The present disclosure relates to exemplary embodiment of three-dimensional dosimetry procedures, methods and devices, and optical CT scanner apparatus which utilizes fiber optic taper for collimated images.
Optical CT scanners have been used for three-dimensional (3D) scanning of polymer gels and radiochromic plastic dosimeters for more than 20 years. However, 3D dosimetry has been limited to research studies, and 3D dosimetry has not been used in the routine clinical QA. Optical CT scanners can be categorized as single-beam and broad-beam geometries. An exemplary single-beam optical CT scanner, modified from original commercial OCTOPUS scanner, has been used for various 3D dosimetry studies (see, e.g., Refs. 1-3) and was considered the “gold standard” technique in light of previous studies showing its accuracy. One of the problems, among others, with this type scanner is that the scanning time for a 3D dosimeter can be very long, e.g., 8-10 hours. The broad-beam optical CT scanner with telecentric lenses design may have a faster scanning time (e.g., less than 10 minutes), although the dosimetry accuracy may not be as accurate due to stray light and spectral artifacts. Both stray light and spectral artifacts may be caused by internal scatter within the imaging lenses and 3D dosimeter.
Accordingly, there is a need to address and/or overcome at least some of the deficiencies with the prior devices, methods and systems described herein above.
To that end, an exemplary broad-beam optical CT scanner can be provided according to exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, that can utilize fiber optic taper for collimated images, e.g., for fast, high resolution, and accurate dose readout of 3D dosimeters. The exemplary scanning time for a complete three-dimensional dataset acquisition can be less than 10 minutes. For example, the performance of this optical CT scanner for 3D dosimetry was evaluated by comparison with the 3D readout from single laser beam optical scanner.
Exemplary system, method and computer-accessible medium for an optical CT scanner according to various exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure is provided. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the system, method and computer-accessible medium can include, e.g., a light source (e.g., an illuminator), an aquarium comprising a motor for rotating a sample, a fluid, an optic taper, and a camera. According to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the aquarium can be provided and/or situated between the light source and the optic taper, and the optic taper can be provided and/or situated between the aquarium and the camera. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the camera can be a CCD camera.
According to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the light source can be or include a telecentric illuminator configured to generate parallel light beams. The parallel light beams can be red light beams, and/or can have a wavelength of approximately 631±5 nm. For example, the fluid can have a refractive index of PRESAGE phantom. A refractive index of the fluid can match a refractive index of a dosimeter. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, a refractive index of the fluid can reduce and/or minimize light fraction at a wall-fluid interface. Octyl-salicylate and octyl-methoxy cinnamate solutions can be mixed with the fluid to match a refractive index 1.4-1.47 of a PRESAGE dosimeter.
According to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the optic taper can collimate light beams passed through the aquarium. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the optic taper can be made from fiberoptic, and/or the optic taper can transmit an image by fiber filaments fused together. For example, a magnification factor for the optic taper can be approximately equal to a ratio of a big end diameter of the optic taper over a small end diameter of the optic taper. Further, a minimization factor for the optic taper can be approximately equal to a small end diameter of the optic taper over a large end diameter of the optic taper. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the optic taper can be configured to pass only light beams incident at the optic taper below a threshold acceptable angle, thereby significantly reduce and/or eliminate scattered artifacts. Further, the optic taper can include a number of fibers (e.g., 9) per pixel configured to preserve a high-resolution performance with the camera. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the optic taper has 9 fibers per pixel.
In yet further exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, a broad-beam optical CT scanner can be provided with a fiber optic taper for collimated images, which can significantly reduce and/or eliminate scattered artifacts and spectral artifacts. The exemplary optical CT scanner can include, e.g., a telecentric broad parallel-beam source, an aquarium to house PRESAGE dosimeters, a fiber optic taper, and a CCD detector. For example, a dose distribution comparison can be performed with TPS and gamma index evaluation, which can indicate that the dose readout from such exemplary scanner can be comparable or better than the results from a single-beam scanner. The exemplary scanning time for a complete 3-D dataset acquisition can be, e.g., approximately 10-20 minutes. The exemplary optical scanner can be used for, e.g., an optical density readout of 3-D dosimeters. For example, the exemplary quality of the 3-D readout from this optical CT scanner can be better than the prior scanning system, and with a scanning time of less than 20 minutes. The exemplary scanning system can provide exemplary results which may be operator-independent.
According to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, a non-transitory computer-accessible medium having stored thereon computer-executable instructions for capturing an image of a sample are described. When a computing arrangement executes the instructions, the computing arrangement is configured to perform procedures comprising receiving the image from a camera of an optical CT scanner. For example, the optical CT scanner can include a light source (e.g., an illuminator), an aquarium comprising a motor for rotating the sample and a fluid, an optic taper, and a camera, and the aquarium can be between the light source and the optic taper and the optic taper can be in between the aquarium and the camera.
