PROMPT GAMMA MONITOR FOR HADRON THERAPY
20210286095 · 2021-09-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
A61N5/1048
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
G01T1/29
PHYSICS
A61N5/10
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
A medical imaging tool is described, capable of providing in real time 2-D images of the prompt gamma fields released during patient treatment. Owing to its millimetre position accuracy, the instrument is particularly suited for applications where a precise determination of the end-of-range (Bragg peak) of the beam is of paramount importance, as in cancerous and non-cancerous targets for treatment with ion beams and for the treatment of atrial fibrillation. With its unique dual-layer conception in coincidence, the instrument has high rejection ability against false neutron-generated counts, the principal source of background noise for in-beam dose monitoring. It can also provide a coarse measurement of the gamma incidence angle, permitting a correction of the parallax error, main source of dispersion for large area detectors employing collimators.
Claims
1. Prompt gamma monitor for patient dose monitoring in hadron therapy, said monitor comprising a first and second contiguous and independent detection modules that are configured in a way as to let prompt gammas coining from a patient initially interact with the first module and generate an electromagnetic shower propagating to the second module, wherein the first module is thick enough to collect sufficient signal from the incoming neutron or photon but thin enough to enable the electromagnetic shower from the photon interaction to propagate to the second module and to limit the natural lateral spread of the electromagnetic shower and wherein the second module is thick enough to absorb a large fraction of the energy from the said electromagnetic shower, said monitor furthermore comprising a signal detecting unit that is adapted to detect an electronic signal coincidence between the two detection modules.
2. Monitor according to claim 1 wherein the thickness of the first module is typically between 5 mm and 100 mm.
3. Monitor according to claim 1 or 2 wherein the thickness of the second module is typically between 5 and 100 mm.
4. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims wherein each detecting module is a LYSO or a lanthanum bromide scintillating crystal.
5. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims wherein at least one detecting module is an assembly of closely packed and optically insulated thin scintillator rods that are adapted to direct the scintillation light along their axis to suitable optical sensors to preserve localization.
6. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims wherein said detecting modules are each optically shielded to provide independent signal outputs.
7. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims comprising two light sensors located respectively in front and behind said detecting modules.
8. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims wherein the second detecting module can provide a quantitative measurement of the energy released by the incoming radiation.
9. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims wherein the two-dimensional projective readout of the crystals matrix is realized coupling the scintillators to perpendicular sets of Wavelength Shifter strips (WLS) in contact with the opposite faces of the stack, and read-out by SiPM at the edges.
10. Monitor according to claim 9 wherein the read-out is made by SiPM at the edges.
11. Monitor according to anyone of the previous claims comprising a neutron absorbing material that is located in a way as to let prompt gammas coining from a patient first cross said material before reaching the first module.
12. Monitor according to claim 1 wherein said material is composed of borated polyethylene at 30%.
13. Monitor according to claim 11 or 12 wherein said material has a thickness of 20 cm.
14. Method of using a prompt gamma monitor as defined in anyone of the previous claims characterized by the selection of the total energy collected by the two modules.
15. Method according to claim 14 wherein the selected energy is between 1 and 10 MeV.
16. Method of using a prompt gamma monitor as defined in anyone of the previous claims 1 to 13 or method according to claim 14 or 15 characterized by the filtering of the coincidence signals based on the angular correlation between the two modules.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0022] The invention will be better understood hereafter, with some non-limiting examples and with the following figures:
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[0036]
[0037] The processes leading to the conversion of photons and neutrons is shown schematically in
[0038] The thickness of each layer, which ranges from a few mm to a few cm depending on the materials chosen, is essential for the correct functioning of the invention. Indeed, the first layer is thick enough to collect enough signal from the incoming neutron or photon but thin enough to enable the electromagnetic shower from the photon interaction to propagate to the second layer and to limit the natural lateral spread of the electromagnetic shower (first layer is most position-sensitive). The second layer (which can be formed of many crystals) should be thick enough to absorb practically all the energy from the electromagnetic shower. It should also be position sensitive, in case that the monitor is used to compute not only the position but also the incidence angle of the radiation.
[0039] The arrangement of the PG-MON instrument is shown schematically in
[0042] The operating principle of the invention exploits the absorption of hard photons in stacks of segmented high-Z scintillators. While there is a wide choice of suitable scintillating crystals, with their high molecular weight and density LYSO (Cerium doped Lutetium based crystals) and lanthanum bromide (LaBr.sub.3) are preferred choices as efficient converter for high-energy photons (Saint-Gobain Crystals Handbook). Two main processes contribute to the absorption in the few MeV region (
[0043] Hard photons emitted by the beam-target interactions enter the detector and interact in the crystals; to limit the lateral spread of the scintillation signal, the converters are an assembly of closely packed, optically insulated individual crystals. After the first interaction, a cascade of events develops into a (few-photon) forward electro-magnetic shower, laterally spreading in the crystals until full absorption.
