UK Project Promises Earlier Detection of Brain Tumors
By MedImaging International staff writers Posted on 06 Apr 2010 |
Time taken to detect brain tumors could soon be significantly reduced due to British scientists, who are developing the technology for next-generation single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging that is set to transform the medical imaging process, improving future diagnosis of cancer and the probability of successful cancer therapy while enabling a higher throughput of patients in hospitals.
The research, called Project ProSPECTus, is an ongoing pioneering project led by the University of Liverpool (UK) with the nuclear physics group and technology departments at the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) at Daresbury Laboratory (Daresbury, Cheshire, UK) Project.
Project ProSPECTus is based on a form of imaging known as SPECT that detects gamma rays emitted by a tiny amount of a radioactive pharmaceutical that is injected into the body. SPECT is a widely used modality of imaging in many areas of medicine providing three-dimensional (3D) functional information about the body, which is typically presented as cross-sectional slices through the patient. It is most commonly used to assess the functioning of the heart or for the detection of tumors. Traditionally, SPECT imaging uses what is known as an Anger camera, which relies on a collimator, a filtering device with many small holes, which lets only some gamma rays through and relies on geometry to identify precisely where they are coming from in order to construct an image of a biologic process happening inside the patient.
However, ProSPECTus has taken a fundamentally different approach and has developed its technology based on what is known as the Compton camera. This identifies the origin of the gamma rays without the use of a collimator, meaning that much less of the radiation used in the process is wasted, so the radiation is used more efficiently. It has not been possible to do this successfully before. However, utilizing new, sophisticated detector systems, ProSPECTus is building a prototype SPECT imaging system, using the Compton camera principle that is 100 times more sensitive than the existing clinical SPECT systems. This increased sensitivity offers two benefits: either the dose of radiation administered to the patient could be reduced or alternatively more patients could be scanned by one machine in a day if the current dose is used.
These new cutting-edge detector systems, designed by the University of Liverpool's nuclear physics research group alongside the nuclear physics group at STFC Daresbury Laboratory, are a direct spin out of AGATA (advanced gamma tracking array), a nuclear physics research and development project with the aim of building the next-generation gamma-ray spectrometer. ProSPECTus is funded from STFC's Particle and Nuclear Physics Applied Systems (PNPAS) program, a scheme aimed at exploiting techniques developed in blue-skies basic research projects such as AGATA to generate knowledge exchange into the areas of health, security, and energy applications.
Dr. Andy Boston, the project spokesperson, at the University of Liverpool, said, "Not only is ProSPECTus' technology a hundred times more sensitive than that of the traditional Compton camera, it is unique in that it will also be possible to operate it simultaneously with MRI [magnetic resonance imaging], which has never been an option due to the MRI's strong magnetic field. In fact, it will be possible to fit this SPECT system retrospectively to the 350 or so existing MRI scanners across the UK. For patients this means fewer appointments, earlier and more effective diagnosis of tumors, which means higher probability of effective treatment. The higher sensitivity camera also offers the scope for shorter imaging time and lower doses of radiation, which is highly beneficial for patients who require frequent scanning. For clinicians, this means that more patients can be seen in a day. This is a truly collaborative effort between the nuclear physics groups both at the University of Liverpool and STFC Daresbury Laboratory, working with STFC's Technology teams who will design and build the detector cryostat and with the essential support from Liverpool's Magnetic Resonance & Image Analysis Research Center [MARIARC] who provide the MRI expertise.”
Ian Lazarus, of STFC's nuclear physics team at Daresbury Laboratory, said, "ProSPECTus has taken the abilities of the Compton imager to a new level. This is a particularly exciting example of how technology emerging from one nuclear physics project, in this case, AGATA, can have a direct and positive impact on the future wellbeing of our society.”
Related Links:
University of Liverpool
Science and Technology Facilities Council
Daresbury Laboratory
The research, called Project ProSPECTus, is an ongoing pioneering project led by the University of Liverpool (UK) with the nuclear physics group and technology departments at the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) at Daresbury Laboratory (Daresbury, Cheshire, UK) Project.
Project ProSPECTus is based on a form of imaging known as SPECT that detects gamma rays emitted by a tiny amount of a radioactive pharmaceutical that is injected into the body. SPECT is a widely used modality of imaging in many areas of medicine providing three-dimensional (3D) functional information about the body, which is typically presented as cross-sectional slices through the patient. It is most commonly used to assess the functioning of the heart or for the detection of tumors. Traditionally, SPECT imaging uses what is known as an Anger camera, which relies on a collimator, a filtering device with many small holes, which lets only some gamma rays through and relies on geometry to identify precisely where they are coming from in order to construct an image of a biologic process happening inside the patient.
However, ProSPECTus has taken a fundamentally different approach and has developed its technology based on what is known as the Compton camera. This identifies the origin of the gamma rays without the use of a collimator, meaning that much less of the radiation used in the process is wasted, so the radiation is used more efficiently. It has not been possible to do this successfully before. However, utilizing new, sophisticated detector systems, ProSPECTus is building a prototype SPECT imaging system, using the Compton camera principle that is 100 times more sensitive than the existing clinical SPECT systems. This increased sensitivity offers two benefits: either the dose of radiation administered to the patient could be reduced or alternatively more patients could be scanned by one machine in a day if the current dose is used.
These new cutting-edge detector systems, designed by the University of Liverpool's nuclear physics research group alongside the nuclear physics group at STFC Daresbury Laboratory, are a direct spin out of AGATA (advanced gamma tracking array), a nuclear physics research and development project with the aim of building the next-generation gamma-ray spectrometer. ProSPECTus is funded from STFC's Particle and Nuclear Physics Applied Systems (PNPAS) program, a scheme aimed at exploiting techniques developed in blue-skies basic research projects such as AGATA to generate knowledge exchange into the areas of health, security, and energy applications.
Dr. Andy Boston, the project spokesperson, at the University of Liverpool, said, "Not only is ProSPECTus' technology a hundred times more sensitive than that of the traditional Compton camera, it is unique in that it will also be possible to operate it simultaneously with MRI [magnetic resonance imaging], which has never been an option due to the MRI's strong magnetic field. In fact, it will be possible to fit this SPECT system retrospectively to the 350 or so existing MRI scanners across the UK. For patients this means fewer appointments, earlier and more effective diagnosis of tumors, which means higher probability of effective treatment. The higher sensitivity camera also offers the scope for shorter imaging time and lower doses of radiation, which is highly beneficial for patients who require frequent scanning. For clinicians, this means that more patients can be seen in a day. This is a truly collaborative effort between the nuclear physics groups both at the University of Liverpool and STFC Daresbury Laboratory, working with STFC's Technology teams who will design and build the detector cryostat and with the essential support from Liverpool's Magnetic Resonance & Image Analysis Research Center [MARIARC] who provide the MRI expertise.”
Ian Lazarus, of STFC's nuclear physics team at Daresbury Laboratory, said, "ProSPECTus has taken the abilities of the Compton imager to a new level. This is a particularly exciting example of how technology emerging from one nuclear physics project, in this case, AGATA, can have a direct and positive impact on the future wellbeing of our society.”
Related Links:
University of Liverpool
Science and Technology Facilities Council
Daresbury Laboratory
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