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Introduction to the ClearPEM projects

Introduction to the ClearPEM projects. Joao Varela LIP, Lisbon On behalf of the ClearPEM Collaboration. Jornadas LIP Universidade do Minho, 7-9 January 2010. The ClearPEM Projects. High performance PET scanner for breast cancer detection. Scanner is in clinical tests.

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Introduction to the ClearPEM projects

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  1. Introduction to the ClearPEM projects Joao Varela LIP, Lisbon On behalf of the ClearPEM Collaboration Jornadas LIP Universidade do Minho, 7-9 January 2010

  2. The ClearPEM Projects High performance PET scanner for breast cancer detection. Scanner is in clinical tests. Other applications to brain imaging and PET animal are being pursued Projects developed by the ClearPEM consortium, in the framework of Crystal Clear at CERN IP licensed to PETsys, SA

  3. The ClearPEM scanner • Good spatial resolution ( ~1.5 mm in whole FoV) • Fine crystal segmentation (2x2 mm) • DoI measurement with good resolution (FWHM ~2 mm) • Dual APD readout of individual crystal pixels • High Sensitivity ( ~ 40 cps/kBq in center FoV) • Long LYSO crystals (20 mm) • Two detector plates with large active area • Reduced Random Background (~30%) • Large flux of single photons (up to 10 MHz) • Coincidence time resolution of ~4 ns FWHM

  4. The ClearPEM scanner

  5. The ClearPEM detector • Two detector plates: • 6144 LYSO 2x2x20 mm3 crystals • 12288 APD pixel channels • Dual readout of crystal pixels for DoI measurement • 160x180 mm2 active area • Water cooling • 75% of detector channels presently installed

  6. ASIC Performance • Pulse Shape • Amplifier rise time: 20ns • Variation of baseline and pulse shape 1-2% • Noise • Pedestal RMS = 2.2 ADC Counts = 5keV • ENC = 1300 e- r.m.s. • Inter-channel dispersion ~ 8% Response to test pulse Noise measurement

  7. Data Acquisition Performance • Trigger Performance • Events in coincidenceup to 1.5MHz • (This involves computation of energy and time, Compton grouping and transmission to the trigger processor) • Acquisition rateup to 0.8MHz • (This involves readout of the event dataframe after issuing a trigger) • Disk storage rate ~ 400MB/s • High performance useful for fast calibration runs • Needed for other PET applications

  8. 40 hours Ancillary Systems • Cooling • Water cooling of detector plates at 18 oC • Stability of temperature ± 0.1 oC • Bias Voltages • Regulation of APD bias voltages on the detector heads (64 regulation channels) • Long-term stability of HV ~ 28 mV rms r.m.s. ~28 mV

  9. Energy Resolution Na-22 spectra summed for all crystals • Energy measurements: • Average energy resolution at 511 keV for the full scanner is 16.0% • Dispersion of energy resolution of individual crystals is 8.8% • Good energy linearity (~ up to few percent) 137Cs Resolution ~12.5% Photopeak measurements

  10. Time Resolution Typical pulse sampling • Time measurement: • Photon time is extracted from the pulse samples fitted by the function: • Coincidence time resolution of the whole scanner is 5.2 ns FWHM 137Cs 50 MHz sampling Resolution ~12.5% Time difference in coincidence events All scanner coincidences

  11. DoI Resolution Asymmetry distributions for different impact points in the crystal • Depth of interaction measurement • DoI is measured from light asymmetry in crystal dual readout • From direct measurement (collimated photons): • DoI resolution ~ 2 mm FWHM • for light asymmetry ±40% • Lu-176 background in crystals is used for DoI calibration in whole scanner • Average light asymmetry is ±59% Energy in bottom vs top APDs

  12. Energy Dependence on DoI Photopeak position as a function of DoI • Energy is independent of DoI: • E[keV]=Kabs.(Etop+Krel.Ebottom) • Z[mm]=CDOI.((Etopkrel.Ebottom)/(Etop+krel.Ebottom)) • Photopeak position is independent of DoI (up to few percent) • Energy resolution does not depend on DoI 137Cs Resolution ~12.5% Energy resolution as a function of DoI

  13. Scanner Calibration Distribution of energy calibrations • Energy: • Dispersion of channel gains 15.3% • Depth of interaction (Lu-176 background): • Dispersion of DoI calibration constants 7.8% • Time calibration: • Two pulse shape parameters per channel • Dispersion of time calibration constants 2% ~4600crystals Distribution of pulse peak time ~4600crystals

