Program Information
Systematic Study of Target Localization for Bioluminescence Tomography Guided Radiation Therapy for Preclinical Research
B Zhang1*, J Yu1,3 , I Iordachita2 , J Reyes1 , Z Liu4,5 , M Brock4 , M Patterson6 , J Wong1 , K Wang1 , (1) Department of Radiation Oncology and Molecular Radiation Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, (2) Laboratory for Computational Sensing and Robotics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, (3)School of Physics and Information Technology, Shaanxi Normal University, Shaanxi, China, (4) Department of Oncology, Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, (5) Department of GI Oncology, Peking University School of Oncology, Beijing Cancer Hospital & Institute, Beijing, China, (6) McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario,Canada
Presentations
WE-FG-BRA-6 (Wednesday, August 3, 2016) 1:45 PM - 3:45 PM Room: Ballroom A
Purpose: To overcome the limitation of CT/CBCT in guiding radiation for soft tissue targets, we developed a bioluminescence tomography(BLT) system for preclinical radiation research. We systematically assessed the system performance in target localization and the ability of resolving two sources in simulations, phantom and in vivo environments.
Methods: Multispectral images acquired in single projection were used for the BLT reconstruction. Simulation studies were conducted for single spherical source radius from 0.5 to 3 mm at depth of 3 to 12 mm. The same configuration was also applied for the double sources simulation with source separations varying from 3 to 9 mm. Experiments were performed in a standalone BLT/CBCT system. Two sources with 3 and 4.7 mm separations placed inside a tissue-mimicking phantom were chosen as the test cases. Live mice implanted with single source at 6 and 9 mm depth, 2 sources with 3 and 5 mm separation at depth of 5 mm or 3 sources in the abdomen were also used to illustrate the in vivo localization capability of the BLT system.
Results: Simulation and phantom results illustrate that our BLT can provide 3D source localization with approximately 1 mm accuracy. The in vivo results are encouraging that 1 and 1.7 mm accuracy can be attained for the single source case at 6 and 9 mm depth, respectively. For the 2 sources study, both sources can be distinguished at 3 and 5 mm separations at approximately 1 mm accuracy using 3D BLT but not 2D bioluminescence image.
Conclusion: Our BLT/CBCT system can be potentially applied to localize and resolve targets at a wide range of target sizes, depths and separations. The information provided in this study can be instructive to devise margins for BLT-guided irradiation and suggests that the BLT could guide radiation for multiple targets, such as metastasis.
Funding Support, Disclosures, and Conflict of Interest: Drs. John W. Wong and Iulian I. Iordachita receive royalty payment from a licensing agreement between Xstrahl Ltd and Johns Hopkins University.
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