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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Fetal dose measurements and shielding efficiency assessment in a custom setup of (192)Ir brachytherapy for a pregnant woman with breast cancer.

J. Gimeno-olmosVicente CarmonaC. Candela-juanJ.l. Ramírez-covesF. CeladaJose Perez-calatayudAlejandro TormoFrançoise LlisoMark J. RivardM.c. PujadesFacundo Ballester

subject

Adultmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentBrachytherapyBrachytherapyBiophysicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyFetal positionBreast NeoplasmsIonizing radiationLead shieldingBreast cancerFetusRadiation ProtectionPregnancymedicineHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadiometrybusiness.industryRadiotherapy Planning Computer-AssistedRadiotherapy DosageGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseIridium RadioisotopesSurgeryRadiation therapyPregnancy ComplicationsElectromagnetic shieldingFemaleImplantbusinessNuclear medicine

description

To assess the radiation dose to the fetus of a pregnant patient undergoing high-dose-rate (HDR) (192)Ir interstitial breast brachytherapy, and to design a new patient setup and lead shielding technique that minimizes the fetal dose.Radiochromic films were placed between the slices of an anthropomorphic phantom modeling the patient. The pregnant woman was seated in a chair with the breast over a table and inside a leaded box. Dose variation as a function of distance from the implant volume as well as dose homogeneity within a representative slice of the fetal position was evaluated without and with shielding.With shielding, the peripheral dose after a complete treatment ranged from 50 cGy at 5 cm from the caudal edge of the breast to0.1 cGy at 30 cm. The shielding reduces absorbed dose by a factor of two near the breast and more than an order of magnitude beyond 20 cm. The dose is heterogeneous within a given axial plane, with variations from the central region within 50%. Interstitial HDR (192)Ir brachytherapy with breast shielding can be more advantageous than external-beam radiotherapy (EBRT) from a radiation protection point of view, as long as the distance to the uterine fundus is higher than about 10 cm. Furthermore, the weight of the shielding here proposed is notably lower than that needed in EBRT.Shielded breast brachytherapy may benefit pregnant patients needing localized radiotherapy, especially during the early gestational ages when the fetus is more sensitive to ionizing radiation.

10.1016/j.ejmp.2015.01.010https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25681030