Dose modification factors for
192Ir high-dose-rate irradiation
using Monte Carlo simulations
Bassel Kassas,1 Firas Mourtada,2 John L. Horton,2 Richard G. Lane,2 Thomas A. Buchholz,3 and Eric A. Strom3
Radiation Oncology Department,1 Greater Baltimore Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland 21204 U.S.A.; Radiation Physics Department,2 Radiation Oncology Division,3 The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030 U.S.A.
bkassas@gbmc.orgReceived 27 April 2005; accepted 8 June 2006
A recently introduced brachytherapy system for partial breast irradiation, MammoSite, consists of a balloon applicator filled with contrast solution and a catheter for insertion of an 192Ir high-dose-rate (HDR) source. In using this system, the treatment dose is typically prescribed to be delivered 1 cm from the balloon's surface. Most treatment-planning systems currently in use for brachytherapy procedures use water-based dosimetry with no correction for heterogeneity. Therefore, these systems assume that full scatter exists regardless of the amount of tissue beyond the prescription line. This assumption might not be a reasonable one, especially when the tissue beyond the prescription line is thin. In such a case, the resulting limited scatter could cause an underdose to be delivered along the prescription line. We used Monte Carlo simulations to investigate how the thickness of the tissue between the surface of the balloon and the skin or lung affected the treatment dose delivery. Calculations were based on a spherical water phantom with a diameter of 30 cm and balloons with diameters of 4 cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm. The dose modification factor is defined as the ratio of the dose rate at the typical prescription distance of 1 cm from the balloon's surface with full scatter obtained using the water phantom to the dose rate with a finite tissue thickness (from 0 cm to 10 cm) beyond the prescription line. The dose modification factor was found to be dependent on the balloon diameter and was 1.098 for the 4-cm balloon and 1.132 for the 6-cm balloon with no tissue beyond the prescription distance at the breast-skin interface. The dose modification factor at the breast-lung interface was 1.067 for the 4-cm balloon and 1.096 for the 6-cm balloon. Even 5 cm of tissue beyond the prescription distance could not result in full scatter. Thus, we found that considering the effect of diminished scatter is important to accurate dosimetry. Not accounting for the dose modification factor may result in delivering a lower dose than is prescribed.
PACS number: 87.53.Jw
Key words: Monte Carlo, MammoSite, HDR, brachytherapy, partial breast irradiation
I. INTRODUCTION
A new high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy system,
the MammoSite Radiation Therapy System (Proxima Therapeutics Inc.,
Alpharetta, GA), has been introduced recently to deliver partial
breast irradiation after a lumpectomy for early-stage breast
cancer.(1-5) The system is designed to
treat the tissue immediately surrounding the lumpectomy cavity by
inserting a multilumen balloon catheter into the cavity at the time
of the surgery or shortly thereafter. The balloon, which is
currently available in two sizes (4 cm to 5 cm and 5 cm to 6 cm), is
then inflated with a contrast solution. This causes the tissue to
shape into an approximately spherical shell conforming to the
balloon's surface. The HDR source is then loaded into the
center of the balloon for a specified duration to deliver the
prescribed dose fraction.
A
typical treatment prescription is 34 Gy delivered in fractions of
3.4 Gy twice per day for 5 days with a minimum of 6 h between
fractions. The dose typically is prescribed to be delivered 1 cm
from the balloon's surface. This prescription line
introduces a restriction on the distance from the balloon's
surface to the skin to limit the dose delivered to the skin and
avoid the probability of a poor cosmetic outcome. Therefore, a
distance of 5 mm to 7 mm between the skin and the balloon's
surface is commonly used as a minimum for such treatments.(5)
One
shortcoming of current brachytherapy treatment-planning systems is
that they use waterbased dosimetry with no correction for
heterogeneity. These systems assume that full scatter exists in
clinical applications regardless of the amount of tissue beyond the
prescription line. However, this assumption might not be a
reasonable one, especially when the tissue beyond the prescription
line is thin. In such a case, we believed that the resulting limited
scatter could cause an underdose to be delivered along the
prescription line. To investigate this possibility, the lack of full
scatter resulting from the limited thickness of the tissue between
the balloon's surface and the breast'ss interface
with skin or lung tissue was modeled using Monte Carlo simulations
for a range of balloon diameters and tissue thicknesses.
