Scanning K-edge subtraction (SKES) imaging with laser-compton x-ray sources

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Medical physics Pub Date : 2025-01-28 DOI:10.1002/mp.17638
Trevor Reutershan, Christine V. Nguyen, Haytham H. Effarah, Eric C. Nelson, Kyle D. Chesnut, Christopher P. J. Barty
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

K-edge subtraction (KES) imaging is a dual-energy imaging technique that enhances contrast by subtracting images taken with x-rays that are above and below the K-edge energy of a specified contrast agent. The resulting reconstruction spatially identifies where the contrast agent accumulates, even when obscured by complex and heterogeneous distributions of human tissue. This method is most successful when x-ray sources are quasimonoenergetic and tunable, conditions that have traditionally only been met at synchrotrons. Laser-Compton x-ray sources (LCSs) are a compact alternative to synchrotron radiation with a quasimonoenergetic x-ray spectrum. One limitation in the clinical application of KES imaging with LCSs has been the extensive time required to tune the x-ray spectrum to two different energies.

Purpose

We introduce an imaging technique called scanning K-edge subtraction (SKES) that leverages the angle-correlated laser-Compton x-ray spectrum in the setting of mammography. The feasibility and utility of this technique will be evaluated through a series of simulation studies. The goal of SKES imaging is to enable rapid K-edge subtraction imaging using a laser-Compton x-ray source. The technique does not rely on the time-consuming process of tuning laser-Compton interaction parameters.

Methods

Laser-Compton interaction physics are modeled using conditions based on an X-band linear electron accelerator architecture currently under development using a combination of 3D particle tracking software and Mathematica. The resulting angle-correlated laser-Compton x-ray beam is propagated through digitally compressed breast phantoms containing iodine contrast-enhanced inserts and then to a digital flat-panel detector using a Matlab Monte Carlo propagation software. This scanning acquisition technique is compared to the direct energy tuning method (DET), as well as to a clinically available dual-energy contrast-enhanced mammography (CEM) system.

Results

KES imaging in a scanning configuration using an LCS was able to generate a KES image of comparable quality to the direct energy tuning method. SKES was able to detect tumors with iodine contrast concentrations lower than what is clinically available today including lesions that are typically obscured by dense fibroglandular tissue. After normalizing to mean glandular dose, SKES is able to generate a KES image with equal contrast to CEM using only 3% of the dose.

Conclusions

By leveraging the unique quasimonochromatic and angle-correlated x-ray spectrum offered by LCSs, a contrast-enhanced subtraction image can be obtained with significantly more contrast and less dose compared to conventional systems, and improve tumor detection in patients with dense breast tissue. The scanning configuration of this technique could accelerate the clinical translation of this technology.

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来源期刊
Medical physics
Medical physics 医学-核医学
CiteScore
6.80
自引率
15.80%
发文量
660
审稿时长
1.7 months
期刊介绍: Medical Physics publishes original, high impact physics, imaging science, and engineering research that advances patient diagnosis and therapy through contributions in 1) Basic science developments with high potential for clinical translation 2) Clinical applications of cutting edge engineering and physics innovations 3) Broadly applicable and innovative clinical physics developments Medical Physics is a journal of global scope and reach. By publishing in Medical Physics your research will reach an international, multidisciplinary audience including practicing medical physicists as well as physics- and engineering based translational scientists. We work closely with authors of promising articles to improve their quality.
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