EJNMMI Physics (Aug 2024)
Positronium lifetime validation measurements using a long-axial field-of-view positron emission tomography scanner
Abstract
Abstract Background Positron emission tomography (PET) traditionally uses coincident annihilation photons emitted from a positron interacting with an electron to localize cancer within the body. The formation of positronium (Ps), a bonded electron-positron pair, has not been utilized in clinical applications of PET due to the need to detect either the emission of a prompt gamma ray or the decay of higher-order coincident events. Assessment of the lifetime of the formed Ps, however, can potentially yield additional diagnostic information of the surrounding tissue because Ps properties vary due to void size and molecular composition. To assess the feasibility of measuring Ps lifetimes with a PET scanner, experiments were performed in a Biograph Vision Quadra (Siemens Healthineers). Quadra is a long-axial field-of-view (LA-FOV) PET scanner capable of producing list-mode data from single interaction events. Results Ortho-Ps (o-Ps) lifetimes were measured for quartz-glass and polycarbonate samples using a $$^{22}\text{Na}$$ 22 Na positron source. Results produced o-Ps lifetimes of 1.538 ± 0.036 ns for the quartz glass and 1.927 ± 0.042 ns for the polycarbonate. Both o-Ps lifetimes were determined using a double-exponential fit to the time-difference distribution between the emission of a prompt gamma ray and the annihilation of the correlated positron. The measured values match within a single standard deviation of previously published results. The quartz-glass samples were additional measured with $${^{82}}\text{Rb}$$ 82 Rb , $$^{68}$$ 68 Ga and $$^{124}\text{I}$$ 124 I to validate the lifetime using clinically available sources. A double-exponential fit was initially chosen as a similar methodology to previously published works, however, an exponentially-modified Gaussian distribution fit to each lifetime more-accurately models the data. A Bayesian method was used to estimate the variables of the fit and o-Ps lifetime results are reported using this methodology for the three clinical isotopes: 1.59 ± 0.03 ns for $$^{82}\text{Rb}$$ 82 Rb , 1.58 ± 0.07 ns for $$^{68}\text{Ga}$$ 68 Ga and 1.62 ± 0.01 ns for $$^{124}\text{I}$$ 124 I . The impact of scatter and attenuation on the o-Ps lifetime was also assessed by analyzing a water-filled uniform cylinder (20 $$\phi$$ ϕ $$\times$$ × 30 cm $$^{3}$$ 3 ) with an added $$^{82}\text{Rb}$$ 82 Rb solution. Lifetimes were extracted for various regions of the cylinder and while there is a shape difference in the lifetime due to scatter, the extracted o-Ps lifetime of the water, 1.815 ± 0.013 ns, agrees with previously published results. Conclusion Overall, the methodology presented in this manuscript demonstrates the repeatability of Ps lifetime measurements with clinically available isotopes in a commercially-available LA-FOV PET scanner. This validation work lays the foundation for future in-vivo patient scans with Quadra.
Keywords