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Featured researches published by E Cascio.


Medical Physics | 2007

PET/CT imaging for treatment verification after proton therapy: a study with plastic phantoms and metallic implants.

Katia Parodi; Harald Paganetti; E Cascio; J Flanz; Ali Bonab; Nathaniel M. Alpert; Kevin Lohmann; Thomas Bortfeld

The feasibility of off-line positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) for routine three dimensional in-vivo treatment verification of proton radiation therapy is currently under investigation at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. In preparation for clinical trials, phantom experiments were carried out to investigate the sensitivity and accuracy of the method depending on irradiation and imaging parameters. Furthermore, they addressed the feasibility of PET/CT as a robust verification tool in the presence of metallic implants. These produce x-ray CT artifacts and fluence perturbations which may compromise the accuracy of treatment planning algorithms. Spread-out Bragg peak proton fields were delivered to different phantoms consisting of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), PMMA stacked with lung and bone equivalent materials, and PMMA with titanium rods to mimic implants in patients. PET data were acquired in list mode starting within 20 min after irradiation at a commercial luthetium-oxyorthosilicate (LSO)-based PET/CT scanner. The amount and spatial distribution of the measured activity could be well reproduced by calculations based on the GEANT4 and FLUKA Monte Carlo codes. This phantom study supports the potential of millimeter accuracy for range monitoring and lateral field position verification even after low therapeutic dose exposures of 2 Gy, despite the delay between irradiation and imaging. It also indicates the value of PET for treatment verification in the presence of metallic implants, demonstrating a higher sensitivity to fluence perturbations in comparison to a commercial analytical treatment planning system. Finally, it addresses the suitability of LSO-based PET detectors for hadron therapy monitoring. This unconventional application of PET involves countrates which are orders of magnitude lower than in diagnostic tracer imaging, i.e., the signal of interest is comparable to the noise originating from the intrinsic radioactivity of the detector itself. In addition to PET alone, PET/CT imaging provides accurate information on the position of the imaged object and may assess possible anatomical changes during fractionated radiotherapy in clinical applications.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2008

Quantitative assessment of the physical potential of proton beam range verification with PET/CT

Antje Knopf; Katia Parodi; Harald Paganetti; E Cascio; Ali Bonab; Thomas Bortfeld

A recent clinical pilot study demonstrated the feasibility of offline PET/CT range verification for proton therapy treatments. In vivo PET measurements are challenged by blood perfusion, variations of tissue compositions, patient motion and image co-registration uncertainties. Besides these biological and treatment specific factors, the accuracy of the method is constrained by the underlying physical processes. This phantom study distinguishes physical factors from other factors, assessing the reproducibility, consistency and sensitivity of the PET/CT range verification method. A spread-out Bragg-peak (SOBP) proton field was delivered to a phantom consisting of poly-methyl methacrylate (PMMA), lung and bone equivalent material slabs. PET data were acquired in listmode at a commercial PET/CT scanner available within 10 min walking distance from the proton therapy unit. The measured PET activity distributions were compared to simulations of the PET signal based on Geant4 and FLUKA Monte Carlo (MC) codes. To test the reproducibility of the measured PET signal, data from two independent measurements at the same geometrical position in the phantom were compared. Furthermore, activation depth profiles within identical material arrangements but at different positions within the irradiation field were compared to test the consistency of the measured PET signal. Finally, activation depth profiles through air/lung, air/bone and lung/bone interfaces parallel as well as at 6 degrees to the beam direction were studied to investigate the sensitivity of the PET/CT range verification method. The reproducibility and the consistency of the measured PET signal were found to be of the same order of magnitude. They determine the physical accuracy of the PET measurement to be about 1 mm. However, range discrepancies up to 2.6 mm between two measurements and range variations up to 2.6 mm within one measurement were found at the beam edge and at the edge of the field of view (FOV) of the PET scanner. PET/CT range verification was found to be able to detect small range modifications in the presence of complex tissue inhomogeneities. This study indicates the physical potential of the PET/CT verification method to detect the full-range characteristic of the delivered dose in the patient.


radiation effects data workshop | 2003

The proton irradiation program at the Northeast Proton Therapy Center

E Cascio; J.M. Sisterson; J.B. Flanz; M.S. Wagner

The Harvard Cyclotron Laboratory (HCL) was closed on 1 July 2002. The successful transfer of the research and radiation effects testing program from HCL to the Northeast Proton Therapy Center is described.


