Dosimetric effects of seed anisotropy and interseed attenuation for 103Pd and 125I prostate implants

被引:50
作者
Chibani, O [1 ]
Williamson, JF [1 ]
Todor, D [1 ]
机构
[1] Virginia Commonwealth Univ, Med Coll Virginia, Massey Canc Ctr, Richmond, VA 23298 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1118/1.1897466
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 [临床医学]; 100207 [影像医学与核医学]; 1009 [特种医学];
摘要
A Monte Carlo study is carried out to quantify the effects of seed anisotropy and interseed attenuation for Pd-103 and I-125 prostate implants. Two idealized and two real prostate implants,are considered. Full Monte Carlo simulation (FMCS) of implants (seeds are physically and simultaneously simulated) is compared with isotropic point-source dose-kernel superposition (PSKS) and linesource dose-kernel superposition (LSKS) methods. For clinical pre-. and post-procedure implants, the dose to the different structures (prostate, rectum wall, and urethra) is calculated. The discretized volumes of these structures are reconstructed using transrectal ultrasound contours. Local dose differences.(PSKS versus FMCS and LSKS versus FMCS) are investigated. The dose contributions from primary versus scattered photons are calculated separately. For Pd-103, the average absolute total dose difference between FMCS and PSKS can be as high as 7.4% for the idealized model and 6. 1 % for the clinical preprocedure implant. Similarly, the total dose difference is lower for the case of I-125 : 4.4% for the idealized model and 4.6% for a clinical post-procedure implant. Average absolute dose differences between LSKS and FMCS are less significant for both seed models: 3 to 3.6% for the idealized models and 2.9 to 3.2% for the clinical plans. Dose differences between PSKS and FMCS are due to the absence of both seed anisotropy and interseed attenuation modeling in the PSKS approach. LSKS accounts for seed anisotropy but not for the interseed effect, leading to systematically overestimated dose values in comparison with the more accurate FMCS method. For both idealized and clinical implants the dose from scattered photons represent less than 1/3 of the total dose. For all studied cases, LSKS prostate DVHs overestimate D-90 by 2 to 5% because of the missing interseed attenuation effect. PSKS and LSKS predictions Of V-150 and V-200 are overestimated by up to 9% in comparison with the FMCS results. Finally, effects of seed anisotropy and interseed attenuation must be viewed in the context of other significant sources of dose uncertainty, namely seed orientation, source misplacement, prostate morphological changes and tissue heterogeneity. (c) 2005 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.
引用
收藏
页码:2557 / 2566
页数:10
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]
Brachytherapy dosimetry of 125I and 103Pd sources using an updated cross section library for the MCNP Monte Carlo transport code [J].
Bohm, TD ;
DeLuca, PM ;
DeWerd, LA .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2003, 30 (04) :701-711
[2]
BRIESMEISTER JF, 2004, LA12625
[3]
THE ACCURACY OF SINGLE-SEED DOSE SUPERPOSITION FOR I125 IMPLANTS [J].
BURNS, GS ;
RAESIDE, DE .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 1989, 16 (04) :627-631
[4]
IVBTMc, A Monte Carlo dose calculation tool for intravascular brachytherapy [J].
Chibani, O ;
Li, XA .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2003, 30 (01) :44-51
[5]
Dosimetric effects of source-offset in intravascular brachytherapy [J].
Chibani, O ;
Li, XA .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2002, 29 (04) :530-537
[6]
Monte Carlo dose calculations in homogeneous media and at interfaces: A comparison between GEPTS, EGSnrc, MCNP, and measurements [J].
Chibani, O ;
Li, XA .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2002, 29 (05) :835-847
[7]
The effect of seed orientation deviations on the quality of 125I prostate implants [J].
Corbett, JF ;
Jezioranski, JJ ;
Crook, J ;
Tran, T ;
Yeung, IWT .
PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2001, 46 (11) :2785-2800
[8]
CULLEN DE, 1997, DLC179
[9]
Analytical approach to heterogeneity correction factor calculation for brachytherapy [J].
Daskalov, GM ;
Kirov, AS ;
Williamson, JF .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 1998, 25 (05) :722-735
[10]
CT-based Monte Carlo simulation tool for dosimetry planning and analysis [J].
DeMarco, JJ ;
Solberg, TD ;
Smathers, JB .
MEDICAL PHYSICS, 1998, 25 (01) :1-11