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          Heavy Charged-particle Interaction Data for Radiotherapy

          Closed for proposals

          Project Type

          Coordinated Research Project

          Project Code

          F43017

          CRP

          1427

          Approved Date

          6 March 2007

          Status

          Closed

          Start Date

          15 September 2007

          Expected End Date

          22 August 2011

          Completed Date

          22 August 2011

          Description

          The Coordinated Research Project on "Heavy charged-particle incretion data for radiotherapy" has been initiated to provide nuclear data that quantifies heavy charged-particle interactions with materials relevant to radiotherapy, from beam generation and collimation to the interaction of the beams with patients and detectors. The recommended data will be carefully checked against experimental charged-particle interaction data and computer-based Monte Carlo simulation

          Objectives

          The CRP was created in order to gather and assess available data and to generate new data for the interaction of heavy charged particles (protons and ions, e.g. Carbon) with the human tissue and with materials of therapeutic accelerators. Such data are required to improve the quality of the heavy charged-particle interaction database for patient dose delivery calculations in radiotherapy

          Specific objectives

          To incorporate available experimental information on charged-particle interactions into evaluated nuclear data files or nuclear data parameterizations,
          to make available existing experimental information on charged-particle data interaction relevant to radiotherapy and recommend nuclear data parameterizations and evaluated data, which can be processed and used by Monte Carlo code developers and users worldwide,
          to define and make available recommended hadronic physics settings for Monte Carlo transport codes and applications,
          to activate available human resources and to facilitate interaction and sharing of work within the community in a timely and professional manner

          Data libraries of charged-particle interactions are needed to validate the calculations using nuclear models and for direct use in other type of calculations. There are several available Monte-Carlo particle transport codes with the capability to treat the transport of nucleons, electrons, photons and heavy ions. We expect that most of the existing codes (GEANT4, SHIELD-HIT, FLUKA, PHITS, MCNP, etc.) will be modified so that they could benefit from the use of updated cross-section libraries.

          Impact

          The CRP has produced a number of measurements, calculations, and compilations of data on proton and carbon ion interaction with human tissues and accelerator structural materials that were not available before.

          Relevance

          The CRP had been strongly supported by MS where proton and ion therapy centres are planned or in operation. The observed increase in proton therapy cancer treatment worldwide highlights the importance of CRP produced data and recommendations to improve the quality and safety of patient dose delivery calculations in radiotherapy.

          CRP Publications

          Type

          Journal

          Year

          2012

          Description

          Phys. Med. Biol. 57 2393 Optimizing SHIELD-HIT for carbon ion treatmentDavid C Hansen, Armin Lühr, Nikolai Sobolevsky and Niels Bassler

          Type

          Journal

          Year

          2012

          Description

          Phys. Med. Biol. 57 4369 . Evaluation of nuclear reaction cross-sections and fragment yields in carbon beams using the SHIELD-HIT Monte Carlo code. Comparison with experiments. Martha Hultqvist, Marta Lazzeroni, Alexander Botvina, Irena Gudowska, Nikolai Sobolevsky and Anders Brahme

          Type

          Journal

          Year

          2012

          Description

          Phys. Med. Biol. 57 5169. The impact of modeling nuclear fragmentation on delivered dose and radiobiology in ion therapy. Armin Lühr, David C Hansen, Ricky Teiwes, Nikolai Sobolevsky, Oliver J?kel and Niels Bassler

          Description

          (more publications in attached file)

          Stay in touch

          Newsletter

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