Researcher profile

Marco Durante

Marco Durante contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Model-aided quantification of patient-specific benefit in mitigating radiation induced lymphopenia by particle therapy of cancer

Treatment-related lymphopenia is a frequent and clinically significant consequence of cancer therapy that can compromise immune-mediated tumor control and worsen patient outcomes. Despite its importance, no mechanistic framework exists to accurately predict the severity of lymphopenia from patient-specific data. Here, we present a biokinetic model that quantitatively describes lymphocyte depletion and recovery during and after radiotherapy, integrating radiation dose-volume distributions, blood circulation dynamics, and distinct kinetics of fast- and slow-recovering lymphocyte populations. The model was calibrated and validated using 56 independent clinical datasets encompassing various tumor sites and treatment modalities. It reproduces observed lymphocyte counts and enables prediction of individual severity of lymphopenia from baseline or early-treatment counts. Applying this framework, we demonstrate that particle therapy reduces lymphocyte depletion by ~30% compared with photon therapy, providing a quantitative explanation for its observed immune-sparing benefit. By linking radiation physics, immune kinetics, and clinical outcomes, our model establishes a mechanistically grounded predictive approach for anticipating systemic immune toxicity. Beyond radiotherapy, this framework offers a generalizable strategy for integrating early biological markers into treatment optimization, advancing personalized and immune-preserving cancer therapy.

preprint2019arXiv

Investigations on physical and biological range uncertainties in Krakow proton beam therapy centre

Physical and biological range uncertainties limit the clinical potential of Proton Beam Therapy (PBT). In this proceedings, we report on two research projects, which we are conducting in parallel and which both tackle the problem of range uncertainties. One aims at developing software tools and the other at developing detector instrumentation. Regarding the first, we report on our development and pre-clinical application of a GPU-accelerated Monte Carlo (MC) simulation toolkit Fred. Concerning the letter, we report on our investigations of plastic scintillator based PET detectors for particle therapy delivery monitoring. We study the feasibility of Jagiellonian-PET detector technology for proton beam therapy range monitoring by means of MC simulations of the $β^+$ activity induced in a phantom by proton beams and present preliminary results of PET image reconstruction. Using a GPU-accelerated Monte Carlo simulation toolkit Fred and plastic scintillator based PET detectors we aim to improve patient treatment quality with protons.

preprint2014arXiv

Total and Partial Fragmentation Cross-Section of 500 MeV/nucleon Carbon Ions on Different Target Materials

By using an experimental setup based on thin and thick double-sided microstrip silicon detectors, it has been possible to identify the fragmentation products due to the interaction of very high energy primary ions on different targets. Here we report total and partial cross-sections measured at GSI (Gesellschaft fur Schwerionenforschung), Darmstadt, for 500 MeV/n energy $^{12}C$ beam incident on water (in flasks), polyethylene, lucite, silicon carbide, graphite, aluminium, copper, iron, tin, tantalum and lead targets. The results are compared to the predictions of GEANT4 (v4.9.4) and FLUKA (v11.2) Monte Carlo simulation programs.