Publication | Open Access
An open source heterogeneous 3D printed mouse phantom utilising a novel bone representative thermoplastic
29
Citations
22
References
2020
Year
Tissue EngineeringComputed TomographyMouse PhantomBiomedical EngineeringOrthopaedic SurgeryTreatment VerificationX-ray ImagingRadiation MedicineSynthetic Bone SubstituteBiomechanicsPrinting Customisable PhantomsCt ScanRadiation ImagingRadiologyHealth SciencesMedical ImagingFunctional Tissue EngineeringRadiologic ImagingRadiographic Imaging3D BioprintingRigorous Quality Standards3D PrintingBone ImagingBiomedical ImagingAnthropomorphic PhantomsMedicineSkeletal Imaging
The lack of rigorous quality standards in pre-clinical radiation dosimetry has renewed interest in the development of anthropomorphic phantoms. Using 3D printing customisable phantoms can be created to assess all parts of pre-clinical radiation research: planning, image guidance and treatment delivery. We present the full methodology, including material development and printing designs, for the production of a high spatial resolution, anatomically realistic heterogeneous small animal phantom. A methodology for creating and validating tissue equivalent materials is presented. The technique is demonstrated through the development of a bone-equivalent material. This material is used together with a soft-tissue mimicking ABS plastic filament to reproduce the corresponding structure geometries captured from a CT scan of a nude mouse. Air gaps are used to represent the lungs. Phantom validation was performed through comparison of the geometry and x-ray attenuation of CT images of the phantom and animal images. A 6.6% difference in the attenuation of the bone-equivalent material compared to the reference standard in softer beams (0.5 mm Cu HVL) rapidly decreases as the beam is hardened. CT imaging shows accurate (sub-millimetre) reproduction of the skeleton (Distance-To-Agreement 0.5 mm ± 0.4 mm) and body surface (0.7 mm ± 0.5 mm). Histograms of the voxel intensity profile of the phantom demonstrate suitable similarity to those of both the original mouse image and that of a different animal. We present an approach for the efficient production of an anthropomorphic phantom suitable for the quality assurance of pre-clinical radiotherapy. Our design and full methodology are provided as open source to encourage the pre-clinical radiobiology community to adopt a common QA standard.
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