Dedicated holmium microsphere administration device for MRI-guided interstitial brain microbrachytherapy

Publication date

2021-10-01

Authors

de Vries, Martijn
Klaassen, Nienke Johanna Maria
Morsink, Nino Chiron
van Nimwegen, S.A.ORCID 0000-0002-5366-0120ISNI 000000041949192X
Nijsen, Johannes Frank Wilhelmus
van den Dobbelsteen, J.J.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Microbrachytherapy with radioactive holmium-166 (166Ho) microspheres (MS) has the potential to be an effective treatment method for brain malignancies. Direct intratumoural delivery of 166Ho-MS and dose coverage of the whole tumour are crucial requirements. However, currently no dedicated instruments for controlled intratumoural delivery exist. This study presents an administration device that facilitates this novel magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) -guided intervention. The bioceramic alumina oxide cannula creates a straight channel for a superelastic nitinol precurved stylet to control spatial deposition of Ho-MS. End-point accuracy of the stylet was measured during insertions in phantoms. Imaging tests were performed in a 3 Tesla MRI-scanner to quantify instrument-induced artefacts. Additionally, the feasibility of non-radioactive holmium-165 (165Ho)-MS delivery with the administration device was evaluated in a brain tumour simulant. Absolute stylet tip error was 0.88 ± 0.61 mm, instrument distortion in MRI depended on needle material and orientation and dose delivery of 165Ho-MS in a brain tumour phantom was possible. This study shows that the administration device can accurately place the stylet for injection of Ho-MS and that visualization can be performed with MRI.

Keywords

Brachytherapy, Brain tumour, Holmium, Image-guided, Steerable needle, Biophysics, Biomedical Engineering

Citation

de Vries, M, Klaassen, N J M, Morsink, N C, van Nimwegen, S A, Nijsen, J F W & van den Dobbelsteen, J J 2021, 'Dedicated holmium microsphere administration device for MRI-guided interstitial brain microbrachytherapy', Medical engineering & physics, vol. 96, pp. 13-21. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medengphy.2021.07.009