Open Access
18 July 2024 Review of Cherenkov imaging technology advances in radiotherapy: single-photon-level imaging in high ambient light and radiation backgrounds
Aubrey Parks, Jeremy Hallett, Alexander Niver, Rongxiao Zhang, Petr Bruza, Brian W. Pogue
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Significance

Single-photon-level imaging has been utilized for decades in closed dark environments; however, the utility for macroscopic imaging is more limited because it involves time-gating, filtering, and processing to view signals of interest. In radiation therapy delivery, a low-level signal called Cherenkov emission occurs from patients’ bodies, which is imaged with single-photon level sensitivity, mapping radiation dose deposition in tissue. Several key technological advances have been leveraged to make this extremely low-light signal overcome high background and noise in clinical settings.

Aim

Our review summarizes specific technological advances that have led to a single-photon imaging in high radiation noise and high optical background environments possible. Our work discusses applications and future opportunities.

Approach

Physical fundamentals of Cherenkov light, ambient room light, optical filtering, time-gating, and image processing are reviewed with key technological camera choices. This is followed by discussion of image quality, noise, and postprocessing, with current and future applications.

Results

Invention and optimization of time-gating techniques and cameras with a single-photon capability were required to achieve real-time Cherenkov imaging. Requirements of video frame rate (10 to 30 fps), fast triggering (μs), clinically relevant spatial resolution (mm), single-photon/pixel sensitivity, and large field of view all led to intensified complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor cameras. Additional innovations in wavelength filtering, lens choices, and spatial and temporal postprocessing have allowed imaging that is not overwhelmed by ambient radiation noise or room lights. The current use provides real-time visualization of external beam radiotherapy on patient’s skin. Several emerging research areas may improve image quality and provide additional capabilities in biochemical sensing and quantification of delivery.

Conclusion

The technical inventions and discoveries on how this light signal is sampled have led to real-time beam observation for dose delivery verification in settings where single-photon sensitive imaging is seemingly implausible while also opening the door to additional research applications.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Aubrey Parks, Jeremy Hallett, Alexander Niver, Rongxiao Zhang, Petr Bruza, and Brian W. Pogue "Review of Cherenkov imaging technology advances in radiotherapy: single-photon-level imaging in high ambient light and radiation backgrounds," Biophotonics Discovery 1(2), 020901 (18 July 2024). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.BIOS.1.2.020901
Received: 22 February 2024; Accepted: 14 June 2024; Published: 18 July 2024
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CITATIONS
Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Radiotherapy

Cameras

Tissues

Scintillators

Signal detection

Interference (communication)

Imaging technologies

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