Introduction. X-Ray Interactions and Energy Deposition. Conceptual Overview of Algorithms. Convolution and Superposition Methods. Stochastic Radiation Transport Method. Deterministic Radiation Transport Methods. En Route to 4D Dose Computations.
Dr. Jerry Battista completed his Ph.D. degree at the University of Toronto in 1977 (Compton Tomography). As a post-doctoral resident in medical physics he then gained clinical physics experience at the Princess Margaret Hospital, under the guidance of Dr.“Jack” Cunningham – a pioneer in computerized dose calculations. Jerry moved to the Cross Cancer Institute and University of Alberta in 1979. His team developed one of the first “3D” treatment planning systems and introduced a new breed of ‘convolution/superposition’ algorithms used for planning radiotherapy of cancer patients. Current research interests include 3D dose measurements in gels using optical CT scans, and adaptive dose re-optimization for image-guided radiotherapy. He has published over 120 peer-reviewed articles.
Jerry is a Fellow of the Canadian College of Physicists in Medicine (FCCPM), Canadian Organization of Medical Physics (FCOMP) and American Association of Physicists in Medicine (FAAPM). Since 1988, Dr. Battista has been driving Physics Research at the London Regional Cancer Program, in London, Ontario, Canada. He is Professor of Medical Biophysics at Western University, with cross-appointments to the Departments of Oncology, Physics, Diagnostic Imaging and Nuclear Medicine, and the Biomedical Engineering Program.
Jerry is an award-winning teacher and he is nationally known for his clear presentations. His enthusiastic style and vivid analogies bring physics concepts to a wide range of audiences with diverse backgrounds, including clinicians, students, and the general public. He has received the university’s top honour for teaching excellence. Dr. Battista has mentored many graduate students, who collectively have received over 20 awards from Canadian, and international, organizations, for excellence in publications or presentations.
Jerry was the recipient of the 2017 Gold Medal Award from the Canadian Organization of Medical Physicists (COMP).
"This book introduces fundamental physics of x-ray interaction with
human tissue and dose deposition and then delves into comprehensive
description of the three generations of dose computation algorithms
through the evolution of computational hardware power…This is
designed as a handbook and teaching resource to fill in the details
of the physics and mathematical infrastructure that are not covered
in the published literature or vendor software manuals. The author
and contributors tried to make each chapter as complete and
self-contained as possible,
minimizing the need for cross referencing. The book dives into
details of the underlying theory, providing definitions and
necessary information for readers to gain a deeper understanding of
complex algorithms, including their limitations and practical
considerations. The author has succeeded in putting together a
comprehensive description of megavoltage dose calculations in a
book that both medical physics students and experienced clinical
medical physicists
will find useful…The book is intended primarily for graduate
students and residents in clinical
medical physics who seek a solid understanding of megavoltage dose
calculation algorithms. It also can be used for a graduate course
in radiological physics and as a reference for clinical physicists
who need to fill in details not in the published literature.
The well-organized chapters cover basic concepts in clinical
radiation dosimetry and review fundamental high-energy photon
interactions and energy deposition. The chapter that provides a
conceptual overview of dose calculation algorithms has a logical
and well-thought-out layout that makes it a must read for all
medical physics students. Each chapter on the different classes of
dose
calculation algorithms starts with the necessary mathematical
framework and physical concepts that students will find helpful.
From there, it systematically covers and builds up thorough
descriptions of the algorithm and concludes with concise summaries
of each method. There are multiple clinical
examples and references to commercial software that readers can
relate to.
This book brings together and explains in detail modern megavoltage
dose calculation algorithms that are scattered across multiple
publications and briefly described in vendor manuals. There is no
other comparable book that covers these topics in such a
self-contained manner. I highly recommend this book to all graduate
students in radiological physics as well as clinical medical
physicists who seek a better understanding of the dose calculation
algorithms used commercially.
Overall score: 4 Stars!"
— Boon-Keng Kevin Teo, PhD, University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine in Doody’s Book Review, September 2019
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