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Arc-PET: Cost-effective whole body PET scanner with high sensitivity and high spatial resolution


A whole-body positron emission tomography system designed with Prism-PET detector modules for enhanced spatial resolution and sensitivity

Tech Image

OsloMetX, pixabay,CC0

Background


Modern whole-body positron emission tomography (PET) systems are constrained by their fixed, often cylindrical, geometries and large ring diameters. This design is largely influenced by technological limitations, specifically the lack of cost-effective detector modules capable of measuring depth-of-interaction. As a result, current scanners employ a one-size-fits-all approach, primarily designed to accommodate the largest patients. This design choice inherently compromises spatial resolution and sensitivity for smaller individuals, including pediatric patients, and prevents the system from adapting to diverse body types or focusing on specific organs to achieve optimal imaging performance across a broad spectrum of clinical needs.

Technology


Researchers at Stony Brook University developed a whole-body positron emission tomography (PET) system designed with Prism-PET detector modules, providing 5 degrees of geometric freedom. The novel design enables non-cylindrical, small-bore scanner geometries, a departure from current fixed, cylindrical systems. Additionally, the system leverages the cost-effective Depth of Interaction (DOI) capability inherent in the Prism-PET modules, which facilitates its geometric adaptability to different body types and specific organs.

Advantages

  • Enhanced spatial resolution and sensitivity
  • Cost-effective depth-of-interaction (DOI) capability
  • Improved patient comfort and accessibility
  • Enhanced Compton scatter localization
  • Uniform performance across the detector array

Application

  • Manufacturing and Sales of Advanced PET Systems
  • Human Clinical Diagnostics
  • Biomedical Research and Drug Development
  • Veterinary Diagnostics and Research

Inventors

Eric Petersen, PhD Student, Biomedical Engineering
Amirhossein Goldan, Assistant Professor, Radiology
Andrew LaBella, PhD Candidate, Biomedical Engineering
Wei Zhao, Professor, Radiology
Adrian Howansky, Clinical Medical Physicist, Radiology

Licensing Potential


Development partner - Commercial partner - Licensing

Licensing Status


Available 

Licensing Contact

James Martino, Licensing Specialist, Intellectual Property Partners, james.martino@stonybrook.edu,

Patent Status


Utility Application filed

Stage of Development


Proof of Concept

Tech ID

050-9201