Medical Physics | 2010

Direct absorbed dose to water determination based on water calorimetry in scanning proton beam delivery

A Sarfehnia; B. Clasie; E Chung; Hsiao-Ming Lu; J Flanz; E Cascio; Martijn Engelsman; Harald Paganetti; J Seuntjens

PURPOSE The aim of this manuscript is to describe the direct measurement of absolute absorbed dose to water in a scanned proton radiotherapy beam using a water calorimeter primary standard. METHODS The McGill water calorimeter, which has been validated in photon and electron beams as well as in HDR 192Ir brachytherapy, was used to measure the absorbed dose to water in double scattering and scanning proton irradiations. The measurements were made at the Massachusetts General Hospital proton radiotherapy facility. The correction factors in water calorimetry were numerically calculated and various parameters affecting their magnitude and uncertainty were studied. The absorbed dose to water was compared to that obtained using an Exradin T1 Chamber based on the IAEA TRS-398 protocol. RESULTS The overall 1-sigma uncertainty on absorbed dose to water amounts to 0.4% and 0.6% in scattered and scanned proton water calorimetry, respectively. This compares to an overall uncertainty of 1.9% for currently accepted IAEA TRS-398 reference absorbed dose measurement protocol. The absorbed dose from water calorimetry agrees with the results from TRS-398 well to within 1-sigma uncertainty. CONCLUSIONS This work demonstrates that a primary absorbed dose standard based on water calorimetry is feasible in scattered and scanned proton beams.


radiation effects data workshop | 2004

Measurements of the energy spectrum of degraded proton beams at NPTC

E Cascio; J.M. Sisterson; Bernard Gottschalk; Surajit Sarkar

The results of NaI scintillator measurements of the energy spectrum of degraded proton beams at the Northeast Proton Therapy Center at Massachusetts General Hospital are described. Measurements are presented for both the typical radiation test beams presently in use and for a configuration that results in a smaller energy spread at low energies.


Medical Physics | 2015

Validation of an in-vivo proton beam range check method in an anthropomorphic pelvic phantom using dose measurements.

E Bentefour; Shikui Tang; E Cascio; M Testa; Deepak Samuel; D. Prieels; Bernard Gottschalk; Hsiao-Ming Lu

PURPOSE In-vivo dosimetry and beam range verification in proton therapy could play significant role in proton treatment validation and improvements. In-vivo beam range verification, in particular, could enable new treatment techniques one of which could be the use of anterior fields for prostate treatment instead of opposed lateral fields as in current practice. This paper reports validation study of an in-vivo range verification method which can reduce the range uncertainty to submillimeter levels and potentially allow for in-vivo dosimetry. METHODS An anthropomorphic pelvic phantom is used to validate the clinical potential of the time-resolved dose method for range verification in the case of prostrate treatment using range modulated anterior proton beams. The method uses a 3 × 4 matrix of 1 mm diodes mounted in water balloon which are read by an ADC system at 100 kHz. The method is first validated against beam range measurements by dose extinction measurements. The validation is first completed in water phantom and then in pelvic phantom for both open field and treatment field configurations. Later, the beam range results are compared with the water equivalent path length (WEPL) values computed from the treatment planning system XIO. RESULTS Beam range measurements from both time-resolved dose method and the dose extinction method agree with submillimeter precision in water phantom. For the pelvic phantom, when discarding two of the diodes that show sign of significant range mixing, the two methods agree with ±1 mm. Only a dose of 7 mGy is sufficient to achieve this result. The comparison to the computed WEPL by the treatment planning system (XIO) shows that XIO underestimates the protons beam range. Quantifying the exact XIO range underestimation depends on the strategy used to evaluate the WEPL results. To our best evaluation, XIO underestimates the treatment beam range between a minimum of 1.7% and maximum of 4.1%. CONCLUSIONS Time-resolved dose measurement method satisfies the two basic requirements, WEPL accuracy and minimum dose, necessary for clinical use, thus, its potential for in-vivo protons range verification. Further development is needed, namely, devising a workflow that takes into account the limits imposed by proton range mixing and the susceptibility of the comparison of measured and expected WEPLs to errors on the detector positions. The methods may also be used for in-vivo dosimetry and could benefit various proton therapy treatments.