[0044] Localization of the interaction point can be performed with a wide choice of segmented photon detection devices: avalanche photodiodes, silicon photomultipliers, multi-anode vacuum photomultipliers, micro-channel plate sensors and more.
[0045] The most powerful readout structure, generally adopted for Positron Emission Tomography (PET) instrumentation, is a matrix of contiguous Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPM) with a pitch corresponding to the crystal lattice. For the S1 and S2 module of the PG-MON device, to reduce cost and complexity, the preferred embodiment of the invention is a two-dimensional projective readout of the crystals matrix realized coupling the scintillators to perpendicular sets of Wavelength Shifter strips (WLS) in contact with the opposite faces of the stack, and read-out by SiPM at the edges (
[0046] The energy module S2 can be readout with a similar scheme but owing to the larger size of the crystals and the spread of the electromagnetic shower the use of a simpler and commercially available multi-anode photomultiplier on the end face could be more suitable. Previous work in the detectors development group of the TERA Foundation has demonstrated that with a center-of-gravity algorithm on the signals recorded on the MA-PM position accuracies around one mm can be achieved for a collimated .sup.22Na 511 keV photon source (Solevi 2007).
[0047] To image a target, the PG-MON device can be mounted with a parallel hole collimator, a pinhole or a knife edge collimator (
[0048] Simpler and cheaper to manufacture, the pinhole and knife-edge collimators suffer from a fundamental limitation, as gammas can impinge the scintillator stack in a wide angular range, introducing parallax error dispersion as the depth in the crystal of the first interaction is unknown. The error can be coarsely corrected suitably combining the positional information provided by the two independent scintillator layers, as shown schematically in
[0049] Advantageously, a neutron absorbing material may be placed as first element (closest to the patient) of the PG-MON. This element reduces the flux of neutrons impinging on the two active scintillator layers of the PG-MON. As an example, such a material could be composed of borated polyethylene at 30%. With a thickness of 20 cm, the neutron flux could thus be reduced by approximately a factor 3.
[0050] A further improvement on the neutron background rejection can be achieved by applying a selection in the total energy collected by the two layers, which enhances the signal from gammas and reduce the signal from neutrons. Such a selection window could be chosen to correspond to the known region of emission of prompt gammas, between 1 and 10 MeV.
[0051] An additional improvement of the neutron background rejection may be achieved by filtering the coincidence signals based on the angular correlation between the two layers, i.e. by selecting only the signals where there is a small position difference between the signal in the two layers. Indeed, for gammas, the generated shower propagates in the forward direction, whereas for neutrons, the generated shower propagates in wider directions. Therefore, for gammas, the coincidence signals is in the two layers at transverse positions close to each other, whereas for neutrons, the coincidence signals may also be located in very far apart transverse positions between the two layers.
REFERENCES AND RELATED ART
[0052] U. Amaldi, Use of linear ion accelerators for the treatment of atrial fibrillation and ion accelerator system there for, TERA Foundation, EP3036978 (2013).
[0053] J. Krimmer, D. Dauvergne, J. M. Letang, E. Testa, Prompt-gamma monitoring in hadrontherapy: A review, Nucl. Insr. and Meth. A 878(2017)58.
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[0055] P. Solevi, Study of an in-beam PET system for CNAO, the National Centre for Oncological Hadrontherapy. PhD Thesis (Milano University, 2007).
[0056] D. Watts, Detectors for Quality Assurance in Hadrontherapy, Doctoral Thesis (Univ. Barcelona 2013)
[0057] C. Casella, M. Heller, C. Joram, T. Schneider, Nucl. Instr. and Meth,. A736(2014)161.
[0058] P. Beltrame et al, Construction and tests of demonstrator modules for a 3-D axial PET system for brain or small animal imaging, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A636(2011)5226
[0059] I. Perali et al, Prompt gamma imaging of proton pencil beams at clinical dose rate, Phys. Med. Biol. 59(2014)5849.
[0060] Saint-Gobain Crystals Handbook (https://www.crystals.saint-gobain.com)
[0061] F. Sauli, Radiation Imaging with Gaseous Detectors, Nucl. Instr. And Meth. A878(2018)1.
[0062] German Patent Application DE 10 2013 102 920 A1.