In additional exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, exemplary optical scanner apparatus, method and computer-accessible medium for obtaining information regarding the sample are provided. In certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the optical scanner, method and computer-accessible medium can utilize a container configured to hold the sample which is provided in a fluid. A light source can be provided which is configured to emit a light radiation to the container and the sample. Further, with an optic taper, it is possible to receive, taper and combine substantially parallel beams of an output radiation exiting the sample. The output radiation can be provided in response to an irradiation of the sample by the light radiation. Further, using a light detector, it is possible to receive and detect the combined tapered parallel beams so as to obtain the information regarding the sample.
According to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, the light source can be a telecentric illuminator configured to generate parallel light beams. In some examples, the parallel light beams can be red light beams. In some examples, the parallel light beams can have a wavelength of approximately 631±5 nm. In some examples, the fluid can have a refractive index of PRESAGE® phantom. In some examples, a refractive index of the fluid can match a refractive index of a dosimeter. In some examples, a refractive index of the fluid minimizes light fraction at a wall-fluid interface. In some examples, octyl-salicylate and octyl-methoxy cinnamate solutions can be mixed with the fluid to match a refractive index in a range of approximately 1.4 to 1.47 of a dosimeter. In some examples, the optic taper can collimate the output radiation. In some examples, the optic taper can be made from a fiberoptic material. In some examples, the optic taper can transmit an image by fiber filaments fused together. In some examples, a magnification factor for the optic taper can be equal to a ratio of a big end diameter of the optic taper over a small end diameter of the optic taper. In some examples, a minimization factor for the optic taper can be equal to a small end diameter of the optic taper over a large end diameter of the taper. In some examples, the optic taper can pass solely the output radiation that is incident at the optic taper which is below a particular threshold angle, thereby reducing or eliminating scattered artifacts. In some examples, the optic taper can include a number of fibers per pixel which are configured to facilitate a high-resolution performance of the light detector. In some examples, the optic taper can have at least 9 fibers per pixel. In some examples, the optical scanner can have a motor for rotating the sample. In some examples, the light detector can be a charge-coupled device (CCD) camera.
In yet additional exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, a further optic taper can be provided to receive the substantially parallel beams of the light radiation from the light source, and transmit the substantially parallel beams as an input radiation to the sample. In some examples, the optic taper can be configured to collimate the output radiation.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description of the exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, when taken in conjunction with the appended claims.
Further objects, features and advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying Figures showing illustrative embodiments of the present disclosure, in which:
Throughout the drawings, the same reference numerals and characters, unless otherwise stated, are used to denote like features, elements, components or portions of the illustrated embodiments. Moreover, while the present disclosure will now be described in detail with reference to the figures, it is done so in connection with the illustrative embodiments and is not limited by the particular embodiments illustrated in the figures.
According to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, an optical CT scanner can be provided which can include a light source (e.g., a telecentric illuminator) emitting parallel light beams (e.g., red-light beams), an aquarium filled with optical matching fluid to the refractive index of the PRESAGE phantom, a taper for collimation of the transmitted light, and a CCD camera. For example, stray light due to scatter, reflections, and refractions can be removed due to the collimation effect of the fiber optic taper.
In some exemplary embodiments of the methods, devices and systems of the present disclosure, a light source 110 can be provided. In some examples, the light source can be an illuminator, and the illuminator can be a telecentric illuminator (e.g., from Opto Engineering, Italy) which can provide a parallel red LED beam with a wavelength of 631±5 nm. In some examples, a wavelength of 630 nm can be selected as the wavelength for the illuminator 110 because the irradiated PRESAGE® phantom may have a peak absorption, and hence, highest signal at this wavelength. In some examples, the working distance of the range can be 20 to 35 cm. In some exemplary embodiments of the methods, devices and systems of the present disclosure, the light source 110 can irradiate light to a sample placed within the container 120 and the container 120 can pass the light to the optic taper 130. The container 120 can include a motor 121 for rotating the sample.
In some example embodiments of the example methods, devices and systems of the present disclosure, the illuminator 110 can project parallel light beams through a container 120 or an aquarium 120 containing a fluid. In some examples, the parallel light beams can have a refractive index matching the fluid. In some examples, the parallel light beams can have a radiochromic (PRESAGE) dosimeter (or a polymer gel dosimeter). In some examples, the refractive index matching fluid was selected to match the refractive index of the dosimeter and minimize the light fraction at the dosimeter wall-fluid interface. In some examples, octyl-salicylate and octyl-methoxy cinnamate solutions were mixed to match the refractive index 1.4-1.47 of PRESAGE dosimeter.
