Measurement of the time structure of FLASH beams using prompt gamma rays and secondary neutrons as surrogates
Serdar Charyyev, Ruirui Liu, Xiaofeng Yang, Jun Zhou, Anees Dhabaan,, William S. Dynan, Cristina Oancea, Liyong Lin

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that pixelated semiconductor detectors can accurately monitor irradiation and scan times in FLASH radiotherapy using prompt gamma rays and secondary neutrons, enabling real-time treatment verification.
Contribution
It introduces the use of fast spectral detectors for online monitoring of FLASH beam time structure, showing high accuracy in vivo and in different irradiation scenarios.
Findings
AdvaPIX-TPX3 measures IRTs within 1% accuracy.
Prompt gamma rays are effective surrogates for primary protons.
Scan times are faster in Y-direction than in X-direction.
Abstract
We aim to investigate the feasibility of online monitoring of irradiation time (IRT) and scan time for FLASH radiotherapy using a pixelated semiconductor detector. Measurements of the time structure of FLASH irradiations were performed using fast, pixelated spectral detectors, AdvaPIX-TPX3 and Minipix-TPX3. The latter has a fraction of its sensor coated with a neutron sensitive material. With little or no dead time and an ability to resolve events that are closely spaced in time (tens of ns), both detectors can accurately determine IRTs as long as pile-ups are avoided. To avoid pile-ups, we placed the detectors beyond the Bragg peak or at a large scattering angle. We acquired prompt gamma rays and secondary neutrons and calculated IRTs based on timestamps of the first (beam-on) and the last (beam-off) charged species. We also measured scan times in x, y, and diagonal directions. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Therapy and Dosimetry · Advanced Radiotherapy Techniques · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies
