Method and Apparatus for Ion Beam Bragg Peak Measurement
20170322316 ยท 2017-11-09
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61N5/1075
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61N2005/1095
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61N2005/1076
HUMAN NECESSITIES
G01T1/29
PHYSICS
International classification
A61N5/10
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A system and method for recording in real-time the duration, position, and energy of ion beams as delivered by a proton or heavy ion cancer treatment system for the purpose of calibrating the radiological system and verifying the treatment plans for various lesions. The energy of the ion beam is calculated from the beam ion depth penetration through a phantom as recorded on a two-dimensional scintillator surface which is viewed by a sensitive visible-light camera mounted in a darkened enclosure. The energy of the beam is degraded by a novel multi-step dual-slope chevron wedge phantom which creates, at a minimum, two bright spots in the camera's field of view. The distance between the centers of these two spots along with the dimensions and density of the multi-step dual-slope chevron wedge are used to calculate the Bragg Peak penetration depth of the ion beam. A computer connected to the camera measures the location and intensity of these spots during treatment delivery and archives the original beam image, spot parameters, timing, and computed beam energies to memory. Software algorithms reconstruct a mathematical description of each treatment beam. The operator can then determine discrepancies between the measured dosimetric pattern and the intended treatment or calibration pattern.
Claims
1. A multi-stepped dual-slope chevron wedge structure of known dimensions and density placed between an ion beam source and a two-dimensional sensing detector capable of providing a proportional response to the input energy.
2. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 consisting of a computer, high sensitivity camera, and two-dimensional scintillator that is capable of detecting and measuring the position and brightness of the ion beam passing through the multi-stepped dual-slope chevron wedge in real-time.
3. A dosimeter apparatus consisting of a computer and two-dimensional array of ion chambers that is capable of detecting and measuring the position and brightness of the ion beam passing through the multi-stepped dual-slope chevron wedge in real-time.
4. A dosimeter apparatus consisting of computer, film and scanner that is capable of detecting and measuring the position and brightness of the ion beam passing through the multi-stepped dual-slope chevron wedge.
5. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 that can electronically measure the Bragg Peak depth penetration of ion beams using two-dimensional images.
6. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 that can electronically measure the position and duration of pulsed ion beams.
7. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 whose multi-stepped dual-slope chevron wedge substance has water equivalent density or dimensions that can be converted to their water equivalent thickness values.
8. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 whose wedge slopes on a given step overlaps the vertical height range of the slopes on the adjacent step such that up to four Bragg Peak positions may be measured at once.
9. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 whose number of wedge steps and overall maximum height may vary with different embodiments that are compatible with different ranges of ion beam energy.
10. A dosimeter apparatus according to claim 1 that can be readily oriented to stay orthogonal to the ion beam direction path as delivered by a gantry mechanism.
11. A method using the dosimeter apparatus of claim 1 for monitoring and measuring a diagnostic ion beam treatment plan.
12. A method according to claim 11 for tailoring the dosimetric delivery of ion beam treatments using different beam energy profiles.
13. A method according to claim 11 for viewing a dosimetric pattern delivered by ion beam therapy.
14. A method according to claim 11 for outputting a dosimetric pattern delivered by ion beam therapy to a computer file in a standard format.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the present invention, objects and advantages of the invention can be more readily ascertained from the following description of a preferred embodiment when used in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
[0016]
[0017]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] Referring now to
[0022] The ion beam 3 passes through the multi-step dual-slope chevron wedge 1 entering the dosimeter detector 2 fluorescing the interior scintillator coating 4 forming an ion beam radiograph of the multi-step dual-slope chevron wedge phantom 1 vertical profile. Scintillating phosphors made up of gadolinium oxysulfides (GOS) doped with the lanthanide elements have been found to work well with proton beam energies up to 230 MeV. The visible light photons 8 from the ion beam 3 radiograph are reflected off the mirror 9 to the C-mount lens 10 attached to camera 6 that has a threshold of sensitivity of 0.01 lux or better. The camera 6 and C-mount lens 10 are adjusted so that maximum amount of scintillator 4 is visible and in focus. The camera 6 is positioned along the central axis of the detector 2 enclosure so that the center of the scintillator 4 is at the center of the field of view. Scaling factors that convert the image pixels into horizontal and vertical distances in millimeters are determined through calibration techniques using the camera and optics. The cable 5 transfers a stream of scintillator 4 images from camera 6 to the dosimeter computer 7. A point is chosen on the scintillator 4 to serve as the origin for the Cartesian coordinate system used in analyzing the scintillator 4 images and calculating the XY values for regions on the ion beam radiograph using the camera scaling factors.
[0023] Referring now to
[0024] The dimensions shown in
[0025] Referring now to
[0026] Referring now to
[0027] Referring now to
[0028] The use of the multi-stepped dual-slope chevron wedge phantom 1 enables the dosimeter detector 2 and computer 7 to measure the energy of ion beam 3 that illuminates the entire phantom footprint. The brightest image regions shown in
[0029] Diagnostic treatment plans on the ion therapy system can then be created to deliver a number of beams 3 of different energies directed at the phantom. The computer 7 can be readily programmed to detect beam activity on the scintillator 4 image, and if present, save the beam image and the number of camera frames that the beam persists into memory in real-time as the treatment plan is delivered.
[0030] Once captured, the sequence of beam energies can be measured from the radiographic scintillator 4 images and the beam energy measurements can be archived to a disk file. Once saved to disk in a Comma Separated Value format or as a DICOM file, the measurements can be compared by the operator to the treatment plan beam energies identifying any differences between the intended and measured penetration depths.
[0031] While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a preferred embodiment thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.