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posted by janrinok on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:29AM   Printer-friendly

Cancer: Giving entire course of radiation treatment in less than a second is feasible: Findings related to FLASH radiotherapy could pave a new path for the future for cancer therapy:

[The study's co-senior author James M. Metz, MD] noted that other research teams have generated similar doses using electrons, which do not penetrate deep enough into the body to be clinically useful as a cancer treatment for internal tumors. Other groups have tried the approach with conventional photons, but currently available treatment devices do not have the ability to generate the necessary dosage. This study shows, that with technical modifications, the currently available accelerators for protons can achieve FLASH doses with the biologic effects today.

The key for the Penn team was the ability to generate the dose with protons, and even in that setting, researchers had to specially develop the tools needed to effectively and accurately measure radiation doses, since the standard detectors were quickly saturated due to the high levels of radiation. The Roberts Proton Therapy Center includes a dedicated research room to run experiments like these, allowing investigators to use photon and proton radiation side-by-side just feet from the clinic. It's one of the few facilities in the world with those unique features, and Metz said this infrastructure is what made Penn's FLASH experiments possible.

"We've been able to develop specialized systems in the research room to generate FLASH doses, demonstrate that we can control the proton beam, and perform a large number of experiments to help us understand the implications of FLASH radiation that we simply could not have done with a more traditional research setup," Metz said.


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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by PiMuNu on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:33PM (1 child)

    by PiMuNu (3823) on Tuesday January 14 2020, @04:33PM (#943126)

    > probably it would be rather cool if one had a "mask" one could program like a pixel monitor

    For conventional (x-ray) radiotherapy they in fact have a motorised shield that does exactly what you propose. For proton therapy, indeed the beam scans across the tumour; and because hadrons have a relatively well-controlled depth at which energy is deposited, the scan can actually be 3-dimensional by tuning the proton energy.

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  • (Score: 2) by Muad'Dave on Wednesday January 15 2020, @04:02PM

    by Muad'Dave (1413) on Wednesday January 15 2020, @04:02PM (#943634)

    because hadrons have a relatively well-controlled depth at which energy is deposited

    For more info read about the Bragg peak [wikipedia.org].