26 research outputs found
mechanistic promiscuity in hydrogen atom abstraction reactions
In addition to oxometal [Mn+[double bond, length as m-dash]O] and imidometal
[Mn+[double bond, length as m-dash]NR] units, transient metalâiodosylarene
[M(nâ2)+âO[double bond, length as m-dash]IPh] and metalâiminoiodane
[M(nâ2)+âN(R)[double bond, length as m-dash]IPh] adducts are often invoked as
a possible âsecond oxidantâ responsible for the oxo and imido group transfer
reactivity. Although a few metalâiodosylarene adducts have been recently
isolated and/or spectroscopically characterized, metalâiminoiodane adducts
have remained elusive. Herein, we provide UV-Vis, EPR, NMR, XAS and DFT
evidence supporting the formation of a metalâiminoiodane complex 2 and its
scandium adduct 2-Sc. 2 and 2-Sc are reactive toward substrates in the
hydrogen-atom and nitrene transfer reactions, which confirm their potential as
active oxidants in metal-catalyzed oxidative transformations. Oxidation of
para-substituted 2,6-di-tert-butylphenols by 2 and 2-Sc can occur by both
coupled and uncoupled proton and electron transfer mechanisms; the exact
mechanism depends on the nature of the para substituent
Beam energy metrics for the acceptance and quality assurance of Halcyon linear accelerator
PURPOSE: Establish and compare two metrics for monitoring beam energy changes in the Halcyon platform and evaluate the accuracy of these metrics across multiple Halcyon linacs.
METHOD: The first energy metric is derived from the diagonal normalized flatness (F
RESULTS: Five Halcyon linacs from five institutions were used to evaluate the accuracy of the D
CONCLUSION: The
A standardized workflow for respiratory-gated motion management decision-making.
PurposeMotion management of tumors within the lung and abdomen is challenging because it requires balancing tissue sparing with accuracy of hitting the target, while considering treatment delivery efficiency. Physicists can play an important role in analyzing four-dimensional computed tomography (4DCT) data to recommend the optimal respiratory gating parameters for a patient. The goal of this work was to develop a standardized procedure for making recommendations regarding gating parameters and planning margins for lung and gastrointestinal stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) treatments. In doing so, we hoped to simplify decision-making and analysis, and provide a tool for troubleshooting complex cases.MethodsFactors that impact gating decisions and planning target volume (PTV) margins were identified. The gating options included gating on exhale with approximately a 50% duty cycle (Gate3070), exhale gating with a reduced duty cycle (Gate4060), and treating for most of respiration, excluding only extreme inhales and exhales (Gate100). A standard operating procedure was developed, as well as a physics consult document to communicate motion management recommendations to other members of the treatment team. This procedure was implemented clinically for 1 year and results are reported below.ResultsIdentified factors that impact motion management included the magnitude of motion observed on 4DCT, the regularity of breathing and quality of 4DCT data, and ability to observe the target on fluoroscopy. These were collated into two decision tables-one specific to lung tumors and another for gastrointestinal tumors-such that a physicist could answer a series of questions to determine the optimal gating and PTV margin. The procedure was used clinically for 252 sites from 213 patients treated with respiratory-gated SBRT and standardized practice across our 12-member physics team.ConclusionImplementation of a standardized procedure for respiratory gating had a positive impact in our clinic, improving efficiency and ease of 4DCT analysis and standardizing gating decision-making amongst physicists
A cobalt(II) iminoiodane complex and its scandium adduct
In addition to oxometal [Mn+[double bond, length as m-dash]O] and imidometal [Mn+[double bond, length as m-dash]NR] units, transient metalâiodosylarene [M(nâ2)+âO[double bond, length as m-dash]IPh] and metalâiminoiodane [M(nâ2)+âN(R)[double bond, length as m-dash]IPh] adducts are often invoked as a possible âsecond oxidantâ responsible for the oxo and imido group transfer reactivity. Although a few metalâiodosylarene adducts have been recently isolated and/or spectroscopically characterized, metalâiminoiodane adducts have remained elusive. Herein, we provide UV-Vis, EPR, NMR, XAS and DFT evidence supporting the formation of a metalâiminoiodane complex 2 and its scandium adduct 2-Sc. 2 and 2-Sc are reactive toward substrates in the hydrogen-atom and nitrene transfer reactions, which confirm their potential as active oxidants in metal-catalyzed oxidative transformations. Oxidation of para-substituted 2,6-di-tert-butylphenols by 2 and 2-Sc can occur by both coupled and uncoupled proton and electron transfer mechanisms; the exact mechanism depends on the nature of the para substituent.Peer Reviewe
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Framework for Evaluation of Automated Knowledge-Based Planning Systems Using Multiple Publicly Available Prostate Routines
To establish a framework for the evaluation of knowledge-based planning routines that empowers new adopters to select systems that best match their clinical priorities. We demonstrate the power of this framework using 4 publicly available prostate routines.
