The impact of treatment parameter variation on secondary neutron spectra in high-energy electron beam radiotherapy

Abstract

High-energy electron treatment procedures in radiotherapy pose a potential iatrogenic cancer risk as well as a critical health risk to patients with cardiac implantable electronic devices due to the generation of secondary neutrons in the linac head, the treatment room, and the patient. It may be argued that the neutron production from photons is well characterized, but the same is not true for electrons. Therefore, to assess the risk involved in an electron treatment, one must determine the neutron flux spectrum generated by the treatment procedure. The neutron spectrum depends on the treatment parameters used and therefore it is crucial to study its dependence on these parameters. In this work, eight experiments were devised to analyze how eight electron treatment parameters impacted the neutron spectrum. The parameters we considered were the electron beam energy, location of measurement, cutout size, collimator size, applicator size, collimator angle, choice of treatment room, and the presence or absence of a solid water phantom. For each experiment, we used a Nested Neutron Spectrometer™ (NNS) to measure the neutron flux spectra for multiple settings of the treatment parameter of interest. The resulting spectra were plotted and compared. We found that the electron beam energy and the location of measurement had the most impact on the neutron flux spectra, while the other parameters had a smaller or insignificant impact. This report may serve as a reference tool for medical physicists to help estimate the risk associated with a particular high-energy electron treatment procedure.

Publication
In Physica Medica
Felix Mathew
Felix Mathew
PhD Student
Logan Montgomery
Logan Montgomery
PhD Student
John Kildea
John Kildea
Associate Professor (tenured) of Medical Physics