Cone-beam breast Computed Tomography (bCT) is an X-ray imaging technique for breast cancer diagnosis, in principle capable of delivering a much more homogeneous dose spatial pattern to the breast volume than conventional mammography, at dose levels comparable to two-view mammography. We present an investigation of the three-dimensional dose distribution for a cone-beam CT system dedicated to breast imaging. We employed Monte Carlo simulations for estimating the dose deposited within a breast phantom having a hemiellipsoidal shape placed on a cylinder of 3.5 cm thickness that simulates the chest wall. This phantom represents a pendulant breast in a bCT exam with the average diameter at chest wall, assumed to correspond to a 5-cm-thick compressed breast in mammography. The phantom is irradiated in a circular orbit with an X-ray cone beam selected from four different techniques: 50, 60, 70, and 80 kVp from a tube with tungsten anode, 1.8 mm Al inherent filtration and additional filtration of 0.2 mm Cu. Using the Monte Carlo code GEANT4 we simulated a system similar to the experimental apparatus available in our lab. Simulations were performed at a constant free-in-air air kerma at the isocenter (1 mu Gy); the corresponding total number of photon histories per scan was 288 million at 80 kVp. We found that the more energetic beams provide a more uniform dose distribution than at low energy: the 50 kVp beam presents a frequency distribution of absorbed dose values with a coefficient of variation almost double than that for the 80 kVp beam. This is confirmed by the analysis of the relative dose profiles along the radial (i.e. parallel to the "chest wall") and longitudinal (i.e. from "chest wall" to "nipple") directions. Maximum radial deviations are on the order of 25% for the 80 kVp beam, whereas for the 50 kVp beam variations around 43% were observed, with the lowest dose values being found along the central longitudinal axis of the phantom.

Investigation of the dose distribution for a cone beam CT system dedicated to breast imaging

LANCONELLI, NICO;LO MEO, SERGIO;
2013

Abstract

Cone-beam breast Computed Tomography (bCT) is an X-ray imaging technique for breast cancer diagnosis, in principle capable of delivering a much more homogeneous dose spatial pattern to the breast volume than conventional mammography, at dose levels comparable to two-view mammography. We present an investigation of the three-dimensional dose distribution for a cone-beam CT system dedicated to breast imaging. We employed Monte Carlo simulations for estimating the dose deposited within a breast phantom having a hemiellipsoidal shape placed on a cylinder of 3.5 cm thickness that simulates the chest wall. This phantom represents a pendulant breast in a bCT exam with the average diameter at chest wall, assumed to correspond to a 5-cm-thick compressed breast in mammography. The phantom is irradiated in a circular orbit with an X-ray cone beam selected from four different techniques: 50, 60, 70, and 80 kVp from a tube with tungsten anode, 1.8 mm Al inherent filtration and additional filtration of 0.2 mm Cu. Using the Monte Carlo code GEANT4 we simulated a system similar to the experimental apparatus available in our lab. Simulations were performed at a constant free-in-air air kerma at the isocenter (1 mu Gy); the corresponding total number of photon histories per scan was 288 million at 80 kVp. We found that the more energetic beams provide a more uniform dose distribution than at low energy: the 50 kVp beam presents a frequency distribution of absorbed dose values with a coefficient of variation almost double than that for the 80 kVp beam. This is confirmed by the analysis of the relative dose profiles along the radial (i.e. parallel to the "chest wall") and longitudinal (i.e. from "chest wall" to "nipple") directions. Maximum radial deviations are on the order of 25% for the 80 kVp beam, whereas for the 50 kVp beam variations around 43% were observed, with the lowest dose values being found along the central longitudinal axis of the phantom.
2013
n lanconelli; g mettivier; s lo meo; p russo
File in questo prodotto:
Eventuali allegati, non sono esposti

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/170653
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 1
  • Scopus 14
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 13
social impact