A Geant4 based simulation platform of the HollandPTC R&D proton beamline for radiobiological studies

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

C. F. Groenendijk (TU Delft - RST/Medical Physics & Technology)

M. Rovituso (Holland Proton Therapy Centre)

D. Lathouwers (TU Delft - RST/Reactor Physics and Nuclear Materials)

J. M.C. Brown (Swinburne University of Technology, TU Delft - RST/Medical Physics & Technology)

Research Group
RST/Medical Physics & Technology
Copyright
© 2023 C.F. Groenendijk, M. Rovituso, D. Lathouwers, J.M.C. Brown
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmp.2023.102643
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 C.F. Groenendijk, M. Rovituso, D. Lathouwers, J.M.C. Brown
Research Group
RST/Medical Physics & Technology
Volume number
112
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Abstract

A Geant4 based simulation platform of the Holland Proton Therapy Centre (HollandPTC, Netherlands) R&D beamline (G4HPTC-R&D) was developed to enable the planning, optimisation and advanced dosimetry for radiobiological studies. It implemented a six parameter non-symmetrical Gaussian pencil beam surrogate model to simulate the R&D beamline in both a pencil beam and passively scattered field configuration. Three different experimental proton datasets (70 MeV, 150 MeV, and 240 MeV) of the pencil beam envelope evolution in free air and depth-dose profiles in water were used to develop a set of individual parameter surrogate functions to enable the modelling of the non-symmetrical Gaussian pencil beam properties with only the ProBeam isochronous cyclotron mean extraction proton energy as input. This refined beam model was then benchmarked with respect to three independent experimental datasets of the R&D beamline operating in both a pencil beam configuration at 120 and 200 MeV, and passively scattered field configuration at 150 MeV. It was shown that the G4HPTC-R&D simulation platform can reproduce the pencil beam envelope evolution in free air and depth-dose profiles to within an accuracy on the order of ±5% for all tested energies, and that it was able to reproduce the 150 MeV passively scattered field to the specifications need for clinical and radiobiological applications.