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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Clinical application of intensity and energy modulated radiotherapy with photon and electron beams

Mu, Xiangkui January 2005 (has links)
In modern, advanced radiotherapy (e.g. intensity modulated photon radiotherapy, IMXT) the delivery time for each fraction becomes prolonged to 10-20 minutes compared with the conventional, commonly 2-5 minutes. The biological effect of this prolongation is not fully known. The large number of beam directions in IMXT commonly leads to a large integral dose in the patient. Electrons would reduce the integral dose but are not suitable for treating deep-seated tumour, due to their limited penetration in tissues. By combining electron and photon beams, the dose distributions may be improved compared with either used alone. One obstacle for using electron beams in clinical routine is that there is no available treatment planning systems that optimise electron beam treatments in a similar way as for IMXT. Protons have an even more pronounced dose fall-off, larger penetration depth and less penumbra widening than electrons and are therefore more suitable for advanced radiotherapy. However, proton facilities optimised for advanced radiotherapy are not commonly available. In some instances electron beams may be an acceptable surrogate. The first part of this study is an experimental in vitro study where the situation in a tumour during fractionated radiotherapy is simulated. The effect of the prolonged fraction time is compared with the predictions by radiobiological models. The second part is a treatment planning study to analyse the mixing of electron and photon beams for at complex target volume in comparison with IMXT. In the next step a research version of an electron beam optimiser was used for the improvement of treatment plans. The aim was to develop a method for translating crude energy and intensity matrices for optimised electrons into a deliverable treatment plan without destroying the dose distribution. In the final part, different methods of treating the spinal canal in medulloblastoma were explored in a treatment planning study that was evaluated with biological models for estimating risks for late radiation effects. The effect on cell survival of prolonging fraction time at conventional doses/fraction is significant in an in vitro system. This effect is underestimated by biological models. Prolonging the fraction time will spare tissues with a fast DNA repair. Thus, there is a risk for sparing tumours. The mixed electron and photon beam technique has the potential to treat deep-seated tumours. Compared with IMXT the number of beams can be reduced and as a consequence, the time for each fraction could be kept shorter. The integral dose in the patient will also be lower. The mixed beam technique could potentially be further improved if automatic optimisation for electrons was available. The results suggest that optimisation and segmentation can be automated, and a deliverable treatment plan can be obtained with simple procedures without destroying the quality of the dose distribution. The integral dose in patients may lead to late radiation side effects. In childhood cancers the risk for development of radiation induced cancers is a reality and the integral dose outside the target volume should be minimised. Based on models for cancer induction, protons show the lowest risk while electrons have some benefit compared with different photon techniques. All methods are able to similarly well treat the target volume.
2

Evaluation of proton treatment strategies for head and neck cancer and lung cancer based on treatment planning studies

Jakobi, Annika 26 July 2016 (has links) (PDF)
The clinical introduction of proton therapy requires an extensive analysis of its benefits compared to conventional radiotherapy and a detailed analysis of possible uncertainties which might have serious consequences for patient treatment. In the first part of the presented thesis, the expected toxicities were evaluated for a treatment of head and neck cancer patients using a biologically adapted dose escalation schedule with photon and proton therapy. The feasibility of the dose escalation schedule could be demonstrated for both photon and proton therapy, since only a small increase in toxicity risk occurred for most toxicities. However, the expected toxicity risks were in most cases smaller with proton therapy. Furthermore, a higher benefit was found for patients with primary tumour locations in the upper head and neck area, who thus might be preferably referred to proton therapy. In the second part of this thesis, an extensive analysis of the impact of tumour motion in lung cancer treatment with active-scanning proton therapy was conducted. It could be shown, that dose degradations were small for tumour motion amplitudes below 5 mm. Parameters like the target volume concept, the optimisation approach, changes in the motion pattern and application sequence times had additional impact on the dose degradation. However, their magnitude was patient specific. Since not all parameters can be assessed before treatment, e.g. the motion pattern during treatment, prospective estimations should be supplemented by retrospective analyses. / Die Einführung der Protonentherapie in die klinische Praxis erfordert umfassende Analysen ihrer Vor- und Nachteile im Vergleich zur konventionellen Photonentherapie sowie detaillierte Untersuchungen der Auswirkungen von Unsicherheiten in der Therapieapplikation. Im ersten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die zu erwartenden Nebenwirkungen bei der Behandlung von Patienten mit Kopf-Hals-Tumoren mit einem biologisch-adaptierten Fraktionierungsschema inklusive Dosiseskalation mit Photonen- und Protonentherapie evaluiert. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Dosiseskalation sowohl mit Photonen- als auch Protonentherapie angewandt werden kann, da die Wahrscheinlichkeit für das Auftreten von Nebenwirkungen in den meisten Fällen kaum erhöht wurde. Weiterhin wurden die Nebenwirkungswahrscheinlichkeiten mit der Protonentherapie im Vergleich zur Photonentherapie reduziert. Dies war vor allem für Patienten mit Tumoren im oberen Kopf-Hals-Bereich der Fall. Diese könnten daher bevorzugt zur Protonentherapie überwiesen werden. Darüber hinaus wurde im zweiten Teil der Arbeit eine umfassende Analyse des Einflusses der Tumorbewegung auf die Dosisverteilung bei Behandlung von Lungentumoren mit aktiver Protonenstrahlformierung durchgeführt. Dabei zeigte sich, dass Dosisdegradierungen bei Bewegungsamplituden unter 5mm gering sind. Parameter wie das Zielvolumenkonzept, Veränderungen des Bewegungsmusters oder der Applikationszeiten nehmen zusätzlich Einfluss auf die Dosisdegradierung, allerdings in unterschiedlichem Maß für individuelle Patienten. Da nicht alle Parameter vor Behandlung bekannt sein können, sollten prospektive Dosisabschätzungen durch retrospektive Analysen ergänzt werden.
3

