Periodic Reporting for period 1 - PGTI (Prompt Gamma Time Imaging: a new medical-imaging modality for adaptive Particle Therapy)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2022-10-01 do 2025-03-31
With the aim of increasing both safety and efficacy, this project proposes a new medical-imaging modality, Prompt Gamma Time Imaging (PGTI), and the development of a dedicated fast gamma detector, TIARA (Time-of-flight Imaging ARrAy), to monitor PT treatments in real-time. They exploit the signal of the secondary prompt gamma-rays emitted from nuclear interactions in the patients to recover information on ion range, tissue density and dose.
TIARA will be composed of 30 gamma detection modules based on monolithic Cherenkov radiators uniformly distributed around the patient, and read in temporal coincidence with a dedicated beam monitor, to allow the measurement of the total Time-Of-Flight (TOF) of the incident ion and the PG with a temporal resolution of the order of 100 ps rms. The resolution of an inverse problem (the PGTI algorithm) makes it possible to determine the spatial distribution of the PG vertices, which is strongly correlated with the particle path in the patient, but also to the densities of tissues intersected by the beam. This will allow to correlate the images provided by PGTI to real-time dose distributions, in order to enable the use of this technique for adaptive dosimetry. PGTI will be also explored as a potential approach to proton tomography. If this project is successful, it will allow, for the first time, to control the uncertainties affecting both treatment planning and treatment delivery with a unique device. PGTI may be the missing step towards the birth of image-guided particle therapy.
A TIARA prototype including 8 block detectors (in the photo) has recently been realised. Numerous experiments under proton and carbon beams conducted in different clinical centers have demonstrated the feasibility of the PGTI approach for irradiations carried out with cyclotrons, synchro-cyclotrons (at Centre Antoine Lacassagne, Nice, France) and synchrotrons (at CNAO, Pavia, Italy). The excellent temporal resolution of the system, as well as its insensitivity to neutrons, the main source of noise for this application, contribute to the measurement of TOF distributions characterized by a very high signal-to-noise ratio. This makes it possible to achieve a range accuracy below 2 mm (at 2 sigma) at the scale of a single irradiation spot (e.g. 10^7 protons), thanks to the measurement of the width of the TOF distribution. The plot shows the TOF distributions obtained from the irradiation of the sinus of an anthropomorphic phantom head with 148 MeV protons at the ProteusOneTM accelerator: data obtained with the sinus empty (red) or filled with gel (blue) are clearly separated. These data also make it possible to measure the variation of the PG production rate along the hadron path and therefore to obtain information on the density and stopping powers of the tissues intersected, opening up prospects for the use of TIARA for proton imaging.