Four publicly available prostate routines (CCMB, Miami, UCSD, WUSTL) were automatically applied across a 25-patient cohort using Eclipse scripting and a PTV prescription of V81 Gy = 95%. The institutions' routines differed in contouring guidelines for planning target volume (PTV) and organs at risk, beam arrangements, and optimization parameters. Model-estimated dose-volume histograms (DVHs) and deliverable postoptimization DVHs were extracted from plans to calculate average DVHs for each routine. Each routine's average calculated DVH was subtracted from the average DVH for all plans and from the model's average predicted DVH for comparison. DVH metrics for PTV (DMAX, D1%, D99%, DMIN), Rectum (DMAX, V70, V60, V40), Bladder (V75, V40), Femur (DMAX), and PenileBulb (DMEAN) were compared with the average using 2-sided paired t tests (Bonferroni-corrected P < .05). To control for contouring effects, the full analysis was conducted for 2 PTV margin schemas: 5 mm uniform and 3 mm or 7 mm posterior/else.
Calculated plans generally aligned with their routine's DVH estimations, except CCMB organ-at-risk Dmaxes. Dosimetric parameter differences were not significant, with the exception of PTV DMAX (Miami = 111.1% [P < .001]), PTV D99% (Miami = 97.4% [P = .05]; UCSD = 97.4% [P = .03]; CCMB = 98.5% [P = .001]), Rectum V40 (Miami = 19.1% [P < .001]; UCSD = 22.7% [P = .003]; CCMB = 53.5% [P < .001]), and Femur DMAX (WUSTL = 48.6% [P = .001.]; CCMB = 37.9% [P < .001]). Overall, UCSD and Miami had lower rectum doses, and CCMB and WUSTL had higher PTV homogeneity. Conclusions were unchanged with different PTV margin schemas.
Using publicly available knowledge-based planning routines spares clinicians substantial effort in developing new models. Our results allow clinicians to select the prostate routine that matches their clinical priorities, and our methodology sets the precedent for comparing routines for different treatment sites
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Evaluating predictive factors for toxicities experienced by head & neck cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy.
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to evaluate if HPV status serves as an independent predictor of early and late dysphagia outcomes when considered alongside standard patient characteristics and dose metrics for head and neck cancer patients treated with radiotherapy.Methods and materialsThe age, sex, smoking history, cancer type (oropharyngeal vs non-oropharyngeal), HPV status, and early and late dysphagia outcomes were obtained for 99 retrospective head and neck cancer patients treated at our clinic with radiotherapy. Additionally for each patient, the mean radiation dose to the pharynx, superior/middle/inferior pharyngeal constrictor muscles, and cricopharyngeus was calculated. The predictive power of these clinical characteristics and radiation metrics was evaluated using chi-square tests for categorical variables and t-tests for continuous variables. Then multi-variate logistic models were built for each outcome using a single dose metric at a time, and either HPV status, cancer type, or both. Multi-variate models were built using both top-down and bottom-up technique to establish the most predictive independent covariates.ResultsIn the univariate analysis for early dysphagia, cancer type (pâ=â0.04) and four dose metrics (pââ€â0.02) were significantly associated with outcome, while for late dysphagia, only cancer type (pâ=â0.04) was associated with outcome. In the multivariate analysis for early dysphagia, cancer type, smoking history, and mean dose to the five structures were consistently selected as covariates. For late dysphagia, either HPV status or cancer type was selected in each model and the mean dose to the cricopharyngeus was selected in one model.ConclusionWhile HPV is a known contributing factor for tumor prognosis in oropharyngeal cancers, its role in normal tissue toxicities for head and neck cancers has not previously been evaluated. Our results indicate having an oropharyngeal cancer may increase a patient's risk of high-grade early and late dysphagia while HPV status was seldom selected
CâH activation and nucleophilic substitution in a photochemically generated high valent iron complex
The photochemical oxidation of a (TAML)FeIII complex 1 using visible light generated Ru(bpy)33+ produces valence tautomers (TAML)FeIV (1+) and (TAMLË+)FeIII (1-TAMLË+), depending on the exogenous anions. The presence of labile Clâ or Brâ results in a ligand-based oxidation and stabilisation of a radical-cationic (TAMLË+)FeIII complex, which subsequently leads to unprecedented CâH activation followed by nucleophilic substitution on the TAML aryl ring. In contrast, exogenous cyanide culminates in metal-based oxidation, yielding the first example of a crystallographically characterised S = 1 [(TAML)FeIV(CN)2]2â species. This is a rare report of an anion-dependent valence tautomerisation in photochemically accessed high valent (TAML)Fe systems with potential applications in the oxidation of pollutants, hydrocarbons, and water. Furthermore, the nucleophilic aromatic halogenation reaction mediated by (TAMLË+)FeIII represents a novel domain for high-valent metal reactivity and highlights the possible intramolecular ligand or substrate modification pathways under highly oxidising conditions. Our findings therefore shine light on high-valent metal oxidants based on TAMLs and other potential non-innocent ligands and open new avenues for oxidation catalyst design.ASTAR (Agency for Sci., Tech. and Research, Sâpore)MOE (Min. of Education, Sâpore)Published versio
