학술논문

Optimizing secondary radiation imaging systems for range verification in hadron therapy
Document Type
Conference
Source
2013 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference (2013 NSS/MIC) Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference (NSS/MIC), 2013 IEEE. :1-6 Oct, 2013
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Image reconstruction
Particle beams
Positrons
Positron emission tomography
Protons
Photonics
Sensitivity
Hadron-therapy
treatment monitoring
secondary radiation
dose
positron distribution
prompt-gamma distribution
PET
TOF
Compton Cameras
GATE
MLEM
range verification
Language
ISSN
1082-3654
Abstract
Hadron-therapy (HT) aims to treat tumors by maximizing the dose released to the target and sparing the dose to normal tissues. For a successful outcome it is very important to determine where the maximum dose is deposited; therefore range verification is necessary for treatment optimization and patient safety. Secondary positron emitting isotopes and prompt gamma radiation are produced after the hadron beam passage. This secondary radiation coming from tissue activation could be used for quality control of treatment, provided that it can be detected and employed to reconstruct the beam path using imaging techniques. This is one of the main goals of the ENVISION project: to evaluate and develop on-line monitoring devices for HT, like PET for detecting the annihilation photons from positrons and Compton Cameras (CCs) for prompt gamma radiation detection. In both technologies high sensitivity is required to increase the signal-to-noise ratio of the reconstructed image for a given therapeutic dose. This simulation study focuses on the sensitivity optimization of such devices, PET and CC, taking into account its use and constraints for on-line HT monitoring. Several configurations of both technologies have been investigated using sources generated from hadron beams. In the case of PET data, the time-of-flight (TOF) information has been included too. For individual hadron beams acquired after 5 minutes, differences in range of 3 mm are detected for all the PET configurations, except for the partial-ring of 60 cm diameter. In addition, patient data from a carbon ion treatment at GSI have been simulated and reconstructed. The system with higher sensitivity and angular sampling recovers more accurately areas with no activity (nasal cavity). In the case of the CC data, the quality of the reconstructed image when using 2-interaction events is notably improved when the detector layers are placed covering a larger solid angle.