The spatial accuracy of cellular dose estimates obtained from 3D reconstructed serial tissue autoradiographs
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Physics in Medicine & Biology
- Vol. 40 (1) , 163-180
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/40/1/014
Abstract
In order to better predict and understand the effects of radiopharmaceuticals used for therapy, it is necessary to determine more accurately the radiation absorbed dose to cells in tissue. Using thin-section autoradiography, the spatial distribution of sources relative to the cells can be obtained from a single section with micrometre resolution. By collecting and analysing serial sections, the 3D microscopic distribution of radionuclide relative to the cellular histology, and therefore the dose rate distribution, can be established. Here, a method of 3D reconstruction of serial sections is proposed, and measurements are reported of (i) the accuracy and reproducibility of quantitative autoradiography and (ii) the spatial precision with which tissue features from one section can be related to adjacent sections. Uncertainties in the activity determination for the specimen result from activity losses during tissue processing (4-11%), and the variation of grain count per unit activity between batches of serial sections (6-25%). Correlation of the section activity to grain count densities showed deviations ranging from 6-34%. The spatial alignment uncertainties were assessed using nylon fibre fiduciary markers incorporated into the tissue block, and compared to those for alignment based on internal tissue landmarks. The standard deviation for the variation in nylon fibre fiduciary alignment was measured to be 41 mu m cm-1, compared to 69 mu m cm-1 when internal tissue histology landmarks were used. In addition, tissue shrinkage during histological processing of up to 10% was observed. The implications of these measured activity and spatial distribution uncertainties upon the estimate of cellular dose rate distribution depends upon the range of the radiation emissions. For long-range beta particles, uncertainties in both the activity and spatial distribution translate linearly to the uncertainty in dose rate of <15%. For short-range emitters (<100 mu m), such as alpha particle sources, the magnitude of the uncertainty in serial section alignment is comparable with the particle track length. Under these circumstances, dosimetric errors are introduced in proportion to the serial section alignment inaccuracy.Keywords
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