Low-Dose TOF-PET Based on Surface Electron Production in Dielectric Laminar MCPs
Abstract
We present simulations of whole-body low-dose time-of-flight positron emission tomography (TOF-PET) based on the direct surface production [1] by 511 keV gamma rays of energetic electrons via the Photo-electric and Compton Effects, eliminating the scintillator and photodetector sub-systems in PET scanners. In Ref. [1] we described Microchannel Plates (MCP) constructed from thin dielectric laminae containing heavy nuclei such as lead or tungsten (LMCPTM). The laminae surfaces are micro-patterned to form channels, which can then be functionalized to support secondary electron emission in the manner of conventional MCPs. We have simulated direct conversion using modifications to the TOPAS Geant4-based tool kit. A 20 × 20 × 2.54 cm3 LMCP, composed of 150-micron thick lead-glass laminae, is predicted to have a 30% conversion efficiency to a primary electron that penetrates an interior wall of a pore. The subsequent secondary electron shower is largely confined to one pore and can provide high space and time resolutions. In whole-body PET scanners the technique eliminates the scintillator and photodetector subsystems. The consequent absence of a photocathode allows assembly of large arrays at atmospheric pressure and less stringent vacuum requirements, including use of pumped and cycled systems. TOPAS simulations of the Derenzo and XCAT-brain phantoms are presented with dose reductions of factors of 100 and 1000 from a literature benchmark. New applications of PET at a significantly lower radiation dose include routine screening for early detection of pathologies, the use in diagnostics in previously unserved patient populations such as children, and a larger installed facility base in rural and under-served populations, where simpler gamma detectors and lower radiation doses may enable small low-cost portable PET scanners.
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