Evaluation of proton treatment strategies for head and neck cancer and lung cancer based on treatment planning studies

Jakobi, Annika 15 July 2016 (has links)
The clinical introduction of proton therapy requires an extensive analysis of its benefits compared to conventional radiotherapy and a detailed analysis of possible uncertainties which might have serious consequences for patient treatment. In the first part of the presented thesis, the expected toxicities were evaluated for a treatment of head and neck cancer patients using a biologically adapted dose escalation schedule with photon and proton therapy. The feasibility of the dose escalation schedule could be demonstrated for both photon and proton therapy, since only a small increase in toxicity risk occurred for most toxicities. However, the expected toxicity risks were in most cases smaller with proton therapy. Furthermore, a higher benefit was found for patients with primary tumour locations in the upper head and neck area, who thus might be preferably referred to proton therapy. In the second part of this thesis, an extensive analysis of the impact of tumour motion in lung cancer treatment with active-scanning proton therapy was conducted. It could be shown, that dose degradations were small for tumour motion amplitudes below 5 mm. Parameters like the target volume concept, the optimisation approach, changes in the motion pattern and application sequence times had additional impact on the dose degradation. However, their magnitude was patient specific. Since not all parameters can be assessed before treatment, e.g. the motion pattern during treatment, prospective estimations should be supplemented by retrospective analyses. / Die Einführung der Protonentherapie in die klinische Praxis erfordert umfassende Analysen ihrer Vor- und Nachteile im Vergleich zur konventionellen Photonentherapie sowie detaillierte Untersuchungen der Auswirkungen von Unsicherheiten in der Therapieapplikation. Im ersten Teil der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die zu erwartenden Nebenwirkungen bei der Behandlung von Patienten mit Kopf-Hals-Tumoren mit einem biologisch-adaptierten Fraktionierungsschema inklusive Dosiseskalation mit Photonen- und Protonentherapie evaluiert. Dabei konnte gezeigt werden, dass die Dosiseskalation sowohl mit Photonen- als auch Protonentherapie angewandt werden kann, da die Wahrscheinlichkeit für das Auftreten von Nebenwirkungen in den meisten Fällen kaum erhöht wurde. Weiterhin wurden die Nebenwirkungswahrscheinlichkeiten mit der Protonentherapie im Vergleich zur Photonentherapie reduziert. Dies war vor allem für Patienten mit Tumoren im oberen Kopf-Hals-Bereich der Fall. Diese könnten daher bevorzugt zur Protonentherapie überwiesen werden. Darüber hinaus wurde im zweiten Teil der Arbeit eine umfassende Analyse des Einflusses der Tumorbewegung auf die Dosisverteilung bei Behandlung von Lungentumoren mit aktiver Protonenstrahlformierung durchgeführt. Dabei zeigte sich, dass Dosisdegradierungen bei Bewegungsamplituden unter 5mm gering sind. Parameter wie das Zielvolumenkonzept, Veränderungen des Bewegungsmusters oder der Applikationszeiten nehmen zusätzlich Einfluss auf die Dosisdegradierung, allerdings in unterschiedlichem Maß für individuelle Patienten. Da nicht alle Parameter vor Behandlung bekannt sein können, sollten prospektive Dosisabschätzungen durch retrospektive Analysen ergänzt werden.

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