 18 40 4 46 11 23 57 4 10 50 10 49 4 21 27 1 8 2 6 4 5 3 53 345 338 416 494 681 760 944 780 899 1033 1035 245 1 1 121 78 57 130 130 249 500 5066 84 19 53 114 378 92 323 133 119 380 % 1.5% 1.0% 0.7% 1.6% 1.6% 3.1% 6.2% 63.1% 1.0% 0.2% 0.7% 1.4% 4.7% 1.1% 4.0% 1.7% 1.5% 4.7% 8,026 100.0% Conformal Avoidance Therapy Cerebro-spinal Irradiation standard protons standard x rays Heart 1.2 Esophagus 1.2 0.8 1 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Dose (Gy) Thyroid Fraction of Volume Fraction of Volume 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 1.2 0 Fraction of Volume 1 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Dose (Gy) 0.8 0.6 Vertebral Body 1.2 0.4 0.2 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Dose (Gy) Bowel 1.2 Fraction of Volume 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 Fraction of Volume 1 0.2 0.8 0 0.6 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 Dose (Gy) 0.4 DVHs: 0.2 0 0 10 20 Dose (Gy) 30 40 pink - standard x rays blue - standard protons 45 The Caveat of Proton Beam Therapy O More precise but less forgiving than x rays and electrons » sharper lateral gradient » sharper distal gradient » lower integral dose » if miss-used, can lead to geometrical miss of target » if miss-used, can damage normal tissue » if target unknown, can lead to geometrical miss of target Standard Headrest and Facemask Frame Problems with Standard Headrest and Facemask Frame O O O O O magnified FOV CT circle does not include table top and mask frame preventing design of bolus common headrest shape does not conform to individual patient resulting in patient discomfort and fulcrum points for motion support sides of common headrest produce large perturbations in proton dose distribution facemask frame produces large perturbations in proton dose distribution large skin-to-aperture distance results in large penumbra Headrest Perturbations (Wake Effect) 0o and 10o Incidence ↑ CAX ↑ support ↑ CAX ↑ support Penumbra Example 149 MeV - Center of Modulation at Isocenter 16 76 mm bolus, ApID = 380 mm 38 mm bolus, ApID = 380 mm 80-20 % Penumbra Width [mm] no bolus, ApID = 380 mm 12 no bolus, ApID = 210 mm 8 4 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 Bolus Thickness + Patient Depth [mm water] 120 140 Flat Table Top O O Perturbation from table edge Large gap between aperture/bolus and patient resulting in large penumbra Whole Body Pod O O minimize perturbation from edge minimize gap between aperture/bolus and patient resulting in smaller penumbra Picture of Pod with C-arms Aperture and Aperture Frame Bolus and Bolus Frame Bolus and Aperture Requirements O minimize skin-to-aperture distance » penumbra versus air gap O minimize scatter » penumbra versus thickness of bolus O minimize weight » lifting restrictions for therapists O accurately place into beamline » lateral margin Methods to Satisfy Bolus and Aperture Requirements O exchangeable cones for different field sizes » similar to electron cones » scatter or scan beam only to final size O O O successive stages of pre-collimator trimmers and a final patient aperture aperture thickness split into several layers that are installed separately large number of accelerator energies » portal specific energy O O extendable snout multi-leaf collimator Snout Extension with Pre-collimator Plates and Exchangeable Cone Multi-leaf Collimator (Chiba) O O eliminates lifting of heavy apertures provides ability to do IMPT Prostate Field using MLC (Berkeley MLC and LLUMC proton beam) surface 29 cm deep 26 cm scattering diameter Depth Profiling Techniques (Range Modulation) TECHNIQUE energy stacking LOCATION accelerator rangeshifters accelerator exit nozzle entrance nozzle exit propellors nozzle middle nozzle entrance ridge filters nozzle middle COMMENTS a. no mechanical movements, no generation of neutrons d. accelerator retuning, switchyard retuning, scatterer adjustment a. no accelerator retuning d. switchyard retuning, lower dose rate at lower energies, generation of neutrons, scatterer adjustment a. no accelerator retuning, no switchyard tuning d. lower dose rate at lower energies, generation of neutrons, scatterer adjustment a. no accelerator retuning, no generation of neutrons, no scatterer