radiation effects data workshop | 2009

A Simplified Vacuumless Faraday Cup for the Experimental Beamline at the Francis H. Burr Proton Therapy Center

E Cascio; Bernard Gottschalk

We describe a simplified, vacuumless, Faraday cup and compare it with a traditional Faraday cup under various beam conditions. We show that the new design agrees with the traditional design to an accuracy of 1% to 5%.


radiation effects data workshop | 2007

A Continuously Variable Water Beam Degrader For The Radiation Test Beamline at The Francis H. Burr Proton Therapy Center

E Cascio; Surajit Sarkar

A continuously variable water beam degrader is described. The advantages of this system are discussed and the equivalence of this system to the standard plastic degraders is shown by measurements of the proton energy spectrum.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2013

Selected Topics in Ultra-Low Emissivity Alpha-Particle Detection

Michael S. Gordon; Kenneth P. Rodbell; Henry H. K. Tang; Emmanuel Yashchin; E Cascio; Brendan D. McNally

In an effort to better understand the contribution of terrestrial protons to the counter background, we have developed a model to examine the production of protons, within an ionization counter from the interaction of incident neutrons on the counter material. Results of high energy proton irradiation on an UltraLo-1800 XIA alpha-particle counter are shown which indicate that the active signal discrimination is very effective at rejecting most of the detected events. A Poisson model is described which gives guidance on making appropriate measurement times and acceptance criteria for detectors with a range of backgrounds.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2017

Investigation of time-resolved proton radiography using x-ray flat-panel imaging system

K-W Jee; Rongxiao Zhang; E Bentefour; P J Doolan; E Cascio; G Sharp; J Flanz; H-M Lu

Proton beam therapy benefits from the Bragg peak and delivers highly conformal dose distributions. However, the location of the end-of-range is subject to uncertainties related to the accuracy of the relative proton stopping power estimates and thereby the water-equivalent path length (WEPL) along the beam. To remedy the range uncertainty, an in vivo measurement of the WEPL through the patient, i.e. a proton-range radiograph, is highly desirable. Towards that goal, we have explored a novel method of proton radiography based on the time-resolved dose measured by a flat panel imager (FPI). A 226 MeV pencil beam and a custom-designed range modulator wheel (MW) were used to create a time-varying broad beam. The proton imaging technique used exploits this time dependency by looking at the dose rate at the imager as a function of time. This dose rate function (DRF) has a unique time-varying dose pattern at each depth of penetration. A relatively slow rotation of the MW (0.2 revolutions per second) and a fast image acquisition (30 frames per second, ~33 ms sampling) provided a sufficient temporal resolution for each DRF. Along with the high output of the CsI:Tl scintillator, imaging with pixel binning (2  ×  2) generated high signal-to-noise data at a very low radiation dose (~0.1 cGy). Proton radiographs of a head phantom and a Gammex CT calibration phantom were taken with various configurations. The results of the phantom measurements show that the FPI can generate low noise and high spatial resolution proton radiographs. The WEPL values of the CT tissue surrogate inserts show that the measured relative stopping powers are accurate to ~2%. The panel did not show any noticeable radiation damage after the accumulative dose of approximately 3831 cGy. In summary, we have successfully demonstrated a highly practical method of generating proton radiography using an x-ray flat panel imager.

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H Lu

Harvard University

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E Bentefour

Université catholique de Louvain

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