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Radioactive Beams for Image-Guided Particle Therapy : The BARB Experiment at GSI

Authors :
Boscolo, Daria
Kostyleva, Daria
Safari, Mohammad Javad
Anagnostatou, Vasiliki
Äystö, Juha
Bagchi, Soumya
Binder, Tim
Dedes, Georgios
Dendooven, Peter
Dickel, Timo
Drozd, Vasyl
Franczack, Bernhard
Geissel, Hans
Gianoli, Chiara
Graeff, Christian
Grahn, Tuomas
Greiner, Florian
Haettner, Emma
Haghani, Roghieh
Harakeh, Muhsin N.
Horst, Felix
Hornung, Christine
Hucka, Jan-Paul
Kalantar-Nayestanaki, Nasser
Kazantseva, Erika
Kindler, Birgit
Knöbel, Ronja
Kuzminchuk-Feuerstein, Natalia
Lommel, Bettina
Mukha, Ivan
Nociforo, Chiara
Ishikawa, Shunki
Lovatti, Giulio
Nitta, Munetaka
Ozoemelam, Ikechi
Pietri, Stephane
Plaß, Wolfgang R.
Prochazka, Andrej
Purushothaman, Sivaji
Reidel, Claire-Anne
Roesch, Heidi
Schirru, Fabio
Schuy, Christoph
Sokol, Olga
Steinsberger, Timo
Tanaka, Yoshiki K.
Tanihata, Isao
Thirolf, Peter
Tinganelli, Walter
Voss, Bernd
Weber, Uli
Weick, Helmut
Winfield, John S.
Winkler, Martin
Zhao, Jianwei
Scheidenberger, Christoph
Parodi, Katia
Durante, Marco
Super-FRS Experiment Collaboration
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2021.

Abstract

Several techniques are under development for image-guidance in particle therapy. Positron (β+) emission tomography (PET) is in use since many years, because accelerated ions generate positron-emitting isotopes by nuclear fragmentation in the human body. In heavy ion therapy, a major part of the PET signals is produced by β+-emitters generated via projectile fragmentation. A much higher intensity for the PET signal can be obtained using β+-radioactive beams directly for treatment. This idea has always been hampered by the low intensity of the secondary beams, produced by fragmentation of the primary, stable beams. With the intensity upgrade of the SIS-18 synchrotron and the isotopic separation with the fragment separator FRS in the FAIR-phase-0 in Darmstadt, it is now possible to reach radioactive ion beams with sufficient intensity to treat a tumor in small animals. This was the motivation of the BARB (Biomedical Applications of Radioactive ion Beams) experiment that is ongoing at GSI in Darmstadt. This paper will present the plans and instruments developed by the BARB collaboration for testing the use of radioactive beams in cancer therapy. peerReviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1222..81bd4dcc32fec590c54f0969e299c141