OPTICAL TOMOGRAPHY OF POLYMER GELS FOR 3D DOSIMETRY
Project Number5R44CA065209-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderMARYANSKI, MAREK J
Awardee OrganizationMGS RESEARCH, INC.
Description
Abstract Text
This project aims to develop a novel, tissue-equivalent gel-dosimeter of
ionizing radiation, which is capable of producing highly-resolved and
accurate data on three dimensional dose distributions using optical
tomographic densitometry. The dose-response mechanism relies on the
production of Rayleigh scattering micro-particles in the gel at the site
of radiation absorption, where acrylic comonomers dispersed in the gel are
polymerized. Absorption and scattering of collimated light passing
through the optically turbid medium produces a net attenuation of light
intensity that can be measured and is directly related to the dose.
Measurements of the projections of the optical density into different
directions can be used to reconstruct the distribution of radiation doses
within the gel. Doses of the order of 1 Gy can be measured with a spatial
resolution <1mm. In Phase 1, basic optical properties of the gel have
been investigated and a prototype optical scanner using a single laser
beam and scanning photodiode was constructed and used successfully to
create accurate 2D dose maps. The goals of Phase 2 are to reengineer the
optical tomography apparatus in order to perform 3D scanning in reasonable
times, to further develop the reconstruction and image analysis software
of the scanner, and to further evaluate and develop formulations of
polymer gel optimized for their optical properties. The latter will
require studies designed to better understand the factors that affect the
optical density - dose response of polymer gels. There are significant
advantages to the use of this simpler optical method of reading the dose
distribution stored by the gel compared to MR imaging, which is the only
alternative. The polymer gel - optical scanner system will find
widespread use in radiation therapy practice, for 3D measurements in
homogeneous and anthropomorphic phantoms, confirmation of computerized
treatment planning and in quality assurance procedures.
PROPOSED COMMERCIAL APPLICATION: Acceptance testing of approximately 125
new high energy X-ray machines requires the measurement of between 6 and
12 dose distributions, using about 1,200 gels. Quality assurance
procedures for the existing 2,500 linear accelerators could require 10,000
polymer-gels. Brachytherapy and experimental applications could account
for 2,000 more gels. At $300 per gel, initial annual sales of gels in
excess of $3 Million are anticipated. Scanner sales (25 per year at
$60,000 each) would add $l.5 Million to this.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R44CA065209-03
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