Quantitative CT imaging and radiation-absorbed dose estimations of 166Ho microspheres: paving the way for clinical application

PMID: PMID
DOI: DOI
Journal: European Radiology Experimental
Year of publication: 2024
Page: Online ahead of print

C. Morsink, N. Klaassen, G. van de maat, M. Boswinkel, A. Arranja, R. Bruggink, I. van Houwelingen, I. Schaafsma, J.W. Hesselink, J.F.W. Nijsen, B. van Nimwegen

Background Microbrachytherapy enables high local tumor doses sparing surrounding tissues by intratumoral injection of radioactive holmium-166 microspheres (166Ho-MS). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) cannot properly detect high local Ho-MS concentrations and single-photon emission computed tomography has insufficient resolution. Computed tomography (CT) is quicker and cheaper with high resolution and previously enabled Ho quantification. We aimed to optimize Ho quantification on CT and to implement corresponding dosimetry.

Methods Two scanners were calibrated for Ho detection using phantoms and multiple settings. Quantification was evaluated in five phantoms and seven canine patients using subtraction and thresholding including influences of the target tissue, injected amounts, acquisition parameters, and quantification volumes. Radiation-absorbed dose estimation was implemented using a three-dimensional 166Ho specific dose point kernel generated with Monte Carlo simulations.

Results CT calibration showed a near-perfect linear relation between radiodensity (HU) and Ho concentrations for all conditions, with differences between scanners. Ho detection during calibration was higher using lower tube voltages, soft-tissue kernels, and without a scanner detection limit. The most accurate Ho recovery in phantoms was 102 ± 11% using a threshold of mean tissue HU + (2 × standard deviation) and in patients 98 ± 31% using a 100 HU threshold. Thresholding allowed better recovery with less variation and dependency on the volume of interest compared to the subtraction of a single HU reference value. Corresponding doses and histograms were successfully generated.

Conclusion CT quantification and dosimetry of 166Ho should be considered for further clinical application with on-site validation using radioactive measurements and intra-operative Ho-MS and dose visualizations.