Laser-driven proton acceleration at Draco PW: a novel platform for ultra-high dose rate radiobiology


Laser-driven proton acceleration at Draco PW: a novel platform for ultra-high dose rate radiobiology

Brack, F.-E.; Kroll, F.; Beyreuther, E.; Jansen, J.; Karsch, L.; Kraft, S.; Leßmann, E.; Metzkes-Ng, J.; Pawelke, J.; Reimold, M.; Schlenvoigt, H.-P.; Schramm, U.; Szabo, R.; Umlandt, M. E. P.; Ziegler, T.; Zeil, K.

Background and Aims
After the rediscovery of the normal tissue sparing FLASH effect of high dose rate radiation, research activities on this topic have been revived. But especially for protons, the portfolio of accelerators capable of performing studies at ultra-high dose rates is limited. Laser-plasma accelerators (LPA) can generate extremely intense proton bunches of many 10 MeV kinetic energy. In combination with dedicated dose delivery systems, LPA proton sources facilitate peak dose rates well above 10^8 Gy/s in a pulse structure regime complementary to conventional accelerators.

Methods
The reliable generation of proton spectra beyond 60 MeV at DRACO-PW [Ziegler et al, SciRep2021], combined with a dedicated energy selective pulsed magnet beam transport system [Brack et al, SciRep2020], allows tailored sample-specific dose distributions. Adapted on-shot dosimetry enables the required spectral monitoring of every proton bunch. Two irradiation series on volumetric biological samples were performed at DRACO-PW, accompanied by reference irradiations at the University Proton Therapy Dresden.

Results
The first small animal pilot study at a laser-driven proton source was conducted successfully. The mouse-ear tumor model’s requirements [Beyreuther et al, PLoS One2018] were fulfilled and verified at high precision (+/- 5%) concerning predefined dose value and conformity. Complementary, a study investigating dose-rate effects such as FLASH was performed irradiating zebrafish embryos with above 10^9 Gy/s.

Conclusions
We present a laser-based irradiation platform at the DRACO-PW facility that enables systematic radiobiological studies, laying the foundations for further studies at LPA sources exploring ultra-high dose-rate effects, such as FLASH, over previously unreachable parameter space.

Keywords: FLASH; Laser-driven protons; Ultra high dose rate

  • Lecture (Conference) (Online presentation)
    FLASH Radiotherapy & Particle Therapy, 01.-03.12.2021, Vienna, Austria

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