4.6 Article

Biologically optimized helium ion plans: calculation approach and its in vitro validation

Journal

PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 11, Pages 4283-4299

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/61/11/4283

Keywords

hadron therapy; helium ions; RBE calculations; experimental validation

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation DFG [KFO214]
  2. German Krebshilfe (Deutsche Krebshilfe)
  3. Max Eder Stiftung

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Treatment planning studies on the biological effect of raster-scanned helium ion beams should be performed, together with their experimental verification, before their clinical application at the Heidelberg Ion Beam Therapy Center (HIT). For this purpose, we introduce a novel calculation approach based on integrating data-driven biological models in our Monte Carlo treatment planning (MCTP) tool. Dealing with a mixed radiation field, the biological effect of the primary He-4 ion beams, of the secondary He-3 and 4He (Z = 2) fragments and of the produced protons, deuterons and tritons (Z = 1) has to be taken into account. A spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP) in water, representative of a clinically-relevant scenario, has been biologically optimized with the MCTP and then delivered at HIT. Predictions of cell survival and RBE for a tumor cell line, characterized by (alpha/beta)(ph) = 5.4 Gy, have been successfully compared against measured clonogenic survival data. The mean absolute survival variation (mu(Delta S)) between model predictions and experimental data was 5.3% +/- 0.9%. A sensitivity study, i.e. quantifying the variation of the estimations for the studied plan as a function of the applied phenomenological modelling approach, has been performed. The feasibility of a simpler biological modelling based on dose-averaged LET (linear energy transfer) has been tested. Moreover, comparisons with biophysical models such as the local effect model (LEM) and the repair-misrepair- fixation (RMF) model were performed. mu(Delta S) values for the LEM and the RMF model were, respectively, 4.5% +/- 0.8% and 5.8% +/- 1.1%. The satisfactorily agreement found in this work for the studied SOBP, representative of clinically-relevant scenario, suggests that the introduced approach could be applied for an accurate estimation of the biological effect for helium ion radiotherapy.

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