In some example embodiments of the example methods, devices and systems of the present disclosure, an optic taper 130 can be provided. In some examples, the optic taper can be a fiberoptic taper, which can transmit an image by numerous (e.g., millions) fiber filaments fused together. In some examples, a fiberoptic taper can be a bundle of optical fibers formed by a stretching process from a fused block of parallel fibers. In some examples, the optic taper 130 (e.g., fiberoptic taper) can magnify or minimize an image or incoming light. In some examples, the optic taper 130 (e.g., fiberoptic taper) can enlarge or reduce digital images. In some examples, the magnification (or minimization) factor for the optic taper 130 can be equal to the ratio of the big end diameter over the small end diameter (or the small end diameter over the large end diameter). In some exemplary embodiments of the methods, devices and systems of the present disclosure, the light received at the optic taper 130 can be tapered and combined, and provided to a light detector 140.
In some examples, the optic taper 130 can be coupled to a light detector (e.g., a CCD camera, etc.) 140. For example, the projected light of the dosimeter can pass through the optic taper 130 from the large end to the small end, and the small end can be coupled to the CCD camera 140. In these examples, when compared to a lens-based CCD camera system, direct coupling of the light source (e.g., an illuminator) with the CCD camera via an optic taper 130 (e.g., an image-preserving fiberoptics taper) can yield significant gains in the amount of light collected. In some examples, when the incident angle of a light exceeds the acceptance angle, the beam will not pass through the fiber, which can eliminate the scattered artifacts. Exemplary embodiments can have sufficient number of fibers per pixel in order to preserve the high-resolution performance with the CCD camera. For example, the recommended number of fibers per pixel can be at least nine.
In some examples, the size of components of exemplary embodiments of the exemplary system of the present disclosure can be as follows: telecentric illuminator, 14 cm; aquarium, 16 cm; window frame, 2 cm; fiberoptic taper, 12 cm; fiberoptic window; 1.5 cm; and CCD camera, 6 cm. In some examples, the size or arrangement of the system components of the present disclosure can be as follows: aquarium: 19.5 (width)×16 cm (length)×22 cm (height); Minimum beam size from the light source: 12 cm×9.9 cm; Field of view: 10×7.5 cm.
In further examples, an exemplary fiber optic taper according to certain exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure can be used to transfer and enlarge/reduce the size of an image with minimal distortion and high resolution. For example, the scatter artifact and other artifacts in the projected images can be removed almost completely due to the collimation effect of fiber optic taper. According to exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure, a pre-irradiation phantom scanning can be performed for each phantom to reduce the effect of background noise, edge artifacts, and/or other artifacts. This exemplary system is capable of measuring, e.g., 3-D dose distribution with high spatial resolution and dosimetry accuracy, and IMRT plan and a VMAT plan were used for testing.
An exemplary effect of collimation on the 3D dose measurement was studied. Spatial resolution, MTF, SNR, and image distortion tests were performed. A comparison between the broad-beam optical CT scanner using fiber optic taper and a single-beam optical raster scanner was performed for square field, conformal arc, and IMRT field dose distribution measurements. Based on previous 3D dosimetry studies, the single-beam optical CT scanner, modified from a commercial OCTOPUS scanner, may be the “gold standard” for 3D studies. The two-dimensional (2D) dose distributions generated by the broad-beam scanner were also compared to EBT3 results.
Exemplary Results: with exemplary collimated images from an fiber optic taper, according to one example, the highest spatial resolution can be estimated to be about 0.07 mm with MTF 10%. The scanning time in such example for a complete 3-D dataset acquisition can be less than 10 minutes. For dose distribution comparison in this example, using small-field conformal arcs, the gamma passing rate (2%/2 mm criteria, 10% dose threshold), was 100% between the fast broad-beam CT scanner and EBT3; and 99% between the broad-beam scanner and the single-beam scanner. All of the dose distributions from the broad-beam optical scanner were reconstructed directly from the 2D projected images without any correction for stray light. According to this example, the stray light was removed almost completely through the collimation effect of fiber optic taper.
Thus, the exemplary designed broad-beam optical CT scanner according to the exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, utilizing fiber optic taper for collimation of transmitted lights, can provide a fast, high resolution, and accurate dose readout of 3D dosimeters.
In a further example, FOV was 7.4 cm×10 cm, and the resolution was 70 μm with MTF of about 10%. In this example, the PRESAGE was scanned before and after irradiation with the phantom at exactly the same position. The exemplary dosimeter rotates via a rotation stage at, e.g., one degree/projection (or less), such that a set of projections from various views is acquired to facilitate a 3D reconstruction. In this example, the scanning time is about 10-20 minutes. The pre-scan (I0) and post-irradiation scan (It) can remove systematic uncertainties such as dosimeter impurities and imperfections.
