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CdTe XG‐Cam: A new high‐resolution x‐ray and gamma‐ray camera for studies of the pharmacokinetics of radiopharmaceuticals in small animals.

Authors :
Katsuragawa, Miho
Yagishita, Atsushi
Takeda, Shin'ichiro
Minami, Takahiro
Ohnuki, Kazunobu
Fujii, Hirofumi
Takahashi, Tadayuki
Source :
Medical Physics; Aug2024, Vol. 51 Issue 8, p5308-5320, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: The recent emergence of targeted radionuclide therapy has increased the demand for imagers capable of visualizing pharmacokinetics in developing radiopharmaceuticals in the preclinical phase. Some radionuclides emit hard x‐rays and gamma‐rays below 100 keV, in which energy range the performance of conventional NaI scintillators is poor. Multipinhole collimators are also used for small animal imaging with a good spatial resolution but have a limited field of view (FOV). Purpose: In this study, a new imager with high sensitivity over a wide FOV in the low‐energy band (<$<$100 keV) was developed for the pharmacokinetic study. Methods: We developed an x‐ray and gamma‐ray camera for high‐resolution spectroscopy, named "CdTe XG‐Cam," equipped with a cadmium telluride semiconductor detector and a parallel‐hole collimator using a metal 3D printer. To evaluate the camera‐system performance, phantom measurements with single and dual nuclides (99mTc$^{\rm 99m}{\rm Tc}$, 111In$^{111}{\rm In}$, and 125I)$^{125}{\rm I)}$ were performed. The performance for in vivo imaging was evaluated using tumor‐bearing mice to which a nuclide (99mTc$^{\rm 99m}{\rm Tc}$ or 125I)$^{125}{\rm I)}$ administered. Results: We simultaneously obtained information on 111In$^{111}{\rm In}$ and 125I$^{125}{\rm I}$, which emit emission lines in the low‐energy band with peak energies close to each other (23–26 keV for 111In$^{111}{\rm In}$ and 27–31 keV for 125I)$^{125}{\rm I)}$, and applied an analytical method based on spectral model fitting to determine the individual radioactivities accurately. In the small animal imaging, the distributions of the nuclide in tumors were accurately quantified and time‐activity curves in tumors are obtained. Conclusions: The demonstrated capability of our system to perform in vivo imaging suggests that the camera can be used for applications of pharmacokinetics research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00942405
Volume :
51
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Medical Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179046696
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/mp.17124