II. MATERIALS AND METHODS
The modeling in this study was based on the
techniques used in a previously reported investigation of the
effects of contrast on dosimetry in this procedure.(6) The phantom was a sphere with a diameter
of 30 cm, and the balloon was assumed to be a sphere positioned at
the center of the phantom. Three balloon diameters were simulated (4
cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm) to model all potential clinical applications
covered by the manufacturer's recommendations. The effects
of the silicone balloon wall and nylon catheter were assumed to be
negligible. The material inside the balloon was assumed to be water
(11.2% H and 88.8% O by weight). The breast tissue outside the
balloon was also modeled as water. In the case of the skin
interface, the material beyond the breast tissue was assumed to be
dry air (75.53% N, 23.18% O, 1.28% Ar, and 0.0124% C by weight).(7) In the case of the lung interface, the
material beyond the breast tissue was assumed to be the lung
composition reported by the Medical Internal Radiation Dose
Committee,(8) limited to 12 elements
(H, C, N, O, Mg, P, S, Ca, Cl, K, Na, and Fe) with a density of
0.2958 g cm-3. Other elements
collectively account for less than 0.005% of lung tissue by weight
and thus were not included in our simulations. For the full scatter
simulations, all the phantom material within the 30-cm sphere was
assumed to be water. The dose modification factor is defined here as
the ratio of the dose rate 1 cm from the balloon's surface
with full scatter to the dose rate with a finite tissue thickness
beyond the prescription line.
The
source simulated in this study was the MicroSelectron HDR 192Ir source (v2, model no. 105.002;
Nucletron B.V., Veenendaal, Netherlands), which has been described
in detail by Daskalov et al.(9) The
modeled source is a 100% solid iridium metal cylinder, 3.6 mm in
length and 0.65 mm in diameter with beveled edges. The beveled edges
of the solid iridium cylinder were not modeled in this simulation.
The effect of not including the rounded edges is considered to be
negligible to the dose rate along the bisector axis perpendicular to
the long axis of the source. A density of 22.42 g cm-3 is used for
the core. The radioactivity is uniformly distributed within the
metal source. A stainless steel shell encapsulates the source. The
capsule is a cylinder of 0.9 mm outer diameter, 0.7 mm inner
diameter, and 4.5 mm length. An air gap of 0.1 mm thickness exists
between the metallic core and the capsule. One end of the capsule is
rounded with a half-sphere of radius 0.45 mm. The other end is
beveled and welded to a stainless steel cable. The beveled end of
the capsule is modeled with a cone. The cable is a cylinder of 0.7
mm diameter and 200 mm length. Only 7.5 mm of cable is modeled in
this study. The stainless steel used in all components is AISI 316L
steel of 8.02 g cm-3 density with the
following elemental composition, by weight: 2% Mn, 1% Si, 17% Cr,
12% Ni, and 68% Fe.
The photon
energy spectrum of the simulated 192Ir
source was taken from the U.S. Department of Energy Radioactive
Decay Tables.(10) The photon energy
spectrum includes 26 energies with 2.36 particles per
disintegration. The energy spectrum ranges from 8.91 keV to 871.73
keV. Beta particles emitted from the source were not included
because they will not contribute to dose outside the source due to
their short ranges. The photon emission from the cylindrical source
is assumed to be isotropic.
The
software used to perform the simulation was the Monte Carlo
N-particle transport code MCNPX (v2.4.0; Los Alamos National
Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM).(11) The
code was used to calculate the energy deposited per unit volume in
the phantom. To yield fine resolution in the calculations, this
simulation used a cylindrical tallying grid in increments of 1 mm
along the radial axis (the difference between the radii of
consecutive concentric cylinders) and width of 0.1 mm wide (the
cylinder height) centered at the core of the source. The tallying
grid covered distances from the balloon's surface to the
end of the phantom. The phantom and the tallying grid are shown in
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1. Monte Carlo model phantom geometry. (a) The HDR source is centered inside a spherical inner balloon with a concentric outer sphere, which represents a patient’s tissue. (b) The tallying grid consists of concentric cylinders of increasing radii centered at the core of the source. |
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|---|---|---|
Cross-sectional data
for all photon and electron interactions were taken from the
Evaluated Nuclear Data File, vB-VI,(11)
and the MCNPX simulation accounted for Compton scattering, the
photoelectric effect, and coherent scattering. Characteristic X-rays
produced by photoelectric absorption were also included in the
calculations. The photon cutoff energy was set at 2 keV, which is
adequate for the present grid resolution. Because of the low
energies of photons emitted by the 192Ir source, secondary charged-particle
equilibrium can be assumed to exist, and the absorbed dose can
therefore be approximated by collision kerma calculations.(12) To reduce the uncertainty of the Monte
Carlo calculations to less than 0.5%, histories of 10 000 000
photons were tracked for each MCNPX simulation.
