Literature DB >> 28715250

The Development of Technology for Effective Respiratory-Gated Irradiation Using an Image-Guided Small Animal Irradiator.

M A Hill1, J M Thompson1, A Kavanagh1, I D C Tullis1, R G Newman1, J Prentice1, J Beech1, S Gilchrist1, S Smart1, E Fokas1, B Vojnovic1.   

Abstract

The development of image-guided small animal irradiators represents a significant improvement over standard irradiators by enabling preclinical studies to mimic radiotherapy in humans. The ability to deliver tightly collimated targeted beams, in conjunction with gantry or animal couch rotation, has the potential to maximize tumor dose while sparing normal tissues. However, the current commercial platforms do not incorporate respiratory gating, which is required for accurate and precise targeting in organs subject to respiration related motions that may be up to the order of 5 mm in mice. Therefore, a new treatment head assembly for the Xstrahl Small Animal Radiation Research Platform (SARRP) has been designed. This includes a fast X-ray shutter subsystem, a motorized beam hardening filter assembly, an integrated transmission ionization chamber to monitor beam delivery, a kinematically positioned removable beam collimator and a targeting laser exiting the center of the beam collimator. The X-ray shutter not only minimizes timing errors but also allows beam gating during imaging and treatment, with irradiation only taking place during the breathing cycle when tissue movement is minimal. The breathing related movement is monitored by measuring, using a synchronous detector/lock-in amplifier that processes diffuse reflectance light from a modulated light source. After thresholding of the resulting signal, delays are added around the inhalation/exhalation phases, enabling the "no movement" period to be isolated and to open the X-ray shutter. Irradiation can either be performed for a predetermined time of X-ray exposure, or through integration of a current from the transmission monitor ionization chamber (corrected locally for air density variations). The ability to successfully deliver respiratory-gated X-ray irradiations has been demonstrated by comparing movies obtained using planar X-ray imaging with and without respiratory gating, in addition to comparing dose profiles observed from a collimated beam on EBT3 radiochromic film mounted on the animal's chest. Altogether, the development of respiratory-gated irradiation facilitates improved dose delivery during animal movement and constitutes an important new tool for preclinical radiation studies. This approach is particularly well suited for irradiation of orthotopic tumors or other targets within the chest and abdomen where breathing related movement is significant.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28715250     DOI: 10.1667/RR14753.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Radiat Res        ISSN: 0033-7587            Impact factor:   2.841


  6 in total

Review 1.  Preclinical models of radiation-induced lung damage: challenges and opportunities for small animal radiotherapy.

Authors:  Mihaela Ghita; Victoria Dunne; Gerard G Hanna; Kevin M Prise; Jaqueline P Williams; Karl T Butterworth
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2019-02-13       Impact factor: 3.039

2.  Multiscale topology characterizes dynamic tumor vascular networks.

Authors:  Bernadette J Stolz; Jakob Kaeppler; Bostjan Markelc; Franziska Braun; Florian Lipsmeier; Ruth J Muschel; Helen M Byrne; Heather A Harrington
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-06-10       Impact factor: 14.957

3.  A preclinical radiotherapy dosimetry audit using a realistic 3D printed murine phantom.

Authors:  Emma R Biglin; Adam H Aitkenhead; Gareth J Price; Amy L Chadwick; Elham Santina; Kaye J Williams; Karen J Kirkby
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 4.996

4.  On the determination of planning target margins due to motion for mice lung tumours using a four-dimensional MOBY phantom.

Authors:  Ana Vaniqui; Brent van der Heyden; Isabel P Almeida; Lotte Ejr Schyns; Stefan J van Hoof; Frank Verhaegen
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2018-07-20       Impact factor: 3.039

5.  Combinatorial Use of Chitosan Nanoparticles, Reversine, and Ionising Radiation on Breast Cancer Cells Associated with Mitosis Deregulation.

Authors:  Sofia Piña Olmos; Roberto Díaz Torres; Eman Elbakrawy; Louise Hughes; Joseph Mckenna; Mark A Hill; Munira Kadhim; Patricia Ramírez Noguera; Victor M Bolanos-Garcia
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2019-05-12

6.  Endothelial cell death after ionizing radiation does not impair vascular structure in mouse tumor models.

Authors:  Ruth J Muschel; Bostjan Markelc; Jakob R Kaeppler; Jianzhou Chen; Mario Buono; Jenny Vermeer; Pavitra Kannan; Wei-Chen Cheng; Dimitrios Voukantsis; James M Thompson; Mark A Hill; Danny Allen; Ana Gomes; Veerle Kersemans; Paul Kinchesh; Sean Smart; Francesca Buffa; Claus Nerlov
Journal:  EMBO Rep       Date:  2022-07-18       Impact factor: 9.071

  6 in total

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