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Clinical commissioning of an adaptive radiotherapy platform: Results and recommendations
Online adaptive radiotherapy platforms present a unique challenge for commissioning as guidance is lacking and specialized adaptive equipment, such as deformable phantoms, are rare. We designed a novel adaptive commissioning process consisting of end-to-end tests using standard clinical resources. These tests were designed to simulate anatomical changes regularly observed at patient treatments. The test results will inform users of the magnitude of uncertainty from on-treatment changes during the adaptive workflow and the limitations of their systems. We implemented these tests for the cone-beam computed tomography (CT)-based Varian Ethos online adaptive platform. Many adaptive platforms perform online dose calculation on a synthetic CT (synCT). To assess the impact of the synCT generation and online dose calculation on dosimetric accuracy, we conducted end-to-end tests using commonly available equipment: a CIRS IMRT Thorax phantom, PinPoint ionization chamber, Gafchromic film, and bolus. Four clinical scenarios were evaluated: weight gain and weight loss were simulated by adding and removing bolus, internal target shifts were simulated by editing the CTV during the adaptive workflow to displace it, and changes in gas were simulated by removing and reinserting rods in varying phantom locations. The effect of overriding gas pockets during planning was also assessed. All point dose measurements agreed within 2.7% of the calculated dose, with one exception: a scenario simulating gas present in the planning CT, not overridden during planning, and dissipating at treatment. Relative film measurements passed gamma analysis (3%/3 mm criteria) for all scenarios. Our process validated the Ethos dose calculation for online adapted treatment plans. Based on our results, we made several recommendations for our clinical adaptive workflow. This commissioning process used commonly available equipment and, therefore, can be applied in other clinics for their respective online adaptive platforms
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Gene alterations as predictors of radiation-induced toxicity in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.
BackgroundOptimizing the therapeutic ratio for radiation therapy (RT) in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is uniquely challenging owing to high rates of early and late toxicity involving nearby organs at risk. These toxicities have a profound impact on treatment compliance and quality of life. Emerging evidence suggests that RT dose alone cannot fully account for the variable severity of RT-related adverse events (rtAEs) observed in HNSCC patients. Next-generation sequencing has become an increasingly valuable tool with widespread use in the oncology field and is being robustly explored for predicting rtAEs beyond dosimetric data.MethodsPatients who had Foundation Medicine sequencing data and received RT for primary or locally recurrent HNSCC were selected for this study. Early and late toxicity data were collected and reported based on Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 5.0. Dosimetric parameters were collected for pertinent structures.ResultsA total of HNSCC 37 patients were analyzed in this study. Genetic alterations in BRCA2, ERBB3, NOTCH1 and CCND1 were all associated with higher mean grade of toxicity with BRCA2 alteration implicated in all toxicity parameters evaluated including mucositis, early dysphagia, xerostomia and to a lesser extent, late dysphagia. Interestingly, patients who exhibited alterations in both BRCA2 and ERBB3 experienced a twofold or greater increase in early dysphagia, early xerostomia and late dysphagia compared to ERBB3 alteration alone. Furthermore, several gene alterations were associated with improved toxicity outcomes. Within an RT supersensitive patient subset, alterations were found in TNFAIP3, HNF1A, SPTA1 and CASP8. All of these alterations were not found in the RT insensitive patient subset. We found 17 gene alterations in the RT insensitive patient subset that were not found in the RT supersensitive patient subset.ConclusionDespite consistent RT dosimetric parameters, patients with HNSCC experience heterogeneous patterns of rtAEs. Identifying factors associated with toxicity outcomes offers a new avenue for personalized precision RT therapy and prophylactic management. Here, next-generation sequencing in a population of HNSCC patients correlates several genetic alterations with severity of rtAEs. Further analysis is urgently needed to identify genetic patterns associated with rtAEs in order to reduce harmful outcomes in this challenging population