Dose rates were normalized to air
kerma strength. The air kerma strength was calculated by MCNPX using
a separate simulation in which the source was centered in a sphere
of 5 m diameter with composition of dry air. The air kerma strength
was calculated 1 m from the center of the source. The cylindrical
grid used for this calculation had a larger scoring bin width of 1
cm and a step of 0.6 cm in order to achieve adequate uncertainty in
the Monte Carlo calculations.
III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The Monte Carlo model was validated against the
dosimetry characterization work of the same HDR 192Ir source performed by Daskalov et al.
(1998).(9) The dose rates at various
distances from the center of the source (along the bisector of the
source) in water were compared. Daskalov et al. used a different
Monte Carlo computer code and energy spectrum. The source geometry
used by Daskalov et al. is the same as that applied here with slight
differences in the modeling of the beveled edges of the core and
capsule. However, these minor differences have negligible
contribution to the present calculations performed away from the
source along the bisector axis. The dose rate constant (defined as
the dose rate per unit air kerma strength at 1 cm in water) obtained
in the present calculations is 1.107 ± 0.22% cGy h-1 U-1 while
that reported by Daskalov et al. is 1.108 ± 0.13% cGy h-1 U-1. This is
also in agreement with their thermoluminescent dosimeter measurement
of the dose rate constant, which varied from 1.10 to 1.12 cGy h-1 U-1.
Corresponding dose rates reported by Daskalov et al. at distances of
1.5 cm, 2 cm, 2.5 cm, 3 cm, and 5 cm were all within 0.6% of the
present calculations. The air kerma strength 1 m from the center of
the source obtained in the present calculation and used to normalize
the dose rates was 3.624 ± 0.16% U per mCi (0.098 U per MBq) of
contained activity.
The dose
modification factors at the prescription line 1 cm from the
balloon's surface near the breast-skin interface for
balloon diameters of 4 cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm and tissue thicknesses
ranging from 0 cm to 10 cm beyond the prescription line are plotted
in Fig. 2. In clinical applications, it would be rare to have much
tissue beyond about 5 cm from the prescription line. However, the
range was extended to 10 cm to better illustrate the amount of
tissue needed for full scatter and for the sake of completeness. The
dose modification factors for the breast- skin interface when there
was no tissue beyond the prescription line (i.e., only 1 cm of
breast tissue existed between the balloon's surface and the
skin) were 1.098, 1.112, and 1.132 for the 4-cm, 5-cm, and 6-cm
balloons, respectively. Therefore, even when the procedure criterion
for a minimum of 1 cm between the balloon's surface and the
skin was met, the reduction in the dose rate resulting from the lack
of full scatter was approximately 10% (range, 9% to 12%, depending
on the balloon's diameter). Furthermore, the simulations
showed that 5 cm of breast tissue beyond the prescription line (6 cm
of tissue between the balloon's surface and the skin) could
not result in full scatter, with dose modification factors ranging
from 1.012 for the smallest balloon to 1.028 for the largest. Ye et
al.(13,14) reported similar results,
with a 3% to 9% dose rate reduction at the prescription line in
Monte Carlo simulations of a balloon with a diameter of 4.5 cm,
depending on the amount of tissue between the balloon's
surface and the skin.
