Background: Internal dosimetry has an increasing role in the planning and verification of nuclear medicine therapies with radiopharmaceuticals. Dose Point Kernels (DPKs), quantifying the energy deposition all around a point source, in a homogenous medium, are extensively used for 3D dosimetry and nowadays are mostly evaluated by Monte Carlo (MC) simulation. To our knowledge, DPK for beta emitters is estimated neglecting the continuous photon emission due to the Internal Bremsstrahlung (IB), whose contribution to the absorbed dose can be relevant beyond the maximum range of betas, as evidenced in recent works. Purpose: Aim of this study was to investigate and quantify, by means of MC simulations, the contribution of IB photons to DPK calculated for 90Y and provide the updated 90Y DPK. Methods: The overall radiation due to the decay of a 90Y point source, placed at the centre of concentric water shells of increasing radii from 0.02 cm to 20 cm, was simulated with GAMOS, including the IB source term whose spectral distribution was described by an analytical model. Energy deposition was scored in the shells as a function of the distance from the source, R, and DPK was estimated in terms of the scaled absorbed dose fraction, F(R/X90), where X90 is the range within which the beta particles deposit 90% of their energy. Results: A comparison between the two simulated absorbed dose distributions, calculated with or without IB, clearly shows that the latter (incomplete) choice is consistent with the findings of other Authors and systematically underestimates the absorbed dose imparted to the tissue. 90Y DPK values currently used are underestimated by 20%-34% for R>2X90. Conclusions: The revised values provided in this work suggest that the inclusion of IB emission in DPK evaluations is advisable for pure beta emitters.
Technical note: The contribution of internal bremsstrahlung to the 90Y dose point kernel
Pistone D.
;
2023
Abstract
Background: Internal dosimetry has an increasing role in the planning and verification of nuclear medicine therapies with radiopharmaceuticals. Dose Point Kernels (DPKs), quantifying the energy deposition all around a point source, in a homogenous medium, are extensively used for 3D dosimetry and nowadays are mostly evaluated by Monte Carlo (MC) simulation. To our knowledge, DPK for beta emitters is estimated neglecting the continuous photon emission due to the Internal Bremsstrahlung (IB), whose contribution to the absorbed dose can be relevant beyond the maximum range of betas, as evidenced in recent works. Purpose: Aim of this study was to investigate and quantify, by means of MC simulations, the contribution of IB photons to DPK calculated for 90Y and provide the updated 90Y DPK. Methods: The overall radiation due to the decay of a 90Y point source, placed at the centre of concentric water shells of increasing radii from 0.02 cm to 20 cm, was simulated with GAMOS, including the IB source term whose spectral distribution was described by an analytical model. Energy deposition was scored in the shells as a function of the distance from the source, R, and DPK was estimated in terms of the scaled absorbed dose fraction, F(R/X90), where X90 is the range within which the beta particles deposit 90% of their energy. Results: A comparison between the two simulated absorbed dose distributions, calculated with or without IB, clearly shows that the latter (incomplete) choice is consistent with the findings of other Authors and systematically underestimates the absorbed dose imparted to the tissue. 90Y DPK values currently used are underestimated by 20%-34% for R>2X90. Conclusions: The revised values provided in this work suggest that the inclusion of IB emission in DPK evaluations is advisable for pure beta emitters.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.