Large energy acceptance beam delivery systems may enable ultra-fast treatment within 10 seconds compared to conventional systems
This review explores opportunities and design concepts regarding large energy acceptance (LEA) beam delivery systems in the context of particle therapy. The scope covers emerging delivery strategies and novel planning optimization schemes rather than a specific primary trial population. The authors do not report a specific study population or sample size for this narrative synthesis.
Key findings indicate that conventional systems are associated with increased treatment times. In contrast, LEA systems facilitate ultra-fast delivery, defined as a single field within approximately 10 seconds. This review also discusses secondary outcomes such as reduced motion-induced dose degradation and improved effectiveness of motion management techniques. However, energy layer switching time remains a persisting limitation in existing beam delivery systems.
The authors note multiple avenues requiring further development and study. Remaining challenges and considerations exist regarding the realization of an LEA system in practice. This review does not report adverse events or discontinuations. The certainty of these findings is limited because this is a review of concepts, not a primary trial. Clinical benefits are described as potential rather than confirmed outcomes.