Characterization of 250 MeV protons from Varian ProBeam pencil beam scanning system for FLASH radiation therapy
Serdar Charyyev, Chih-Wei Chang, Mingyao Zhu, Liyong Lin, Katja, Langen, Anees Dhabaan

TL;DR
This study characterizes 250 MeV protons from a Varian ProBeam system for FLASH radiation therapy, evaluating beam parameters, dose rate capabilities, and the clinical monitoring ionization chamber's performance for high-dose-rate treatments.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of 250 MeV protons for FLASH RT and assesses the clinical ionization chamber's suitability for monitoring ultra-high dose rates.
Findings
Achieved FLASH dose rate (>40 Gy/s) with 250 MeV protons.
Determined maximum field size for FLASH dose rate as 35x35 mm².
Found dose rate depends on beam current, spot spacing, and arrangement.
Abstract
Recently, shoot-through proton FLASH has been proposed where the highest energy is extracted from the cyclotron to maximize the dose rate (DR). Even though our proton pencil beam scanning system can deliver 250 MeV (the highest energy), it is not typical to use 250 MeV protons for routine clinical treatments and as such 250 MeV may not have been characterized in the commissioning. In this study, we aim to characterize 250 MeV protons from Varian ProBeam system for FLASH RT as well as assess the ability of clinical monitoring ionization chamber (MIC) for FLASH-readiness. We measured data needed for beam commissioning: integral depth dose (IDD) curve, spot sigma, and absolute dose calibration. To evaluate MIC, we measured output as a function of beam current. To characterize a 250 MeV FLASH beam, we measured: (1) central axis DR as a function of current and spot spacing and arrangement,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Therapy and Dosimetry · Radiation Effects in Electronics · Advanced Radiotherapy Techniques