adjustment d. increased penumbra a. easy to make, no scatterer adjustment d. installed by hand, easy to break a. small, automatically installed d. complex design to compensate for scattering a. time independent d. difficult to make Modulator Propellors 43 cm diameter large beam mid-nozzle 11 cm diameter small beam nozzle entrance Ridge Filters (Kashiwa) Dynamic Scattering System Scanning Definitions O Wobbling: a non- or slowly-repeating pattern » ex. circular with modulating radius - perpendicular sine waves with identical frequencies 90o out of phase » ex. Lissajous - perpendicular triangle waves of different frequencies (non-multiple) O Raster: a spatially and temporally constant scan pattern pre-defined for use with all patients » ex. repeating triangle wave » ex. rectilinear O Spot: a customized scan pattern for an individual patient defined spatially and or temporally Film of Small Spot Scan Orthogonal X Ray Tubes and Imagers on Rotating Gantry (Hyogo) ↑extended retracted→ Alignment in Tx Room Using Orthogonal Pairs of DRRs and Electronic Images O Identical landmarks identified on treatment planning DRRs and treatment room images. Alignment in Tx Room Using Orthogonal Pairs of DRRs and Electronic Images O O Alignment algorithm calculates translations and rotations. Aperture projection with x ray magnification also transmitted for comparison with double exposure. Authorization to Treat O O O precision treatments use small margins from tumors and critical structures therapist versus MD versus computer algorithm turnaround time Proton Beam Treatment Planning General Comments Planning is the core of proton beam therapy. “The devil is in the details”. XCT O CT# versus tissue » scanner dependent » protocol dependent (FOV, kVp, slice width, filter) » patient specific scaling O CT# to proton RLSP conversion curve Relative Linear Stopping Power 2.0 1.5 1.0 Battista et al 1980 fit MGH model c1980 LLUMC model 1996 Moyers et al 1992 measured Schneider et al 1996 calculated 0.5 0.0 0 500 1000 1500 Scaled CT Number 2000 2500 3000 Relative Linear Stopping Power Assignments O O O O O O registration / immobilization devices gas bubbles contrast agents metal implants artifacts tissue motion Margins and Uncertainties O target coverage » CTV only, no PTV O O O normal tissue avoidance lateral penumbra lateral alignment uncertainty » target, 90% (1.5 σ) » normal, average position O O distal gradient penetration uncertainty » target, 90% (1.5 σ) Motion Example: Moving Target Solution: expand aperture, design target for bolus with WE of bolus target set to match real target tissue Motion Example: Moving Normal Tissue Solution: replace tissue volume with highest density tissue Interoperability XCT Siemens Treatment Planning System home grown Permedics Toshiba CMS Phillips MDSNordion Varian GE Shimadzu Aperture Manuf. Bolus Manuf. Beam Delivery System home grown Optivus Positioner Imager home grown Par Scientific Huestis Fanuc home grown ABB home grown Trixell IBA Siemens HEK Hitachi Oncolog PerkinElmer Cares Built Fanuc Mitsubishi IBA Accel Mitsuibishi Hitachi DICOM-RT WG-7 Ion Beam Sub-Group O Dec, 1999 Aug, 2000 O Feb, 2000 O O Jul, 2001 Nov, 2001 O May, 2002 O throughout O Varian proposal to add tags to support protons LLUMC proposal to define and test parallel RT Proton Beam Module that would later be incorporated into standard RT Beams Module WG-6 proposal for RT Ion Plan Object parallel to RT Plan Object formation of Ion Beam sub-committee of DICOM WG-7 first formal meeting of ion beam sub-committee at NEMA headquarters in Arlington second formal meeting in conjunction with PTCOG meeting in Cantania numerous telephone and web conferences Summary O O O O O O O O O reduce motion and assure repeatable set-ups avoid edges within beam path avoid objects that do not lie on the CT conversion curve minimize air gaps between beamline devices and patient minimize bolus thickness or rangeshifter thickness at patient explicitly account for lateral and penetration uncertainties on a beam by beam basis explicitly account for penumbra and distal gradient on a beam by beam basis avoid collisions with localization devices provide communication between devices involved in planning and delivering treatments