| Literature DB >> 30241279 |
Nicola D'Ascenzo1,2,3, Min Gao4, Emanuele Antonecchia5,6, Paolo Gnudi7,8, Hsien-Hsin Chen9,10, Fang-Hsin Chen11, Ji-Hong Hong12,13, Ing-Tsung Hsiao14, Tzu-Chen Yen15, Weidong Wang16, Daoming Xi17, Bo Zhang18, Qingguo Xie19,20,21.
Abstract
One of the most challenging areas of sensor development for nuclear medicine is the design of proton therapy monitoring systems. Sensors are operated in a high detection rate regime in beam-on conditions. We realized a prototype of a monitoring system for proton therapy based on the technique of positron emission tomography. We used the Plug and Imaging (P&I) technology in this application. This sensing system includes LYSO/silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) detection elements, fast digital multi voltage threshold (MVT) readout electronics and dedicated image reconstruction algorithms. In this paper, we show that the P&I sensor system has a uniform response and is controllable in the experimental conditions of the proton therapy room. The prototype of PET monitoring device based on the P&I sensor system has an intrinsic experimental spatial resolution of approximately 3 mm (FWHM), obtained operating the prototype both during the beam irradiation and right after it. The count-rate performance of the P&I sensor approaches 5 Mcps and allows the collection of relevant statistics for the nuclide analysis. The measurement of both the half life and the relative abundance of the positron emitters generated in the target volume through irradiation of 10 10 protons in approximately 15 s is performed with 0.5% and 5 % accuracy, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: digital readout; multi voltage threshold; positron emission tomography; proton therapy; silicon sensors
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30241279 PMCID: PMC6164641 DOI: 10.3390/s18093006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The P&I sensor system. A array of LYSO crystals with size mm3 is read out by an array of SiPM. The assembled block has a dedicated plug-in system for the readout electronics on the back.
Figure 2The P&I sensor system. Two P&I modules are connected to a MVT readout board.
Figure 3The P&I sensor system. Schematics of the digital readout electronics based on the MVT concept.
Figure 4Different views of the design of the prototype of P&I PET monitoring system for proton beam therapy. The detector modules (flat black panels), the electronic board housing (side structures) and the central positioning support for the alignment of phantoms and detectors are placed on a movable base adaptable to the proton therapy room and fixable to the proton therapy patient’s bed.
Figure 5Installation of the prototype of Plug and Imaging sensor PET inside the proton therapy treatment room at the proton therapy center of the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital. The prototype is shown: during the table rotation (a); and in the final position, aligned with the proton beam (b).
Most relevant positron emitters produced in the target volume and production channels used in this study.
| Isotope | Channel | Threshold [MeV] |
|---|---|---|
| 15O | 16O(p,pn)15O | 16.79 |
| 11C | 12C(p,pn)11C | 20.61 |
| 16O(p,3p3n)11C | 59.64 | |
| 10C | 12C(p,p2n)10C | 35 |
| 16O(p,3p4n)10C | 72 |
Figure 6Response of a LYSO/SIPM channel after the detection of a 511 keV photon from a 22Na source. In (a) the MVT digitized signal (black points) and the fitted function reconstructing the original signal (red line) are shown. The fitted function is integrated within a time window of 200 ns and the distribution of its integral for a small sub-sample of 30,000 events is shown in (b): the photoelectric peak and the Compton continuum are visible in the obtained spectrum.
Figure 7System calibration: position () (a) and energy resolution (FWHM/) (b) of the 511 keV photoelectric peak measured during a 22Na calibration run in the 2880 channels.
Figure 82D histogram of the energy resolution (FWHM/) obtained in the prototype PET monitoring system for the left (a) and right (b) module with respect to the beam direction.
Figure 9Position of the 511 keV photoelectric peak taken at a time distance of ten hours.
Figure 10Reconstructed lateral profile at y = 10 cm (a); and one-dimensional longitudinal profile (b) of the positron emitters produced by a 150 MeV proton pencil beam with approximately 2 mm spot-size and 0.3 MeV energy spread within a PMMA target volume.
Relative abundance and half life of the isotopes produced after proton irradiation in the Monte Carlo simulation and experimental results after fitting the measured coincidence rate.
| Element | Half life | Half Life | Abundance | Abundance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15O | 122 |
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| 11C | 1220 |
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| 10C | 19.3 |
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Figure 11Time dependence of the measured coincidence rate. The exponential decay fitting function and the separate components corresponding to the activated elements are shown.
Figure 12Histogram of the energy deposited in one of the crystals of the PET monitoring system during beam-on operation before (blue line) and after (filled red) 5 ns time coincidence.
Figure 13Reconstructed lateral profile at at y = 10 cm (a); and one-dimensional longitudinal profile (b) of the positron emitters produced by a 150 MeV proton pencil beam with approximately 2 mm spot-size and 0.3 MeV energy spread within a water target volume during beam-on operation.