Physics-driven innovations toward the democratization of proton therapy
Vivek Maradia, Martin Bues

TL;DR
This review discusses how physics innovations in proton therapy, including compact designs and rapid delivery, can reduce costs and improve accessibility, enabling broader global adoption.
Contribution
It reframes proton therapy adoption as a physics problem, identifying key bottlenecks and proposing physics-based solutions to enhance accessibility and cost-effectiveness.
Findings
Compact architectures reduce facility size and cost
Fast delivery times improve throughput and suppress motion effects
Physics-driven innovations support broader adoption of proton therapy
Abstract
Proton therapy exploits the finite range of charged particles in tissue to achieve dose distributions no photon based modality can replicate. Yet the modality reaches fewer than 1 percent of patients who might benefit a gap rooted in cost and complexity rather than clinical evidence. This Review reframes proton therapy adoption as a physics problem. Two fundamental bottlenecks are identified: cost, arising from scaling laws governing accelerator design, beam transport, and radiation shielding; and motion, arising from the spatiotemporal mismatch between sequential pencil beam scanning and respiratory tumour displacement. We trace how successive compact architectures from gantry-integrated energy selection to gantry mounted accelerators and upright fixed beam systems have progressively reduced facility scale toward LINAC like simplicity and cost-effectiveness. An economic physics…
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