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News
Joint Seminar, Computer Science and Mechanical, Aerospace and Nuclear Engineering
Radiation Treatment Involving Moving Targets
Dr. Harald Paganetti
Massachusetts General Hospital
Tuesday, March 7, 2006
Sage 3510 - 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Refreshments at 3:50 p.m.
Abstract:
Dynamic radiation therapy involves variable geometries. While
intensity-modulated photon therapy is based on moving leafs in a multi-leaf
collimator, intensity modulated proton therapy is based on changing
magnetic fields. Conventional proton therapy using a scattering system is
based on time-dependent range modulator settings. In addition to time-dependent
beam properties, the patient geometry may be time dependent due to respiratory
or cardiac motion. Monte Carlo simulations can be applied to model
electro-mechanical motion in the treatment head and to model respiratory
organ motion. 4D Monte Carlo allows continuously changing geometrical setup
during simulation.
At Massachusetts General Hospital we are able to simulate all clinically
used treatment head configurations for proton and photon treatments. For
organ motion studies, 4D dose calculation is applied using patient specific
4D CT information. To accumulate dose deposition over different respiratory
patient states, the position of each voxel as a function of time has to be
known. The tracking of voxel positions over time is done using deformable
image registration algorithms, which generate voxel displacement maps.
These are transformation matrices to correlate different respiratory states
describing positional voxel changes within a particular volume between
different points in time. The local dose is calculated as a function of
moving sub-volumes and not as a function of position relative to a specific
coordinate system.
Bio:
Dr. Harald Paganetti is currently a biophysicist at Massachusetts
General Hospital and an assistant professor of radiation oncology at
Harvard Medical School. Dr. Paganetti is an active member of AAPM, serving
on study sections for NIH and is a consultant for the ICRU. His main research
areas are Monte Carlo dose calculation for quality assurance and dose
calculation in proton beam therapy, four-dimensional Monte Carlo dose
calculation, relative biological effectiveness of proton beams, dose rate
effects in intensity modulated radiation therapy, secondary dose in radiation
therapy, and PET/CT imaging in proton therapy. His Monte Carlo code is currently
the only clinically used proton Monte Carlo dose calculation package worldwide.
For his innovative idea of four-dimensional Monte Carlo he received an R01
grant by NIH. Besides his dominant role in proton Monte Carlo simulations,
he has published more papers on modeling proton biology than anybody else
in the field. He also collaborates with Dr. George Xu at RPI on using the
VIP-Man patient models for radiation treatment.
Hosted by: Daniel Freedman (Computer Science, x4785), George Xu (MANE, x4014)
Last updated: February 27, 2006
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