Mixed Ion Beams Enable Simultaneous Treatment and Real-Time Imaging in Carbon Ion Therapy
Abstract
Carbon ion therapy is one of the most advanced forms of radiotherapy, promising improved efficacy against resistant cancers. However, the high precision offered by the carbon ion Bragg peak requires precise knowledge of the beam range inside the patient. We report the first experimental realization of range monitoring and portal imaging with a mixed ion beam, where carbon ions are treating the tumor while helium ions simultaneously accelerated to the same velocity fully traverse the patient and provide treatment feedback. Using the GSI synchrotron, a beam of 12C3+ and 4He1+ ions is accelerated, exploiting their nearly identical charge-to-mass ratios. Stable extraction with controlled helium fractions down to 7% is demonstrated. Beam characterization reveals that the helium ion Bragg peak can be cleanly separated from the carbon ion fragment background which enables accurate detection of sub-millimeter Bragg peak displacements. Mixed-beam radiographs of a lung-cancer-like phantom offer target position detection to better than 0.5 mm accuracy. This establishes mixed beams as a powerful modality for real-time image guidance in carbon ion therapy, uniquely providing simultaneous treatment delivery, range probing, and portal imaging. By overcoming range uncertainty inside the patient, mixed beams will enable to fully exploit the precision of carbon ion therapy.
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