Proton tracking in a high-granularity Digital Tracking Calorimeter for proton CT purposes
Helge Egil Seime Pettersen, Johan Alme, Aleksandra Biegun, Anthony van, den Brink, Mamdouh Chaar, Dominik Fehlker, Ilker Meric, Odd Harald Odland,, Thomas Peitzmann, Elena Rocco, Hongkai Wang, Shiming Yang, Chunhui Zhang,, Dieter R\"ohrich

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a Digital Tracking Calorimeter's potential for proton CT by reconstructing proton tracks and energies with high resolution, aiming to improve tissue stopping power estimates in radiation therapy.
Contribution
It introduces a novel single-technology Digital Tracking Calorimeter prototype for proton tracking and calorimetry, simplifying setup and reducing costs for proton CT systems.
Findings
Proton range can be estimated with 4% resolution.
The prototype handles 1 MHz proton frequency with 500 concurrent tracks.
Future prototypes will enable faster, more accurate proton range measurements.
Abstract
Radiation therapy with protons as of today utilizes information from x-ray CT in order to estimate the proton stopping power of the traversed tissue in a patient. The conversion from x-ray attenuation to proton stopping power in tissue introduces range uncertainties of the order of 2-3% of the range, uncertainties that are contributing to an increase of the necessary planning margins added to the target volume in a patient. Imaging methods and modalities, such as Dual Energy CT and proton CT, have come into consideration in the pursuit of obtaining an as good as possible estimate of the proton stopping power. In this study, a Digital Tracking Calorimeter is benchmarked for proof-of-concept for proton CT purposes. The Digital Tracking Calorimeteris applied for reconstruction of the tracks and energies of individual high energy protons. The presented prototype forms the basis for a proton…
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