Quantum Entanglement Tomography for enhanced medical imaging

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Physics and Astronomy

Abstract

This project will enable the commercialisation of a new concept for positron imaging which utilises quantum entanglement - Quantum Entanglement Tomography (QET). The work will fund a new collaboration between the University of Edinburgh (UoE) and Kromek, one of the leading UK based manufacturers of particle detector products. The new collaboration has the potential to enable new high-quality and low-cost PET imaging detectors.

In PET imaging a patient is injected with sugar containing a radioactive atom, usually a flourine atom. When this atom decays 2 photons are emitted which come out in opposite directions back-to-back. By detecting many of these 2 photon events an image of the source can be reconstucted. PET imaging is used for many important clinical diagnoses such as identifying cancerous tissue and diagnosing Alzheimer's disease.

We (UoE) have developed and patented a new technique (QET) which will improve upon the sharpness and contrast of the PET image using quantum information. There will be significant cost benefits in adopting this approach. Better imaging will lead to more appropriate treatment, resulting in fewer futile surgical interventions and improved therapy choices for the increasingly expensive chemotherapies applied by oncologists. Apart from oncology applications, there is an increasing use of PET imaging in neurodegenerative disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease. This technical developments in this project would allow smaller and weaker clinical features to be seen, permitting earlier and more reliable diagnosis of disease and disease progression.

The new quantum-information based medical imaging method will be commercialised with the CZT based detector systems developed by Kromek. These state-of-the-art photon detectors have close to ideal detection characteristics to accurately determine and exploit this quantum information.

Planned Impact

Positron Emission Tomography (PET) imaging is currently the fastest growing modality of medical imaging in both the US and Europe, with the number of patients using PET scans increasing by 21% per year between 2005 and 2010. To meet this growing demand, worldwide sales of PET scanners are expected to increase from $781M in 2010 to $1.7B by 2018. Three of the targeted areas for improvements of PET scanners are improved image quality, reduced scanning times and reduced radiation dose to the patient. We propose a technique based on QET, utilising the quantum entanglement of the two photons. Our solution provides a novel method with increased signal:noise ratio over PET, proving a method to improve the image quality in reduced time and dose. A feasibility study by UoE has proved the concept of the technology, and led to an initial patent. The work also evaluated performance criteria which any detection system would need to meet to create a commercial system. Kromek's cadmium zinc telluride (CZT) semiconductor detectors are the current leading detector technology to achieve this and commercialise the new method. The collaboration between Kromek and UoE has the potential to create new technology and analysis methods which will lead to higher quality and lower cost PET scanners.

The improved imaging capabilities will lead to better diagnosis, including smaller cancers being detected, lower false alarms, better localisation for planning. These will lead to reduced misdiagnosis and follow-up costs, reduced treatment costs (e.g. diagnosis of breast cancer, before they present symptomatically can reduce treatment costs by 20-40%), reduced anxiety and increased health. The radiation dose required for a QET scan will be smaller than PET, giving health and environmental benefits (with lower amounts of radiotracer production required). This reduction can also lead to faster scan times, opening up new functional scanning possibilities for the technique.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Please see the /2 instance of this grant. The main outputs came about after the reseracher (and grant) relocated mid project
First Year Of Impact 2020
Impact Types Societal

 
Description Collaboration with Kromek Ltd 
Organisation Kromek Group plc
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Private 
PI Contribution We setup a collaboration with industrial partners based on the outcomes of this grant. This led to a successful application to InnovateUK to commercialise the outcomes of the research funded in this work.
Collaborator Contribution They provide state of the art CZT photon detection systems and staff
Impact Succesful Innovate UK grant application under the quantum technologies call. Multidisciplinary including nuclear physics, detector physics, medical physics and imaging.
Start Year 2016
 
Description Collaboration with leading PET research centres 
Organisation University of Hull
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The Hull PET reserach centre has joined with our programme on quantum-entangled PET imaging. The medical imaging colleagues have collaborated on the medical imaging aspects for the next stages of the project, advising on suitable algorithms and involved in discussions about how best to include the quantum entanglement in the imaging. We are now collaborating with the Hull PET research centre to achieve the first measurements of entangled-PET imaging in tissue (our proof-of-principle used a laboratory source)
Collaborator Contribution Expertise on PET medical imaging. Suitable medical research facilities for follow on to project using the new detectors and methods for real biological imaging.
Impact Collaboration is multidisciplinary. Involving Chemistry, medicine and physics.
Start Year 2018
 
Title A METHOD OF, AND APPARATUS FOR, PROCESSING POSITRON EMISSION TOMOGRAPHY DATA 
Description A method of, and apparatus for, processing positron emission tomography data A positron emission tomography (PET) data processing method comprises obtaining PET data from a PET detector, wherein the PET detector comprises an array of scintillator elements, and wherein the PET data is representative of a PET measurement of at least part of a subject. The method comprises identifying in the PET data a plurality of paired events, wherein each paired event comprises a first photon event in a first region of the PET detector and a second photon event in a second region of the PET detector. The first photon event comprises an energy deposition in a first scintillator element of the array due to a scattering of a first photon at a first azimuthal scattering angle and an associated energy deposition by the scattered first photon in a second scintillator element of the array. The second photon event comprises an energy deposition in a third scintillator element of the array due to a scattering of a second photon at a second azimuthal scattering angle and an associated energy deposition by the scattered second photon in a fourth scintillator element of the array. The method further comprises processing the PET data in dependence on the first and second azimuthal scattering angles for the paired events. 
IP Reference WO2016092314 
Protection Patent granted
Year Protection Granted 2016
Licensed No
Impact Currently being developed for commercialisation with InnovateUK grant. The original IP was developed during the period of this award. Kromek agreed to fund the patent costs. We are in the process of potentially garnering additional new IP relating to the work carried out in this award.