Fig. 2. Dose modification factors at the prescription line 1 cm from the balloon’s surface with various breast tissue thicknesses between the prescription line and the breast–skin interface |
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|---|---|---|
The dose modification factors at the prescription line 1 cm from the balloon's surface near the breast-lung interface for balloon diameters of 4 cm, 5 cm, and 6 cm and breast tissue thicknesses ranging from 0 cm to 10 cm beyond the prescription line are plotted in Fig. 3. The factors for the breast-lung interface were lower than those for the breast-skin interface. This is, of course, because lung tissue is so much denser than air and thus provides more scatter than air does. The dose modification factor for the breast-lung interface ranged from 1.067 when there was no additional breast tissue beyond the prescription line to 1.009 when there was 5 cm of tissue beyond the prescription line for the 4-cm balloon. For the largest balloon, the dose modification factors were 1.096 and 1.023 with 0 cm and 5 cm of breast tissue beyond the prescription line, respectively. Thus, the reduction in the dose rate resulting from the lack of full scatter was approximately as high as 6% to 9%, depending on the balloon's diameter. In addition, as in the case of the breast-skin interface, even with 5 cm of breast tissue beyond the prescription line, full scatter did not exist.
Fig. 3. Dose modification factors at the prescription line 1 cm from the balloon’s surface with various breast tissue thicknesses between the prescription line and the breast–lung interface |
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Although it is
generally not strictly followed, the criterion for the minimum
distance from the balloon's surface to the lung is
typically the same as for the distance from the balloon's
surface to the skin. Therefore, even if this criterion is met, the
reduction in the dose resulting from the lack of scatter can still
be considerable. It can be argued that the bone in the chest wall
might provide additional scatter, so the scatter effect at the
breast-lung interface therefore might not be as pronounced as our
simulations indicated. However, the presence of bone in the chest
wall would affect the dose rate only over a limited region, so it
was not modeled in this study.
It
is possible to compensate for a lack of tissue beyond the
prescription line by adding bolus. The present results showed that
the effect of added bolus was appreciable with the first 2 cm of
thickness but diminished beyond 5 cm. Some clinical trials have
shown adverse effects on the skin.(1-3,15) These adverse effects may actually
be caused at lower doses than previously reported when heterogeneity
is accounted for and the lack of full scatter is considered.
The present modeling assumes full
symmetry with air or lung surrounding the entire 3D geometry.
Although this procedure typically is treated with balloon-source
symmetry of ±2 mm along the orthogonal bisector plane of the source,
various amounts of tissue would be present at different angles in
the clinical cases rather than a constant tissue thickness at all
angles, as the present simulations were performed. By averaging the
factors at various tissue thicknesses over multiple angular sectors,
one can obtain an average dose modification factor for the implant.
In addition, dose optimization techniques can be developed with
multiple dwell positions to account for this dose modification.
Because the Association of
Physicists in Medicine Task Group 40 recommendation for
intracavitary brachytherapy allows for ±15% in the delivery of the
prescribed dose rather than the ±5% limit expected for external beam
therapy,(16) the reduction in the dose
resulting from the lack of full scatter coupled with the reduction
from the use of high atomic number contrast material (which causes a
dose rate reduction in the range of 1% to 6%)(6,17,18) can result in considerable
uncertainty. A comparison of the dosimetry with and without a
correction for heterogeneity may, therefore, be helpful, especially
in cases in which there is not much tissue beyond the prescription
line and the procedure uses a large balloon with a highly
concentrated contrast material. One should keep in mind that most
breast tumor recurrences are in or near the original tumor bed,(19) which is the region this procedure is
intended to cover. Therefore, adequate coverage is essential, and it
is important to consider the effect of diminished scatter to achieve
adequate dosimetry.
IV. CONCLUSION
Our Monte Carlo simulations showed dose rate reductions of 9% for the smallest balloon and 12% for the largest balloon when the criterion for the minimum distance between the balloon's surface and the skin was met. The dose reduction at the breast-lung interface was 6% for the smallest balloon and 9% for the largest. The dose reduction, therefore, warrants comparing plans with a correction for heterogeneity and plans that assume homogeneity. Not accounting for the dose modification factors may result in delivery of a lower dose than is prescribed. Our findings also show the importance of ensuring the required minimum distance between the balloon's surface and the breast's interfaces with both the lung and skin for accurate dosimetry in this brachytherapy procedure.
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