Luc Beaulieu received his PhD from Laval University in 1996. After a postdoctoral fellowship in Berkeley, California, he worked as a research scientist at the Indiana University Cyclotron Facility in Bloomington. In 2000, he took the leadership of the medical physics research group at the Quebec City University Hospital. Under his leadership, a formal graduate medical physics teaching curriculum was set-up and became CAMPEP accredited in 2011. This was the first French CAMPEP training program in the world.
In addition to be a researcher at the Centre de recherche du CHU de Québec – Université Laval, Dr. Beaulieu is a full professor at Laval University, Director of the CAMPEP graduate program (since 2011) and also Director of the Laval University Cancer Research Centre (since 2012). From 2010 to 2016, he served on the Board of the Canadian Organization of Medical Physicists as President Elect, President and Past President. He is a member of the AAPM Brachytherapy Subcommittee, was the Chair of TG-186, and now leads the AAPM/ESTRO/ABG Working Group on Model-Based Dose Calculations in brachytherapy. He received research grants from all of the Canadian major funding agencies (CIHR, NSERC, NCIC, CCSRI) and NIH (R01 and SBIR). For the past 15 years, Dr. Beaulieu has worked collaboratively with a number of industrial partners for the design, building and validation of biomedical algorithms and devices. Since November 2015, he is the holder of an NSERC Industrial Research Chair related to biomedical technology for brachytherapy. He has served on grant panels for most of the agencies listed previously, and was Section Chair for the Medical Physics Panel in the last NSERC Discovery round (2017). He has mentored 70 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows and a similar number of undergraduate student research projects, published over 210 peer-reviewed manuscripts (with over 7 000 citations) and 445 refereed abstracts (all poster and oral presentations) at national and international meetings. He is a recognized expert in scintillation dosimetry and brachytherapy.
The ongoing objective of our research program is to increase the accuracy of dose measurements, dose calculations, and treatment delivery for radiation-based procedures including, but not limited to, radiation therapy, diagnostics, and interventional radiology. This is achieved through a comprehensive research program combining the elements of basic and applied research in medical physics and biomedical engineering. The program hinges on radiation physics, optics, numerical optimization problems, image and signal processing, and high-performance computing.
Four main research tracks
The current activities of the research program are based on four main research tracks, namely 1) development of new radiation dosimeters, 2) applied medical image processing, 3) numerical computation in optimization problems and high precision particle transport and dose calculations and 4) robotic medical devices. We are aggressively pursuing our optics-based radiation detector research track for which 3 patents have been granted, 2 provisional patents taken, and 1 technology licensed and commercialized. We have recently shown proof-of-principle for multi-point scintillation fiber dosimeters, a completely new concept in the field. My laboratory is a recognized world leader in optics-based dosimeter developments and the proposed program is intended to maintain and extend this lead. These research tracks have proven to be extremely productive in terms of scientific outputs, patents and HQP training over the last few years. The current program significantly extends the research topics. While the long-term application and commercialization potential are in the medical field (cancer, radiation therapy and radiology), the science discovery and technology development are embedded in a strong science and engineering research program. Our program has far reaching impacts: scientific, commercial, and ultimately on the quality of life of Canadians through the applications of said technologies.
