Electron FLASH Delivery at Treatment Room Isocenter for Efficient Reversible Conversion of a Clinical LINAC
Mahbubur Rahman, M. Ramish Ashraf, Rongxiao Zhang, Petr Bruza, Chad A., Dexter, Lawrence Thompson, Xu Cao, Benjamin B. Williams, P. Jack Hoopes,, Brian W. Pogue, David J. Gladstone

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a rapid, reversible method to convert a clinical LINAC for electron FLASH radiation delivery at the treatment room isocenter, maintaining beam quality and enabling efficient switching between FLASH and conventional modes.
Contribution
Developed a quick, practical procedure for reversible LINAC conversion to deliver electron FLASH beams with stable output and minimal modifications, suitable for clinical settings.
Findings
Achieved 0.86 Gy dose per pulse at 310 Gy/s average dose rate.
Beam parameters remained within clinical tolerance after reverting to conventional mode.
Reversible conversion process took approximately 20 minutes.
Abstract
Purpose: In this study, procedures were developed to achieve efficient reversible conversion of a clinical linear accelerator (LINAC) and deliver electron FLASH (eFLASH) or conventional beams to the treatment room isocenter. Material & Methods: The LINAC was converted to deliver eFLASH beam within 20 minutes by retracting the x-ray target from the beam's path, positioning the carousel on an empty port, and selecting 10 MV photon beam energy in the treatment console. Dose per pulse and average dose rate were measured in a solid water phantom at different depths with Gafchromic film and OSLD. A pulse controller counted the pulses via scattered radiation signal and gated the delivery for preset pulse count. A fast photomultiplier tube-based Cherenkov detector measured per pulse beam output at 2 ns sampling rate. After conversion back to clinical mode, conventional beam output, flatness,…
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