Prompt gammas imaging (PGI) is a promising method for observing a beam's shape and estimating the range of the beam from outside a subject. However 2-dimensional images of prompt gammas (PGs) during irradiation of protons were still difficult to measure. To achieve PGI, we developed a new gamma camera and imaged PGs while irradiating a phantom by proton beams. We also simultaneously measured prompt X-ray (PX) images with an X-ray camera from opposed direction and compared the images. The developed gamma camera uses a 10 mm thick GAGG block optically coupled to a flat panel photomultiplier tube (FP-PMT), and it is contained in a 20 mm thick tungsten container with a pinhole collimator attached. A poly-methyl-methacrylate (PMMA) block was irradiated by proton beams with total number of the protons similar to the clinical level, and the gamma camera imaged PGs and X-ray camera imaged PXs simultaneously. For all of the tested beams, we could measure the beam shapes of the PGs and the PXs and the ranges could also be estimated from the images. For both PG and PX images, time sequential images and accumulated images could be derived. We confirmed that the PGI using our developed gamma camera, as well as PXI, is promising for beam imaging and range estimation in proton therapy.
Keywords: Gamma camera; PGs; PXs; Proton; Range.
Copyright © 2024 Associazione Italiana di Fisica Medica e Sanitaria. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.