Abstract

In recent years, breast imaging using radiolabelled molecules has attracted significant interest. Our group has proposed a multi-pinhole molecular breast tomosynthesis (MP-MBT) scanner to obtain 3D functional molecular breast images at high resolutions. After conducting extensive optimisation studies using simulations, we here present a first prototype of MP-MBT and evaluate its performance using physical phantoms. The MP-MBT design is based on two opposing gamma cameras that can image a lightly compressed pendant breast. Each gamma camera consists of a 250 × 150 mm2 detector equipped with a collimator with multiple pinholes focusing on a line. The NaI(Tl) gamma detector is a customised design with 3.5 mm intrinsic spatial resolution and high spatial linearity near the edges due to a novel light-guide geometry and the use of square PMTs. A volume-of-interest is scanned by translating the collimator and gamma detector together in a sequence that optimises count yield from the scan region. Derenzo phantom images showed that the system can reach 3.5 mm resolution for a clinically realistic 99mTc activity concentration in an 11-minute scan, while in breast phantoms the smallest spheres visible were 6 mm in diameter for the same scan time. To conclude, the experimental results of the novel MP-MBT scanner showed that the setup had sub-centimetre breast tumour detection capability which might facilitate 3D molecular breast cancer imaging in the future.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women

  • X-ray mammography has generally high diagnostic sensitivity and reasonably low dose, it suffers from a reduced sensitivity for patients with dense breasts, which is especially disadvantageous as dense breasts are associated with higher cancer risk (Yaffe 2008, Berg 2009)

  • Reconstructed slices near the centre of the phantom are lower in intensity than those near the collimator, which is clearly visible in the images in figure 5. We investigated this issue by doing a full simulation of the Derenzo phantom scan using our voxelized raytracing (VRT) software

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women. About 25% of cancer diagnoses and 15% of cancer deaths in females are due to breast cancer (Ferlay et al 2015). Several planar breast scintigraphy devices (Hruska et al 2012a, 2012b, Siman and Kappadath 2012, Long et al 2016), dedicated breast SPECT (Brzymialkiewicz et al 2005, Gong and Williams 2015, Gilland et al 2017) and PET (Macdonald et al 2009, Baghaei et al 2010, Yanagida et al 2010, Moliner et al 2012) scanners are under development or available from manufacturers. These dedicated systems are preferred over whole-body general-purpose scanners, as they improved count yield and resolution in the breast

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