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The ENDOTOFPET-US PROJECT objectives

 

The objectives of the Endo-TOFPET-US project are briefly described below:

1. Build a detection head behaving as an optical photon counter and providing a quantum detection scheme for photons over a wide spectral range (from visible to gamma -rays) and a fully digital signal at the level of the photo-detector.

2. Reach a 200ps timing resolution, corresponding to a spatial resolution of 3 cm along the Line of Response (LOR) in a dual-head system, allowing a direct (and therefore fast) 3-dimensional reconstruction through a limited number of angular projections, and an efficient rejection of background coming from outside of the few cubic centimetres region of interest (ROI).

3. Achieve a millimetre spatial resolution for the PET detector head.

4. Integrate all the components in a very compact detector head with an efficient tracking system for a sub-millimetre on-line determination of the position of the different imaging parts.

5. Generate fully 3D tomographic images and fuse them with the US images for hybrid visualization of the biomarker distribution (PET) and the anatomy (US).

6. Define a roadmap for the development of a new generation of multimodal endoscopic probes combining the morphological information with submillimeter spatial resolution provided by the US endoscopic probe with the high-sensitivity measurement of the functional response of specific radioactive biomarkers acquired by a dedicated high performance and versatile PET camera.

The main clinical objective is to address image-guided diagnosis and minimally invasive surgery with a miniaturized bimodal endoscopic probe with a millimetre spatial resolution and a 100 times higher sensitivity than whole-body PET scanners. The aim is to improve harvesting of tumoural tissue during biopsy by combining the functional biological information of radioactive biomarkers with the morphological information obtained from US. As first target pathologies, we focus on pancreatic cancer (with a clinical pilot study) and prostatic cancer (in a second intention after the present FP7 project), entities with almost asymptomatic development and – in the case of pancreatic cancer – extremely bad prognosis if not detected and treated at an early stage. A first stage of preclinical investigations on pigs will be followed by pilot clinical investigations by a team grouping the PIs of the 3 hospitals of the consortium in Marseille.