Painting with protons: treatment beams recreate works of art


Key Highlights :

1. Intensity-modulated proton therapy uses narrow pencil-like beams of protons to deliver radiation in highly complex dose patterns.
2. Medical physicist Lee Xu recreated well-known paintings using proton beams as treatment plans, and the resulting images exhibited a marked resemblance to the original artworks.
3. Xu envisages that the paintings could act as an educational tool, to help patients undergoing treatment understand the general principles of proton therapy or radiation oncology.




     Intensity-modulated proton therapy (IMPT) is an advanced cancer treatment technique that uses narrow pencil-like beams of protons to deliver radiation in highly complex dose patterns. Medical physicist Lee Xu from the New York Proton Center wanted to showcase the impressive power of IMPT and decided to use proton pencil beams to recreate a series of well-known paintings as treatment plans. By using protons to recreate renowned paintings, Xu demonstrates the remarkable capabilities of pencil-beam scanning proton therapy.

     Combined with sophisticated treatment planning techniques, IMPT can shape the proton dose to match the targeted tumour with unprecedented accuracy, maximizing the destruction of cancer cells while minimizing damage to nearby healthy tissue. Xu chose five well-known paintings – Girl with a Pearl Earring by Johannes Vermeer, The Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh, The Scream by Edvard Munch, Composition with Red, Blue and Yellow by Piet Mondrian, and Son of Man by René Magritte – to recreate in the Eclipse v16.1 treatment planning system.

     To generate each “painting”, the planning system used clinical protons with energies of 70–250 MeV to deposit “paint” (radiation dose) onto a “canvas” (a water phantom), with a total prescription of 100 Gy in 50 fractions. Each treatment plan employed between one and six proton fields directed onto the front of the canvas, with the isocentre placed at a depth of 10 cm.

     The process begins in a similar manner to a traditional artwork – by creating a preliminary sketch on the canvas to determine the overall layout, in this case using the 2D brush tool in Eclipse’s contouring workspace. Next, key elements such as the sky and the ground are delineated as contours and divided into separate structures to represent different colours, tones and textures. In some cases, Xu used a final subdivision into even smaller structures (up to 65 for the most complex painting) to reflect more intricate details.

     Xu assigned different colours to various isodose levels between 0 and 100 Gy in intervals of roughly 300 cGy. He then optimized the treatment plans to deposit doses within the canvas that achieved the desired colour in each region. Xu notes that the final dose distribution was calculated using the same proton convolution-superposition algorithm employed in his clinic.

     The final recreations exhibited a marked resemblance to the original artworks with sufficient resolution to elucidate fine details. Xu notes that each painting is actually a three-dimensional work of art and can be viewed at multiple depths within the water phantom.

     Xu hopes that his work serves as an educational tool, to help patients undergoing treatment understand the general principles of proton therapy, or even to help medical and medical physics students better understand proton physics and dosimetry by using a series of annotated paintings. “I hope this paper showcases how far we’ve come since the days of 2D planning and how modern technology has allowed us to provide highly targeted care that is specific to each patient,” Xu adds. “I also hope this work serves as a reminder to all of us within the fields of radiation oncology and medical physics that while we often consider ourselves scientists or clinicians, deep down we are also artists; and without art, our field wouldn’t be the same.”

     Using protons to recreate renowned paintings as treatment plans, medical physicist Lee Xu demonstrates the remarkable capabilities of pencil-beam scanning proton therapy. By combining sophisticated treatment planning techniques with the power of protons, Xu was able to create intricate dose distributions that showcased the impressive power of IMPT. His work serves as an educational tool, helping patients, medical and medical physics students to better understand proton physics and dosimetry. Xu also hopes that it serves as a reminder that while radiation oncologists and medical physicists often consider themselves scientists or clinicians, they are also artists; and without art, their field wouldn’t be the same. The post Painting with protons: treatment beams recreate works of art appeared first on Physics World.



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