Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

12-1-2023

Journal

Medical Physics

Abstract

Background: Thermochemical ablation (TCA) is a minimally invasive therapy under development for hepatocellular carcinoma. TCA simultaneously delivers an acid (acetic acid, AcOH) and base (sodium hydroxide, NaOH) directly into the tumor, where the acid/base chemical reaction produces an exotherm that induces local ablation. However, AcOH and NaOH are not radiopaque, making monitoring TCA delivery difficult.

Purpose: We address the issue of image guidance for TCA by utilizing cesium hydroxide (CsOH) as a novel theranostic component of TCA that is detectable and quantifiable with dual-energy CT (DECT).

Materials and methods: To quantify the minimum concentration of CsOH that can be positively identified by DECT, the limit of detection (LOD) was established in an elliptical phantom (Multi-Energy CT Quality Assurance Phantom, Kyoto Kagaku, Kyoto, Japan) with two DECT technologies: a dual-source system (SOMATOM Force, Siemens Healthineers, Forchheim, Germany) and a split-filter, single-source system (SOMATOM Edge, Siemens Healthineers). The dual-energy ratio (DER) and LOD of CsOH were determined for each system. Cesium concentration quantification accuracy was evaluated in a gelatin phantom before quantitative mapping was performed in ex vivo models.

Results: On the dual-source system, the DER and LOD were 2.94 and 1.36-mM CsOH, respectively. For the split-filter system, the DER and LOD were 1.41- and 6.11-mM CsOH, respectively. The signal on cesium maps in phantoms tracked linearly with concentration (R2 = 0.99) on both systems with an RMSE of 2.56 and 6.72 on the dual-source and split-filter system, respectively. In ex vivo models, CsOH was detected following delivery of TCA at all concentrations.

Conclusions: DECT can be used to detect and quantify the concentration of cesium in phantom and ex vivo tissue models. When incorporated in TCA, CsOH performs as a theranostic agent for quantitative DECT image-guidance.

Keywords

Humans, Contrast Media, Sodium Hydroxide, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular, Phantoms, Imaging, Liver Neoplasms, ablation, cesium, contrast media, dual-energy computed tomography, material decomposition, quantitative imaging, thermochemical ablation

DOI

10.1002/mp.16558

PMID

37409792

PMCID

PMC10770302

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

12-1-2024

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Author MSS

Published Open-Access

yes

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