Applied Sciences (Apr 2023)

Transformative Technology for FLASH Radiation Therapy

  • Reinhard Schulte,
  • Carol Johnstone,
  • Salime Boucher,
  • Eric Esarey,
  • Cameron G. R. Geddes,
  • Maksim Kravchenko,
  • Sergey Kutsaev,
  • Billy W. Loo,
  • François Méot,
  • Brahim Mustapha,
  • Kei Nakamura,
  • Emilio A. Nanni,
  • Lieselotte Obst-Huebl,
  • Stephen E. Sampayan,
  • Carl B. Schroeder,
  • Ke Sheng,
  • Antoine M. Snijders,
  • Emma Snively,
  • Sami G. Tantawi,
  • Jeroen Van Tilborg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app13085021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 8
p. 5021

Abstract

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The general concept of radiation therapy used in conventional cancer treatment is to increase the therapeutic index by creating a physical dose differential between tumors and normal tissues through precision dose targeting, image guidance, and radiation beams that deliver a radiation dose with high conformality, e.g., protons and ions. However, the treatment and cure are still limited by normal tissue radiation toxicity, with the corresponding side effects. A fundamentally different paradigm for increasing the therapeutic index of radiation therapy has emerged recently, supported by preclinical research, and based on the FLASH radiation effect. FLASH radiation therapy (FLASH-RT) is an ultra-high-dose-rate delivery of a therapeutic radiation dose within a fraction of a second. Experimental studies have shown that normal tissues seem to be universally spared at these high dose rates, whereas tumors are not. While dose delivery conditions to achieve a FLASH effect are not yet fully characterized, it is currently estimated that doses delivered in less than 200 ms produce normal-tissue-sparing effects, yet effectively kill tumor cells. Despite a great opportunity, there are many technical challenges for the accelerator community to create the required dose rates with novel compact accelerators to ensure the safe delivery of FLASH radiation beams.

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