IFEG   20353
INSTITUTO DE FISICA ENRIQUE GAVIOLA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Calculation of electron and isotopes dose point kernels with FLUKA Monte Carlo code for dosimetry in nuclear medicine therapy
Autor/es:
F. BOTTA; M VALENTE; A. MAIRANI ; G. BATTISTONI; M. CREMONESI ; A. DI DIA; A. FASSO ; A. FERRARI ; M. FERRARI; G. PAGANELLI ; G. PEDROLI
Revista:
MEDICAL PHYSICS
Editorial:
AMER ASSOC PHYSICISTS MEDICINE AMER INST PHYSICS
Referencias:
Año: 2011 vol. 38 p. 3944 - 3954
ISSN:
0094-2405
Resumen:
Purpose: The calculation of patient-specific dose distribution can be achieved by Monte Carlo simu- lations or by analytical methods. In this study, FLUKA Monte Carlo code has been considered for use in nuclear medicine dosimetry. Up to now, FLUKA has mainly been dedicated to other fields, namely high energy physics, radiation protection, and hadrontherapy. When first employing a Monte Carlo code for nuclear medicine dosimetry, its results concerning electron transport at energies typical of nuclear medicine applications need to be verified. This is commonly achieved by means of calcula- tion of a representative parameter and comparison with reference data. Dose point kernel (DPK), quantifying the energy deposition all around a point isotropic source, is often the one. Methods: FLUKA DPKS have been calculated in both water and compact bone for monoenergetic electrons (10?3 MeV) and for beta emitting isotopes commonly used for therapy (89Sr, 90Y, 131I, 153 Sm, 177Lu, 186Re, and 188Re). Point isotropic sources have been simulated at the center of a water (bone) sphere, and deposed energy has been tallied in concentric shells. FLUKA outcomes have been compared to PENELOPE v.2008 results, calculated in this study as well. Moreover, in case of monoe- nergetic electrons in water, comparison with the data from the literature (ETRAN, GEANT4, MCNPX) has been done. Maximum percentage differences within 0.8ÁRCSDA and 0.9ÁRCSDA for monoenergetic electrons (RCSDA being the continuous slowing down approximation range) and within 0.8ÁX90 and 0.9ÁX90 for isotopes (X90 being the radius of the sphere in which 90% of the emitted energy is absorbed) have been computed, together with the average percentage difference within 0.9ÁRCSDA and 0.9ÁX90 for electrons and isotopes, respectively. Results: Concerning monoenergetic electrons, within 0.8ÁRCSDA (where 90%?97% of the particle energy is deposed), FLUKA and PENELOPE agree mostly within 7%, except for 10 and 20 keV electrons (12% in water, 8.3% in bone). The discrepancies between FLUKA and the other codes are of the same order of magnitude than those observed when comparing the other codes among them, which can be referred to the different simulation algorithms. When considering the beta spectra, discrep- ancies notably reduce: within 0.9ÁX90, FLUKA and PENELOPE differ for less than 1% in water and less than 2% in bone with any of the isotopes here considered. Complete data of FLUKA DPKs are given as Supplementary Material as a tool to perform dosimetry by analytical point kernel convolution. Conclusions: FLUKA provides reliable results when transporting electrons in the low energy range, C proving to be an adequate tool for nuclear medicine dosimetry