1401, 18e rue
G0.431
Québec, Québec
Canada G1J 1Z4
- Alain-Beaudoin, AlexandraMaster student+1 418-525-4444, extension 67028
- Berthiaume, FrédérikEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954frederik.berthiaume@crchudequebec.ulaval.ca
9 Rue McMahon
00770
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S3 - Breton-aubé, JonathanMaster studentjonathan.breton-aube.1@ulaval.ca
- Cervantes Espinosa, YunuenPostdoctoral fellowHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67030yunuen.cervantes-espinosa@crchudequebec.ulaval.ca
1401, 18e Rue
G0.436
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Charette, OlivierIntern
- Chatigny, PhilippeDoctoral studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67029philippe.chatigny.1@ulaval.caphilippe.chatigny@crchudequebec.ulaval.ca
1401, 18e rue
G0.434
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Côté, BenjaminEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954+1 418-691-5268benjamin.cote.1@ulaval.ca
9 Rue Mcmahon
00770-1 / 00770-2
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S1 - Côté, Jean-SimonEmployeeHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67028
1401, 18e rue
G0.432
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Ghannoudi, ChahrazedDoctoral studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésuschahrazed.ghannoudi.1@ulaval.ca
1401, 18e rue
CIC
G0.432
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Giguère, CloéDoctoral studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67028
1401, 18e rue
G0.432
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Giguère, CloéMaster studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67028
1401, 18e rue
G0.432
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Khan, Sajjad AhmadDoctoral studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67028
1401, 18e rue
G0.432
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Lambert-Girard, SimonEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954
9 Rue Mcmahon
00770
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S3 - Larouche, RaphaelEmployee
- Lechasseur, YoanEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954
9, rue McMahon
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S3 - Lemarchand, ElisabethEmployee
- Moth, Élodie FloraMaster studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67028elodie.moth.1@ulaval.ca
1401, 18e rue
G0.432
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Mugnes, Jean-MichelEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954
9 Rue McMahon
00770-1 / 00770-2
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S3 - Ouellet, SamuelDoctoral studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67029samuel.ouellet@crchudequebec.ulaval.caSAMUELOUELLET@cmail.carleton.ca
1401, 18e rue
G0.434
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Poher, AudranDoctoral studentHôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus+1 418-525-4444, extension 67036audran.poher@crchudequebec.ulaval.ca
1401, 18e rue
CIC
G0.462
Québec, QC
Canada G1J 1Z4 - Therriault-Proulx, FrançoisEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954frank.thp@gmail.com
9 Rue Mcmahon
00770
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S1 - Turcotte, JonathanEmployeeL'Hôtel-Dieu de Québec+1 418-525-4444, extension 16954jonathan.t@medscint.com
9 rue McMahon
00770
Québec, QC
Canada G1R 3S3
Measurements of intrafraction motion and interfraction and intrafraction rotation of prostate by three-dimensional analysis of daily portal imaging with radiopaque markers
Journal ArticleInt J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys, 60 (1), 2004.
Automatic generation of anatomy-based MLC fields in aperture-based IMRT
Journal ArticleMed Phys, 31 (6), 2004.
Automated seed detection and three-dimensional reconstruction. II. Reconstruction of permanent prostate implants using simulated annealing
Journal ArticleMed Phys, 28 (11), 2001.
In vivo biocompatibility and degradation studies of polyhydroxyoctanoate in the rat: a new sealant for the polyester arterial prosthesis
Journal ArticleTissue Eng, 5 (4), 1999.
Active projects
- 2SHARP:Two Fractions Study of Hypofractionated Ablative Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer. , from 2024-06-19 to 2025-03-31
- Anatomically relevant brachytherapy implants by a 3D printing and radiosenstizing approach, from 2020-10-01 to 2025-09-30
- Medical physics and biomedical technology development for next generation dose measurement, optimization and computation tools, from 2019-04-01 to 2025-03-31
- Next generation treatment planning algorithms for brachytherapy, from 2024-08-30 to 2027-08-29
- Propulsion d’une plateforme de dosimétrie à scintillation de pointe vers de nouvelles applications à fort potentiel innovant et commercial, from 2022-06-27 to 2024-11-25
- The impact of Monte Carlo dose calculations on prostate and breast low-dose rate brachytherapy dose-outcome relationships and radiobiological modeling, from 2020-10-01 to 2025-09-30
Recently finished projects
- Advanced tracking and optimization technology for brachytherapy applications, from 2021-02-01 to 2023-12-31
- Financement d'une caméra BeamSite Research pour la recherche en dosimétrie, from 2024-03-05 to 2024-03-31