ROAD: ROtational direct Aperture optimization with a Decoupled ring-collimator for FLASH radiotherapy.

2020 
Ultra-high dose rate in radiotherapy (FLASH) has been shown to increase the therapeutic index with markedly reduced normal tissue toxicity and the same or better tumor cell killing. The challenge to achieve FLASH using X-rays, besides developing a high output linac, is to intensity-modulate the high-dose-rate X-rays so that the biological gain is not offset by the lack of physical dose conformity. In this study, we develop the ROtational direct Aperture optimization with a Decoupled ring-collimator (ROAD) to achieve simultaneous ultrafast delivery and complex dose modulation. The ROAD design includes a fast-rotating slip-ring linac and a decoupled collimator-ring with 75 pre-shaped multi-leaf-collimator (MLC) modules. The ring-source rotates at 1 rps clockwise while the ring-collimator is either static or rotating at 1 rps counterclockwise, achieving 75 (ROAD-75) or 150 (ROAD-150) equal-angular beams for one full arc. The Direct Aperture Optimization (DAO) for ROAD was formulated to include a least-square dose fidelity, an anisotropic total variation term, and a single segment term. The FLASH dose (FD) and FLASH biological equivalent dose (FBED) were computed voxelwise, with the latter using a spatiotemporal model accounting for radiolytic oxygen depletion. ROAD was compared with clinical Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) on a brain, a lung, a prostate, and a head and neck cancer patient. The mean dose rate of ROAD-75 and ROAD-150 are 76.2 Gy/s and 112 Gy/s respectively to deliver 25Gy single-fraction dose in 1s. With improved PTV homogeneity, ROAD-150 reduced [max, mean] OAR physical dose by [4.8Gy, 6.3Gy]. The average R50 and integral dose of [VMAT, ROAD-75, ROAD-150] are [4.8, 3.2, 3.2] and [89, 57, 56] Gy×Liter, respectively. The FD and FBED showed model dependent FLASH effects. The novel ROAD design achieves ultrafast dose delivery and improves physical dosimetry compared with clinical VMAT, providing a potentially viable engineering solution for X-ray FLASH radiotherapy.
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