Cherenkov emissions for studying tumor changes during radiation therapy: An exploratory study in domesticated dogs with naturally-occurring cancer.
Abstract
<h4>Purpose</h4>Real-time monitoring of physiological changes of tumor tissue during
radiation therapy (RT) could improve therapeutic efficacy and predict therapeutic
outcomes. Cherenkov radiation is a normal byproduct of radiation deposited in tissue.
Previous studies in rat tumors have confirmed a correlation between Cherenkov emission
spectra and optical measurements of blood-oxygen saturation based on the tissue absorption
coefficients. The purpose of this study is to determine if it is feasible to image
Cherenkov emissions during radiation therapy in larger human-sized tumors of pet dogs
with cancer. We also wished to validate the prior work in rats, to determine if Cherenkov
emissions have the potential to act an indicator of blood-oxygen saturation or water-content
changes in the tumor tissue-both of which have been correlated with patient prognosis.<h4>Methods</h4>A
DoseOptics camera, built to image the low-intensity emission of Cherenkov radiation,
was used to measure Cherenkov intensities in a cohort of cancer-bearing pet dogs during
clinical irradiation. Tumor type and location varied, as did the radiation fractionation
scheme and beam arrangement, each planned according to institutional standard-of-care.
Unmodulated radiation was delivered using multiple 6 MV X-ray beams from a clinical
linear accelerator. Each dog was treated with a minimum of 16 Gy total, in ≥3 fractions.
Each fraction was split into at least three subfractions per gantry angle. During
each subfraction, Cherenkov emissions were imaged.<h4>Results</h4>We documented significant
intra-subfraction differences between the Cherenkov intensities for normal tissue,
whole-tumor tissue, tissue at the edge of the tumor and tissue at the center of the
tumor (p<0.05). Additionally, intra-subfraction changes suggest that Cherenkov emissions
may have captured fluctuating absorption properties within the tumor.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Here
we demonstrate that it is possible to obtain Cherenkov emissions from canine cancers
within a fraction of radiotherapy. The entire optical spectrum was obtained which
includes the window for imaging changes in water and hemoglobin saturation. This lends
credence to the goal of using this method during radiotherapy in human patients and
client-owned pets.
Type
Journal articleSubject
AnimalsDogs
Neoplasms
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Radiotherapy Dosage
Prospective Studies
Pilot Projects
Particle Accelerators
X-Rays
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22461Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1371/journal.pone.0238106Publication Info
Rickard, Ashlyn G; Yoshikawa, Hiroto; Palmer, Gregory M; Liu, Harrison Q; Dewhirst,
Mark W; Nolan, Michael W; & Zhang, Xiaofeng (2020). Cherenkov emissions for studying tumor changes during radiation therapy: An exploratory
study in domesticated dogs with naturally-occurring cancer. PloS one, 15(8). pp. e0238106. 10.1371/journal.pone.0238106. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22461.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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