  14. ClearPEM Sensitivity • Sensitivity measurement: • Na-22 source • A(22Na) = 2.73 µCi ± 0.3% (101kBq) • Sensitivity at center of FoV for 10 cm Detector Head opening is 1.0% • (350-700 keV, 20 ns) • Correction factors: • Incomplete (75%) detector: 1.3 • In-detector Comptons: ~2 • Corrected sensitivity: ~2.6% • Monte Carlo estimation: 3.1% Count rate scan Sensitivity (100 mm ): 1.0% 14

  15. ClearPEM Spatial Resolution With DoI • Point source imaging • Na-22 point source in a grid with 5mm pitch • Energy window 400-600 keV • Sinograms of 16 source positions are added • Reconstruction with 3D-OSEM / STIR • Spatial resolution • Transaxial 1.2 mm FWHM • (corrected for source size ~1mm) • DoI effect • Images without using DoI information show considerable blurring 5 mm 1 mm Without DoI

  16. ClearPEM Image Uniformity • Images of uniform Ge-68 source • Reconstruction with 4 orientations of the detector plates • Absorption, scatter and corrections are not applied • Image artifacts due to detector effects are corrected • Good image uniformity Cylinder filled with positron emitter Ge-68 EW=400-700keV TW=4 ns 6 iterations 3D-OSEM

  17. Clinical Tests Program • Scanner Installation • Hospital IPO, Porto • Phase 1 (present) • Patients indicated for PET/CT (other disease) • Negative breast exams • Tuning the image reconstruction with real cases • 11 exams done • Phase 2 • Patients with positive indication from x-rays mammography • Assessment of PEM sensitivity / specificity • Comparison to mammography and MRI ClearPEM scanner at IPO Porto

  18. Initial clinical exams • Example of typical exam: • dose 8 mCi • 150 mm detector plate opening • 4 angular orientations • coincidence window ±4 ns • energy window 400-650 keV • fraction of randoms in FoV is 35% • Reconstruction: • 3D-OSEM • randoms, attenuation and scatter corrections not applied • simple normalization correction • on-going work to reduce statistical noise

  19. ClearPEM and Ultrasound • Dualmodal PET – US • CERIMED , Hospital Marseille, other partners • Ultra-sound probe with elastography capabilities • Cross-reference system and PET-US image fusion • Construction of second ClearPEM machine is well advanced ClearPEM-Sonic

  20. PET Animal • Pre-clinical studies with small and medium size animals • PET/MR insert • Texas Institute of Preclinical Studies • Application to brain imaging /EPFL 35 cm 60 cm 4.5 cm Cooling plates Detector modules Version with DoI

  21. High performance PET • Improvements to Electronics/DAQ • Optical S-link (under test) • ASICv4 (in design) • Intelligent Front End Board (in project) • PET Ring Trigger (hw ready) • PET Time-of-Flight (FWHM ~200 ps) • SiPM and TOF ASIC • (collaboration with Torino and CERN) • SPAD single-photon detectors integrated with TDCs • (collaboration with TUDelft and CERN)

  22. The ClearPEM Collaboration E. Albuquerque1, F. G. Almeida2,13, P. Almeida3, E. Auffray10, J. Barbosa2, A. L. Bastos9, V. Bexiga1, R. Bugalho4, C. Cardoso4,S. Carmona8, J.F. Carneiro2, B. Carriço4, C. S. Ferreira4, N. C. Ferreira5, M. Ferreira4, M. Frade4, F. Gonçalves1, C. Guerreiro5, P. Lecoq10, C. Leong1, P. Lousã6, P. Machado1, M. V. Martins3, N. Matela3, R. Moura4, J. Neves4, P. Neves6, N. Oliveira3, C. Ortigão4, F. Piedade6, J. F. Pinheiro4, P. Relvas6, A. Rivetti , P. Rodrigues4, I. Rolo4, A. I. Santos8, J. Santos2, M. M. Silva1, S. Tavernier11, I. C. Teixeira1,9,J. P. Teixeira1,9, J. C. Silva4,10, R. Silva4, A. Trindade4, J. Varela4, 12 1 INESC-ID, 2 INEGI, 3 IBEB/FCUL, 4 LIP, 5 IBILI/FMUC, 6 INOV, 8 HGO, 9 IPO, 10CERN, 11VUB Funded by

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