Development of Compact Gamma Camera For Imaging Of Prostate Cancer

The U.S. Department of Energys Brookhaven National Laboratory and Hybridyne Imaging Technologies, Inc., of Toronto, Canada, have won a 2009 R&D 100 Award for developing a compact gamma camera for highresolution imaging of prostate cancer. The camera system, called ProxiScan, is a nuclear medical instrument that can localize cancer tissue in the prostate gland in detail at an early stage, which is important for the successful diagnosis and early treatment of the potentially deadly disease.

R&D Magazine gives R&D 100 Awards annually to the top 100 technological achievements of the year. Typically, these are innovations that transform basic science into useful products. The 2009 awards will be presented on November 12, in Orlando, Florida.

“The Department of Energys national laboratories are incubators of innovation, and Im proud they are being recognized once again for their remarkable work,” said Energy Secretary Steven Chu. “The cuttingedge research and development being done in our national labs is vital to maintaining Americas competitive edge, increasing our nations energy security, and protecting our environment. I want to thank this years winners for their work and congratulate them on this award.”

The common way to diagnose prostate cancer the second leading cancer among men, next to lung cancer is through a blood test that measures the levels of a protein produced by the prostate gland called prostatespecific antigen, or PSA. Elevated PSA levels may indicate prostate cancer, but with a high number of falsepositive detections. Often, then, men must have an invasive biopsy, normally guided by ultrasound imagery. Other methods for confirming a diagnosis of prostate cancer include conventional nuclear medical imaging techniques, such as positron emission spectroscopy and single photon emission computed tomography.

However, the current imaging methods have limitations. Benign and cancerous tumors cannot easily be distinguished by ultrasound, and fibrous tissues can be mistakenly identified as tumors if patients have had radiation treatment of the prostate previously. Traditional nuclear imaging systems produce lowerresolution images and are less efficient than Brookhavens compact digital camera. Also, the detectors in current systems are too large to be used in transrectal probes.

In contrast, the new cadmium zinc telluride (CZT)based gamma camera is small enough for transrectal prostate cancer diagnosis, after the patient is injected with a tracer radiopharmaceutical. The highresolution CZT detector is the cuttingedge technology that drives the novel system. Using this new technology, the working distance between the imaging system and the prostate gland is minimized, allowing urologists to obtain better images with a smaller amount of injected radioactive tracer, compared to conventional nuclear medical systems.

“This project has been a great opportunity to take gammaray detector technology originally developed for national security and apply it toward important societal goals in the area of cancer diagnosis and treatment,” said Ralph James, a senior physicist at Brookhaven who is the Laboratorys principal coinventor of the technology together with Brookhaven associate scientist Yonggang Cui.

Cui added, “The CZT material combines the best aspects of conventional nuclear imaging detectors while minimizing their weaknesses. Our experience in detector development and electronics design has been critical in delivering this high performance system in a very compact package at a competitive cost.”

Although the CZTbased system was designed to reveal prostate cancer, it can be modified for imaging other cancers, such as cervical, uterine, colorectal and breast cancers. It can also be optimized for surgical use as a probe to guide the removal of cancerous tumors while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissues.

CZT detectors have fostered the development of new instruments for measuring radiation. Numerous medical, industrial, scientific, environmental and homelandsecurity applications exist for this technology, including handheld instruments to reduce the trafficking of nuclear materials and portable field instruments for environmental monitoring and remediation.

The U.S. Department of Energys (DOE) Office of Nonproliferation Research and Development has been the principal sponsor funding the development of CZT detectors, and Hybridyne Imaging Technologies funded the design and engineering of the new compact gamma camera. The inventors have 16 patents on the technology, ranging from detector design and fabrication to imaging. Brookhaven Science Associates, the company that manages Brookhaven Lab, has a patent pending on the advanced CZT detectors.

Source
Diane Greenberg

This entry was posted on Sábado, Julio 25th, 2009 at 10:40 and is filed under prostate. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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