Taiga Yamaya, Eiji Yoshida, Hideaki Tashima, Naoko Inadama, Fumihiko Nishikido, Yoshiyuki Hirano, Yasunori Nakajima, Tetsuya Shinaji, Munetaka Nitta, Mikio Suga, Hideaki Haneishi, Keisuke Masuda, Keiji Shimizu, Shinji Sato, Taku Inaniwa, Hiroshi Ito
2014 IEEE NUCLEAR SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM AND MEDICAL IMAGING CONFERENCE (NSS/MIC) 2014年 査読有り
The OpenPET is our original idea that realizes the world's first open-type 3D PET scanner for PET-image guided particle therapy such as in situ dose verification and direct tumor tracking. Even with a full-ring geometry, the OpenPET has an open gap between its 2 detector rings through which the treatment beam passes. Following our initial 2008 proposal, we developed a small prototype in 2010 to show a proof-of-concept. Now, we report the development of a prototype whole-body OpenPET. The key technology which enabled the OpenPET realization is our original, 4-layered depth-of-interaction detector. In order to measure a radiation from the limited activity produced though fragmentation reactions, Zr-doped GSO (GSOZ), which contains less natural radioactivity, was chosen for the scintillators instead of Lu-based scintillators although timing performance was compromised. In order to compensate for the limited light yield, on the other hand, we used 64-channel flat-panel PMTs with a super-bialkali photocathode, which had a 30% higher quantum efficiency. In order to enable stable in-beam PET measurement even under high background radiations, voltage divider circuits were designed to provide 5 times higher linearity. Additionally, to avoid severe radiation damage, we did not use gain control ASICs in the front-end circuits, and position analyzer circuits were placed with a 15-m cable extension. The prototype consists of 2 detector rings, and each detector ring has 2 sub-rings of 40 detectors. Each detector consists of 16 x 16 x 4 array of GSOZ (2.8 x 2.8 x 7.5mm(3)). The portable gantry has a compact design; each detector ring has a 940 mm outer diameter and 171 mm thickness for the detector inner bore of 640 mm diameter and 113 mm thickness. The system was tested with a carbon beam irradiation at a clinical intensity. Phantom images were obtained by applying a GPGPU-based, list mode iterative reconstruction algorithm with geometrical detector response modeling.