In still further exemplary embodiments, experiments were performed using a Varian 2100 C/D linear accelerator, converted to deliver ultra-high-dose-rate 10 MeV electron beam. The LINAC delivered approximately 0.7 Gy/pulse for FLASH irradiations. Exemplary dose rate was varied from about 40 Gy/s to 240 Gy/s by changing the repetition rate. PRESAGE phantoms were irradiated en face at six FLASH dose rates: 40 Gy/s, 80 Gy/s, 120 Gy/s, 160 Gy/s, 200 Gy/s, and 240 Gy/s. EBT film and scintillator measurements were used to verify dose. Optical response of PESAGE phantom versus delivered dose was evaluated with various known doses. A novel parallel-beam optical CT scanner, utilizing fiber optic taper for collimated images, was developed for fast, high resolution, and accurate readout of 3D dosimeters. Exemplary percent depth dose curves for various FLASH dose rates and regular dose rate were generated and compared based on the optical response versus dose measurements. Exemplary percent depth dose curves from Eclipse Monte Carlo calculation were also generated
As exemplary results of such experiment(s), the exemplary optical density of PRESAGE phantom was confirmed to be linear with absorbed dose, consistent with the observation at regular treatment dose rates. At depths past D90, percent depth dose as a function of depth for six FLASH dose rates (e.g., 240-40 Gy/s) are nearly identical, indicating that optical response of PRESAGE is dose-rate independent. At depths near to and shallower than Dmax, there was some increased uncertainty in the results due to unevenness in the phantom surface and low signal-to-noise ratio.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, the exemplary broad-beam optical CT scanner can include, e.g.,
With this exemplary embodiment, the exemplary scanner can utilize a fiber optic taper for 3D dosimetry. Fiber optic taper can be used to transfer as well as enlarge and/or reduce the size of an image with minimal distortion and high resolution. For example, with the exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, the stray light and spectral artifacts in the reconstruction of 3D dose distribution can be removed, e.g., almost completely, due to the collimation effect of fiber optic taper. As an exemplary result, the exemplary embodiments of the broad-beam optical CT scanner with the fiber optic taper can provide an important readout device for a 3D radiation dosimeter. The exemplary benefits can be that such exemplary devices are fast, reproducible, high-resolution, and accurate 3D optical CT scanner.
According to another exemplary embodiment of the present disclosure, the exemplary device utilizes one or more optical fibers so as to provide a collimation effect. Indeed, it is not necessary to provide an error calibration for uncertainty, according to exemplary embodiments of the present disclosure. For example, an LED light source delivers light through optical fiber(s) (e.g., tapered fiber(s)), and the resultant radiation is provided on the CCD camera on the other side. The tapering can be based on the imaging sensor, and the tapering is utilized so as to determine which fiber corresponds the point on the image sensor. In phantom dark, e.g., the color means larger dose, and the darker light absorbs more light.
As shown in
Further, the exemplary processing arrangement 1205 can be provided with or include an input/output ports 1235, which can include, for example a wired network, a wireless network, the internet, an intranet, a data collection probe, a sensor, etc. As shown in
The foregoing merely illustrates the principles of the disclosure. Various modifications and alterations to the described embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of the teachings herein. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise numerous systems, arrangements, and procedures which, although not explicitly shown or described herein, embody the principles of the disclosure and can be thus within the spirit and scope of the disclosure. Various different exemplary embodiments can be used together with one another, as well as interchangeably therewith, as should be understood by those having ordinary skill in the art. In addition, certain terms used in the present disclosure, including the specification, drawings and claims thereof, can be used synonymously in certain instances, including, but not limited to, for example, data and information. It should be understood that, while these words, and/or other words that can be synonymous to one another, can be used synonymously herein, that there can be instances when such words can be intended to not be used synonymously. Further, to the extent that the prior art knowledge has not been explicitly incorporated by reference herein above, it is explicitly incorporated herein in its entirety. All publications referenced are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The following references are hereby incorporated by reference, in their entireties:
This application is a continuation-in-part of International Patent Application No. PCT/US2021/021203, filed on Mar. 5, 2021 that published as International Patent Publication No. WO 2021/178889 on Sep. 10, 2021, and also relates to and claims priority from U.S. Patent Application No. 62/985,629, filed on Mar. 5, 2020, the entire disclosure of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62985629 | Mar 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/US2021/021203 | Mar 2021 | US |
Child | 17902781 | US |