A simple method to shorten the apparent dead time in the dosimetry of Lu-177 for targeted radionuclide therapy using a gamma camera

•A simple and novel method to shorten the apparent dead time was proposed for Lu-177.•Usefulness of the method was assessed by experiments and Monte Carlo simulations.•Apparent time was shortened by one third of that without the proposed method.•Dead-time loss could be reduced from 10% to 1.3% in th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physica medica 2024-03, Vol.119, p.103298-103298, Article 103298
Hauptverfasser: Nakanishi, Kohei, Fujita, Naotoshi, Abe, Shinji, Nishii, Ryuichi, Kato, Katsuhiko
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A simple and novel method to shorten the apparent dead time was proposed for Lu-177.•Usefulness of the method was assessed by experiments and Monte Carlo simulations.•Apparent time was shortened by one third of that without the proposed method.•Dead-time loss could be reduced from 10% to 1.3% in the simulated tumour imaging. The dead-time loss reportedly degrades the accuracy of dosimetry using a gamma camera for targeted radionuclide therapy with Lu-177; therefore, the dead-time loss needs to be corrected. However, the correction is challenging. In this study, we propose a novel and simple method to shorten the apparent dead time rather than correcting it through experiments and Monte Carlo simulations. An energy window of 208 keV ± 10 % is generally used for the imaging of Lu-177. Lower-energy gamma photons and X-rays of Lu-177 do not contribute to image formation but lead to dead-time losses. In our proposed method, a thin lead sheet was used to shield gamma photons and X-rays with energies lower than 208 keV, while detecting 208 keV gamma photons that penetrated the thin sheet. We measured and simulated the energy spectra and count rate characteristics of a clinical gamma camera system using a cylindrical phantom filled with a Lu-177 solution. Lead sheets of 1.0- and 0.5-mm thicknesses were used as thin shields, and the dead-time losses in tumour imaging with consumed Lu-177 were simulated. The apparent dead times with lead sheets of 1.0- and 0.5-mm thicknesses and without a lead sheet were 1.7, 1.9, and 5.8 µs for an energy window of 208 keV ± 10 %, respectively. The dead-time losses could be reduced from 10 % to 1.3 % using the 1.0-mm thick lead sheet in the simulated imaging of tumour. Our method is promising in clinical situations and studies on Lu-177 dosimetry for tumours.
ISSN:1120-1797
1724-191X
DOI:10.1016/j.ejmp.2024.103298