Back to Search Start Over

Prototype Small-Animal PET-CT Imaging System for Image-guided Radiation Therapy.

Authors :
Mikhaylova, Ekaterina
Mikhaylova, Ekaterina
Brooks, Jamison
Zuro, Darren
Nouizi, Farouk
Kujawski, Maciej
Madabushi, Srideshikan Sargur
Qi, Jinyi
Zhang, Mengxi
Chea, Junie
Poku, Erasmus K
Bowles, Nicole
Wong, Jeffrey YC
Shively, John E
Yazaki, Paul J
Gulsen, Gultekin
Cherry, Simon R
Hui, Susanta
Mikhaylova, Ekaterina
Mikhaylova, Ekaterina
Brooks, Jamison
Zuro, Darren
Nouizi, Farouk
Kujawski, Maciej
Madabushi, Srideshikan Sargur
Qi, Jinyi
Zhang, Mengxi
Chea, Junie
Poku, Erasmus K
Bowles, Nicole
Wong, Jeffrey YC
Shively, John E
Yazaki, Paul J
Gulsen, Gultekin
Cherry, Simon R
Hui, Susanta
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Molecular imaging is becoming essential for precision targeted radiation therapy, yet progress is hindered from a lack of integrated imaging and treatment systems. We report the development of a prototype positron emission tomography (PET) scanner integrated into a commercial cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) based small animal irradiation system for molecular-image-guided, targeted external beam radiation therapy. The PET component consists of two rotating Hamamatsu time-of-flight PET modules positioned with a bore diameter of 101.6 mm and a radial field-of-view of 53.1 mm. The measured energy resolution after linearity correction at 511 KeV was 12.9% and the timing resolution was 283.6 ps. The measured spatial resolutions at the field-of-view center and 5 mm off the radial center were 2.6 mm × 2.6 mm × 1.6 mm and 2.6 mm × 2.6 mm × 2.7 mm respectively. 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose-based PET imaging of a NEMA NU 4-2008 phantom resolved cylindrical volumes with diameters as small as 3 mm. To validate the system in-vivo, we performed 64Cu-DOTA-M5A PET and computed tomography (CT) imaging of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)-positive colorectal cancer in athymic nude mice and compared the results with a commercially available Siemens Inveon PET/CT system. The prototype PET system performed comparably to the Siemens system for identifying the location, size, and shape of tumors. Regions of heterogeneous 64Cu-DOTA-M5A uptake were observed. Using 64Cu-DOTA-M5A PET and CT images, a Monte Carlo-based radiation treatment plan was created to escalate the dose to the 64Cu-DOTA-M5A-based, highly active, biological target volume while largely sparing the normal tissue. Results demonstrate the feasibility of molecular-image-guided treatment plans using the prototype theranostic system.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391594022
Document Type :
Electronic Resource