Cherenkov effect improves optical dosimetry for safer cancer therapy

Feb. 26, 2015
The Cherenkov effect can be measured and used in optical dosimetry to make cancer therapies safer and more effective.

Researchers at Dartmouth College's Norris Cotton Cancer Center (Lebanon, NH) have shown how the complex parts of blue light, known as the Cherenkov effect, can be measured and used in optical dosimetry to make cancer therapies safer and more effective. The characteristic blue glow from a nuclear reactor is present in radiation therapy, too.

"The beauty of using the light from the Cherenkov effect for dosimetry is that it's the only current method that can reveal dosimetric information completely noninvasively in water or tissue," says Adam K. Glaser, a PhD candidate who worked alongside Rongxiao Zhang, another PhD candidate, and Brian W. Pogue, Ph.D., who led the work.

Although the phenomenon has been constructively utilized for decades in high-energy particle and astrophysics, only recently has it been investigated during radiation therapy. In this study, the researchers separately measured emissions of x-ray photons, protons, and electrons and they found widely varying utility.

Based on the findings of where dose correlates with Cherenkov emission, the research team concluded that, for x-ray photons, the light emission would be optimally suited for narrow beam stereotactic radiation therapy and surgery validation studies, verification of dynamic intensity-modulated and volumetric modulated arc therapy treatment plans in water tanks, near mono-energetic sources (e.g., Co-60 and brachy therapy sources), and also for entrance and exit surface imaging dosimetry of both narrow and broad beams. For electron use, Cherenkov emission was found to be only suitable for surface dosimetry applications. Finally, for proton dosimetry, there exists a fundamental lack of Cherenkov emission at the Bragg peak, making the technique of little use, although the researchers say that post-irradiation detection of light emission from radioisotopes could prove to be useful.

"By detecting this light, we can pursue novel applications of Cherenkov light emission during radiation therapy to help clinicians improve the overall treatment outcome for patients," explains Pogue.

The collaborators intend to pursue further investigation at Norris Cotton Cancer Center to find other applications where this "free" light can be useful, such as continuing clinical trials in which the Cherenkov light from x-ray beams is imaged directly from a patient's tissue surface during radiation therapy.

Full details of the work appear in the journal Physics in Medicine and Biology; for more information, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/59/14/3789.

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BioOptics World Editors

We edited the content of this article, which was contributed by outside sources, to fit our style and substance requirements. (Editor’s Note: BioOptics World has folded as a brand and is now part of Laser Focus World, effective in 2022.)

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