Reston, VA—A novel imaging modality that can visualize the distribution of medical radiopharmaceuticals with very fine resolution has been developed and successfully tested, according to research published in the March issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine. Known as the lensless radiomicroscope, the palm-sized instrument offers the same level of imaging performance as its closest imaging equivalent but comes with significantly larger field of view and costs less than $100.
Credit: Image created by Justin Klein, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
Reston, VA—A novel imaging modality that can visualize the distribution of medical radiopharmaceuticals with very fine resolution has been developed and successfully tested, according to research published in the March issue of The Journal of Nuclear Medicine. Known as the lensless radiomicroscope, the palm-sized instrument offers the same level of imaging performance as its closest imaging equivalent but comes with significantly larger field of view and costs less than $100.
“While many nuclear medicine imaging modalities can quantitively measure how radiopharmaceuticals interact with living tissues, few have the resolution necessary to zoom down to level of single cells,” said Guillem Pratx, PhD, associate professor of radiation oncology at Stanford University in Stanford, California. “This potentially hinders the development of effective radiopharmaceuticals for disease detection, staging, and treatment.”
To address this issue, researchers constructed a compact instrument that images radiopharmaceuticals by direct detection of ionizing charged particles via a consumer-grade complementary metal-oxide semiconductor detector. It is made from off-the-shelf parts that cost less than $100, which is approximately 500 times less than the radioluminescence microscope, the closest imaging device to the lensless microscope.
Upon proof-of-concept testing, the lensless radiomicroscope produced high-resolution images of more than 5,000 cells within its 1 cm2 field of view, a hundredfold increase over current state-of-the-art technology. Static and dynamic images were successfully created for both beta- and alpha-emitting radionuclides with the lensless radiomicroscope.
“With these improvements, we expect that the new lensless radiomicroscope will be available for more labs to incorporate into their studies,” noted Pratx. “Researchers will be able to analyze the uptake of radiotracers by heterogeneous populations of cells, such as those extracted from tumors or the brain. This in turn, will provide an opportunity for researchers to incorporate cellular level data into the development pipeline of new radiopharmaceuticals.”
Currently the lensless radiomicroscope design is available to other researchers as open source. The instrument can be built using consumer grade components and 3-D printing.
This study was made available online in September 2022.
The authors of “Development of a lensless radiomicroscope for cellular-resolution radionuclide imaging” include Justin Shaun Klein, Tae Jin Kim, and Guillem Pratx, Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
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Journal
Journal of Nuclear Medicine
DOI
10.2967/jnumed.122.264021
Article Title
Development of a lensless radiomicroscope for cellular-resolution radionuclide imaging
Article Publication Date
1-Mar-2023
COI Statement
Justin Klein was supported by T32CA118681.