For longitudinal linac-MR systems only a small increase in the entrance skin dose is predicted, due to the rapid decay of the realistic magnetic fringe fields. For transverse linac-MR systems, changes to the entrance skin dose are small for most scenarios. For the same geometry, on the exit side a fairly large increase is observed for perpendicular beams, but significantly drops for large oblique angles of incidence. The observed effects on skin dose are not expected to limit the application of linac-MR systems in either the longitudinal or transverse configuration.
In an effort to achieve higher quality images and a reduction in hot and cold spots in the treatment plan, a parallel configuration linac-MR system is presented. The longitudinal magnetic fields of the MR imager caused large beam losses within the electron gun. These losses may be eliminated through a redesign of the electron gun optics incorporating a longitudinal magnetic field, or through magnetic shielding, which has already been proven successful for the transverse configuration.
A ≥99% original target current is recovered with passive shield thicknesses >0.75 mm. An active shield consisting of two current rings of diameter of 110 mm with 625 and 430 A-turns fully recovers the loss that would have been caused by the magnetic fields. The minimal passive or active shielding requirements to essentially fully recover the current output of the linac in our parallel-configured linac-MR system have been determined and are easily achieved for practical implementation of the system.
Purpose Real‐time magnetic resonance (MR) guidance is of interest to various groups globally because the superior soft tissue contrast MR images offer over other x‐ray‐based imaging modalities. Because of the precision required in proton therapy, proton therapy treatments rely heavily on image guidance. Integrating a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) into a proton therapy treatment is a challenge. The charged particles (protons) used in proton therapy experience magnetic forces when travelling through the MRI magnetic fields. Given that it is desired that proton beams can be delivered with submillimeter accuracy, it is important that all potential sources of beam displacement are well modeled and understood. This study investigated the behavior of monoenergetic proton beams in the presence of a simulated set of realistic three‐dimensional (3D) vector magnetic gradient fields required for spatial localization during imaging. This deflecting source has not been previously investigated. Methods Three‐dimensional magnetic vector fields from a superconducting 0.5 T open bore MRI magnet model (previously developed in‐house) and 3D magnetic fields from an in‐house gradient coil model were applied to two types of computer simulations. In all simulations, monoenergetic proton pencil beams (from 80 to 250 MeV) were used. The initial directions of proton beams were varied. In all simulations, the orientation of the B0 field coincided with the positive z‐axis in the simulation geometry. The first type of simulation is based on an analytic magnetic force equation (analytic simulations) while the second type is a full Monte Carlo (MC) simulation. The analytic simulations were limited to propagating the proton beams in vacuum but could be rapidly calculated in a desktop computer while the MC simulations were calculated in a cluster computer. The proton beam locations and dose profiles at the central plane (z = 0 cm) with or without magnetic fields were extracted and used to quantify the effect of the presence of the different magnetic fields on the proton beam. Results The analytic simulations agree with MC results within 0.025 mm, thus acting as the verification of MC calculations. The presence of the B0 field caused the beam to follow a helical trajectory which resulted in angular offsets of 4.9o, 3.6o, and 2.8o for the 80, 150, and 250 MeV, respectively. Magnetic field deflections caused by a rapid MRI sequence (bSSFP, with maximum gradient strength of 40 mT/m) show a pattern of distortion which remained spatially invariant in the MR's field of view. For the 80 MeV beam, this pattern shows a maximum ranged in the y direction of 1.5 mm. The presence of the B0 field during the bSSFP simulations adds the same beam rotation to the observed during the B0 only simulations. Conclusion This investigation reveals that time‐varying gradient magnetic fields required for image generation can cause a small spread in the proton beams used in the study which are independent of the effects arising from the B0 field. Further, studies where cl...
Accurate and efficient patient dose calculations are essential for treatment planning in magnetic resonance imaging guided radiotherapy (MRIgRT). Achieving reasonable performance for a space-angle discontinuous finite element method (DFEM) grid based Boltzmann solver (GBBS) with magnetic fields for clinical MRIgRT applications largely depends on how the transport sweep is orchestrated. Compared to classical Discrete Ordinates, DFEM in angle introduces increased angular degrees of freedom and eliminates ray-effect artifacts. However, the inclusion of magnetic fields introduces additional serial dependencies such that parallelization of the space-angle transport sweeps becomes more challenging. Novel techniques for the transport sweep and right-hand source assembly are developed, predicated on limiting the number of bulk material densities modeled in the transport sweep scatter calculations. Specifically, k-means clustering is used to assign sub-intervals of mass-density for each spatial element to execute the scatter-dose calculations using batched multiplication by pre-inverted transport sweep matrices. This is shown to be two orders of magnitude more efficient than solving each elemental system individually at runtime. Even with discrete material densities used in the transport sweep scatter calculations, accuracy is maintained by optimizing the material density assignments using k-means clustering, and by performing the primary photon fluence calculations (ray-tracing) using the underlying continuous density of the computed tomography (CT) image. In the presence of 0.5 T parallel and 1.5 T perpendicular magnetic fields, this approach demonstrates high levels of accuracy with gamma 1%/1 mm passing rates exceeding 94% across a range of anatomical sites compared to GEANT4 Monte Carlo dose calculations which used continuous densities. This deterministic GBBS approach maintains unconditional stability, produces no ray-effect artifacts, and has the benefit of no statistical uncertainty. Runtime on a non-parallelized Matlab implementation averaged 10 min per beam averaging 80 000 spatial elements, paving way for future development based on this algorithmically efficient paradigm.
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