Configurable {\gamma} Photon Spectrometer to Enable Precision Radioguided Tumor Resection
Rahul Lall, Youngho Seo, Ali M. Niknejad, and Mekhail Anwar

TL;DR
This paper introduces a configurable gamma photon spectrometer integrated into a CMOS chip, enabling precise detection and energy measurement of gamma photons for improved radioguided tumor surgery.
Contribution
The development of a compact, configurable gamma spectrometer with sub-keV energy resolution and adaptable pixel architectures for enhanced intraoperative tumor detection.
Findings
Able to resolve activities down to 1 uCi
Achieves sub-keV energy resolution
Operates with a 1.315 MeV energy dynamic range
Abstract
Surgical tumor resection aims to remove all cancer cells in the tumor margin and at centimeter-scale depths below the tissue surface. During surgery, microscopic clusters of disease are intraoperatively difficult to visualize and are often left behind, significantly increasing the risk of cancer recurrence. Radioguided surgery (RGS) has shown the ability to selectively tag cancer cells with gamma ({\gamma}) photon emitting radioisotopes to identify them, but require a mm-scale {\gamma} photon spectrometer to localize the position of these cells in the tissue margin (i.e., a function of incident {\gamma} photon energy) with high specificity. Here we present a 9.9 mm2 integrated circuit (IC)-based {\gamma} spectrometer implemented in 180 nm CMOS, to enable the measurement of single {\gamma} photons and their incident energy with sub-keV energy resolution. We use small 2 2 um…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Advanced Optical Sensing Technologies · Radiation Therapy and Dosimetry
