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Purpose: Experimental assessment of inter-centre variation and absolute accuracy of stopping-power-ratio (SPR) prediction within 17 particle therapy centres of the European Particle Therapy Network.
Material And Methods: A head and body phantom with seventeen tissue-equivalent materials were scanned consecutively at the participating centres using their individual clinical CT scan protocol and translated into SPR with their in-house CT-number-to-SPR conversion. Inter-centre variation and absolute accuracy in SPR prediction were quantified for three tissue groups: lung, soft tissues and bones. The integral effect on range prediction for typical clinical beams traversing different tissues was determined for representative beam paths for the treatment of primary brain tumours as well as lung and prostate cancer.
Results: An inter-centre variation in SPR prediction (2σ) of 8.7%, 6.3% and 1.5% relative to water was determined for bone, lung and soft-tissue surrogates in the head setup, respectively. Slightly smaller variations were observed in the body phantom (6.2%, 3.1%, 1.3%). This translated into inter-centre variation of integral range prediction (2σ) of 2.9%, 2.6% and 1.3% for typical beam paths of prostate-, lung- and primary brain-tumour treatments, respectively. The absolute error in range exceeded 2% in every fourth participating centre. The consideration of beam hardening and the execution of an independent HLUT validation had a positive effect, on average.
Conclusion: The large inter-centre variations in SPR and range prediction justify the currently clinically used margins accounting for range uncertainty, which are of the same magnitude as the inter-centre variation. This study underlines the necessity of higher standardisation in CT-number-to-SPR conversion.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radonc.2021.07.019 | DOI Listing |
Lancet Reg Health Eur
September 2025
Department of Surgery, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Background: Pre-implantation biopsy may help select kidneys retrieved from elderly deceased donors for transplantation, but concerns persist that it may cause unnecessary discard of kidneys that would have provided acceptable transplant function. The PITHIA trial tested the hypothesis that introduction of a National Digital Pathology Service (NDPS) would increase the proportion of kidneys transplanted from elderly donors and/or improve their function.
Methods: A stepped-wedge cluster randomised controlled registry trial delivered the NDPS to 22 UK kidney transplant centres (clusters) in 5 sequences at four-monthly intervals, using a restricted randomisation technique to ensure similar cluster sizes in the intervention and control status.
Radiother Oncol
September 2025
Northern Centre for Cancer Care, Medical Physics, Newcastle, United Kingdom.
Introduction: Despite the increasing frequency of reirradiation (reRT) in cancer treatment, a critical lack of reliable dose constraint data remains. This study addresses this gap by collating current reRT constraints used in clinical practice across multiple centers, facilitating the development of more consistent and safer reRT guidelines.
Materials And Methods: A comprehensive survey collected data on reRT patient numbers, dose constraints, sources, and dose summation methods for 30 OARs.
Cureus
January 2025
Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Kitakyushu, JPN.
Background Achieving a balance between the utilization and limitation of carbapenems for initial sepsis therapy is imperative, yet documentation on the use of carbapenems in sepsis treatment is limited. This study aimed to ascertain the prevalence of carbapenem use in Japanese intensive care units (ICUs) and evaluate the association between its use in the initial antibiotic therapy for sepsis and patient prognosis. Methods This study is a post hoc descriptive analysis of the Focused Outcome Research on Emergency Care for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Sepsis, and Trauma (FORECAST), a multicenter, prospective cohort study conducted in 59 ICUs in Japan from January 2016 to March 2017.
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July 2024
Medical Physics Department, A.O.U. Città Della Salute E Della Scienza Di Torino, Turin, Italy.
Objectives: To assess the incidence (1 year) and the cumulative incidence (3 years) of the condition of patients accruing cumulative effective doses (CED) of ≥ 100 mSv and their variability among different hospitals. To establish and validate a reference level for the CED in patients with recurrent exposures (RERL) and provide a RERL value.
Methods: Data of CT exposure was collected in 9 similar hospitals.
Radiother Oncol
July 2023
Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Department of Radiation Oncology, Boston, MA, USA.
Background And Purpose: Studies have shown large variations in stopping-power ratio (SPR) prediction from computed tomography (CT) across European proton centres. To standardise this process, a step-by-step guide on specifying a Hounsfield look-up table (HLUT) is presented here.
Materials And Methods: The HLUT specification process is divided into six steps: Phantom setup, CT acquisition, CT number extraction, SPR determination, HLUT specification, and HLUT validation.