Principles of Radiation Therapy

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Radiobiology - Cell Kill Chronicles

  • Primary Target: DNA; DSBs most lethal.
  • Mechanisms:
    • Direct: Direct DNA ionization.
    • Indirect: H₂O ionization → free radicals ($OH·$) → DNA damage (X/gamma rays).
  • Cell Cycle Sensitivity:
    • Most Sensitive: M & G2.
    • Most Resistant: Late S. DNA damage sources, types, and repair
  • 📌 4 Rs of Radiobiology:
    • Repair (sublethal damage)
    • Redistribution (to sensitive phases)
    • Repopulation (growth)
    • Reoxygenation (hypoxia ↓, O₂ ↑)
  • Oxygen Effect: O₂ ↑ radiosensitivity. OER: 2.5-3.5. Hypoxia → resistance.
  • LET & RBE:
    • Low LET (X-rays): Sparse ions, ↑repair, ↓RBE.
    • High LET (particles): Dense ions, ↓repair, ↑RBE (to ~100 keV/µm).

⭐ Most radiosensitive phases of the cell cycle are M and G2; most resistant is the late S phase.

Radiation Physics - Beam Me Up!

  • Key Units:
    • Absorbed Dose: Gray (Gy). $1 Gy = 1 J/kg$ (energy absorbed per unit mass).
    • Equivalent Dose (Sv): Accounts for radiation type ($W_R$).
    • Effective Dose (Sv): Accounts for tissue sensitivity ($W_T$).
  • Radiation Production & Types:
    • Photons (X-rays/Gamma rays):
      • LINACs: X-rays (Bremsstrahlung from electron-target interaction). For deep tumors.
      • Cobalt-60: Gamma rays (radioactive decay).
    • Electrons: From LINACs; treat superficial tumors (e.g., skin, nodes). Rapid dose fall-off.
  • Photon Beam Properties:
    • Interactions: Compton scattering (dominant at MV energies), Photoelectric effect, Pair production (at >1.02 MeV).
    • Depth Dose: Build-up region, then exponential fall-off. Skin sparing.
  • Inverse Square Law (ISL): Dose rate $\propto 1/d^2$. Critical for distance calculations.

⭐ Linear Accelerators (LINACs) are the workhorses of modern radiotherapy, capable of producing both photon (X-ray) and electron beams of various energies for treating a wide range of cancers.

Treatment Delivery - Zap Attack Tech

  • Goal: Maximize tumor dose, minimize normal tissue toxicity.
  • Main Modalities:
    • External Beam RT (EBRT): Source outside body.
      • Linac (Linear Accelerator): X-rays, electrons; most common.
      • Cobalt-60: Gamma rays; simpler, older.
    • Brachytherapy: Source inside/near tumor.
  • Key EBRT Techniques:
    • 3D Conformal RT (3D-CRT): Beams conform to tumor shape.
    • Intensity-Modulated RT (IMRT): Modulates beam intensity; ↑ conformity, spares Organs at Risk (OARs).
    • Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT): Rapid IMRT via rotating gantry.
    • Stereotactic Radiosurgery (SRS): Single high dose fraction (typically brain).
    • Stereotactic Body RT (SBRT): 1-5 high dose fractions (extracranial).
  • Precision Tools:
    • Image-Guided RT (IGRT): Verifies target position daily (e.g., Cone Beam CT - CBCT).
    • Particle Therapy (e.g., Protons): Bragg peak reduces exit dose. 📌 Minimizes damage beyond target.

3D-CRT vs IMRT Dose Distribution

⭐ IMRT enables dose escalation to the target while better sparing adjacent normal tissues, improving therapeutic ratio.

Radiation Effects & Safety - Damage Control Duty

  • Radiation Effects:
    • Deterministic: Threshold dose; severity ↑ with dose (e.g., mucositis, fibrosis).
    • Stochastic: No threshold; probability ↑ with dose (e.g., cancer, genetic effects).
    • Acute: Occur during/soon after RT (e.g., skin erythema, mucositis).
    • Late: Occur months/years after RT (e.g., fibrosis, necrosis, secondary malignancy).
  • Key Radiobiology (4 R's): Repair, Repopulation, Redistribution, Reoxygenation.
  • TD 5/5 (Tolerance Dose): Dose for 5% severe complication risk in 5 years.
    • Spinal Cord: 45-50 $Gy$
    • Lens (Cataract): 10 $Gy$
    • Lung (Pneumonitis): 17.5 $Gy$
  • Radiation Safety: 📌 ALARA & TDS
    • ALARA: As Low As Reasonably Achievable.
    • TDS: Time, Distance, Shielding.

⭐ Radiation protection principles are Time, Distance, and Shielding (TDS). TD5/5 and TD50/5 for Critical Structures

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • DNA damage: Primarily indirect action (free radicals) for photons.
  • Radiosensitivity: Peak in M & G2 phases, nadir in late S. Bergonie & Tribondeau.
  • Fractionation: Spares normal tissue (4 R's: Repair, Reoxygenation, Repopulation, Redistribution), ↑tumor kill.
  • Therapeutic Ratio: Maximize TCP / NTCP.
  • Oxygen Effect: OER ~3 for photons; hypoxic tumors are radioresistant.
  • Units: Gray (Gy) (absorbed dose); Sievert (Sv) (equivalent dose).
  • Delivery: Teletherapy (external), Brachytherapy (internal).

Practice Questions: Principles of Radiation Therapy

Test your understanding with these related questions

Precisely directed high dose radiation is used in which of the following therapies?

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Flashcards: Principles of Radiation Therapy

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_____ is the most commonly used radioactive agent for brachytherapy in carcinoma cervix.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ is the most commonly used radioactive agent for brachytherapy in carcinoma cervix.

Cesium

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