A quantitative clinical evaluation of simultaneous reconstruction of attenuation and activity in time-of-flight PET

被引:1
作者
Zhang, Haiqiong [1 ,2 ]
Wang, Jingnan [1 ]
Li, Nan [3 ]
Zhang, Yue [3 ]
Cui, Jie [3 ]
Huo, Li [1 ]
Zhang, Hui [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Peking Union Med Coll Hosp, Chinese Acad Med Sci, Dept Nucl Med, State Key Lab Complex Severe & Rare Dis,Beijing Ke, Beijing 100730, Peoples R China
[2] Peking Union Med Coll Hosp, Chinese Acad Med Sci, Med Sci Res Ctr MRC, Beijing 100730, Peoples R China
[3] SinoUn Beijing Healthcare Technol Co Ltd, Beijing 100082, Peoples R China
[4] Tsinghua Univ, Dept Biomed Engn, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China
关键词
TOF-PET; MLAA; CT-OSEM; Quantitative evaluation; IMAGE; MLAA;
D O I
10.1186/s12880-023-00987-7
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
BackgroundThe maximum likelihood activity and attenuation (MLAA) reconstruction algorithm has been proposed to jointly estimate tracer activity and attenuation at the same time, and proven to be a promising solution to the CT attenuation correction (CT-AC) artifacts in PET images. This study aimed to perform a quantitative evaluation and clinical validation of the MLAA method.MethodsA uniform cylinder phantom filled with F-18-FDG solution was scanned to optimize the reconstruction parameters for the implemented MLAA algorithm. 67 patients who underwent whole-body F-18-FDG PET/CT scan were retrospectively recruited. PET images were reconstructed using MLAA and clinical standard OSEM algorithm with CT-AC (CT-OSEM). The mean and maximum standardized uptake values (SUVmean and SUVmax) in regions of interest (ROIs) of organs, high uptake lesions and areas affected by metal implants and respiration motion artifacts were quantitatively analyzed.ResultsIn quantitative analysis, SUVs in patient's organ ROIs between two methods showed R-2 ranging from 0.91 to 0.98 and k ranging from 0.90 to 1.06, and the average SUVmax and SUVmean differences between two methods were within 10% range, except for the lung ROI, which was 10.5% and 16.73% respectively. The average SUVmax and SUVmean differences of a total of 117 high uptake lesions were 7.25% and 7.10% respectively. 20 patients were identified to have apparent respiration motion artifacts in the liver in CT-OSEM images, and the SUVs differences between two methods measured at dome of the liver were significantly larger than measured at middle part of the liver. 10 regions with obvious metal artifacts were identified in CT-OSEM images and the average SUVmean and SUVmax differences in metal implants affected regions were reported to be 52.90% and 56.20% respectively.ConclusionsPET images reconstructed using MLAA are clinically acceptable in terms of image quality as well as quantification and it is a useful tool in clinical practice, especially when CT-AC may cause respiration motion and metal artifacts. Moreover, this study also provides technical reference and data support for the future iteration and development of PET reconstruction technology of SUV accurate quantification.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] PET detectors with 127 ps CTR for the Tachyon-II time-of-flight PET scanner
    Xie, Siwei
    Zhang, Xi
    Peng, Hui
    Yang, Jingwu
    Huang, Qiu
    Xu, Jianfeng
    Peng, Qiyu
    NUCLEAR INSTRUMENTS & METHODS IN PHYSICS RESEARCH SECTION A-ACCELERATORS SPECTROMETERS DETECTORS AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT, 2019, 933 : 48 - 55
  • [22] One-View Time-of-Flight Positron Emission Tomography Reconstruction
    Zeng, Gengsheng L.
    Huang, Qiu
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON RADIATION AND PLASMA MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2021, 5 (05) : 723 - 728
  • [23] Consistency equations in native detector coordinates and timing calibration for time-of-flight PET
    Li, Yusheng
    BIOMEDICAL PHYSICS & ENGINEERING EXPRESS, 2019, 5 (02):
  • [24] Improvement in Lesion Detection with Whole-Body Oncologic Time-of-Flight PET
    El Fakhri, Georges
    Surti, Suleman
    Trott, Cathryn M.
    Scheuermann, Joshua
    Karp, Joel S.
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2011, 52 (03) : 347 - 353
  • [25] Generation of attenuation correction factors from time-of-flight PET emission data using high-resolution residual U-net
    Yin, Tuo
    Obi, Takashi
    BIOMEDICAL PHYSICS & ENGINEERING EXPRESS, 2021, 7 (06)
  • [26] Data Driven Respiratory Signal Detection in PET Taking Advantage of Time-of-Flight Data
    Bertolli, Ottavia
    Arridge, Simon
    Stearns, Charles W.
    Wollenweher, Scott D.
    Hutton, Brian F.
    Thielemans, Kris
    2016 IEEE NUCLEAR SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM, MEDICAL IMAGING CONFERENCE AND ROOM-TEMPERATURE SEMICONDUCTOR DETECTOR WORKSHOP (NSS/MIC/RTSD), 2016,
  • [27] Analytic time-of-flight positron emission tomography reconstruction: three-dimensional case
    Zeng, Gengsheng L.
    Li, Ya
    Huang, Qiu
    VISUAL COMPUTING FOR INDUSTRY BIOMEDICINE AND ART, 2020, 3 (01)
  • [28] Accurate PET/MR Quantification Using Time of Flight MLAA Image Reconstruction
    R. Boellaard
    M. B. M. Hofman
    O. S. Hoekstra
    A. A. Lammertsma
    Molecular Imaging and Biology, 2014, 16 : 469 - 477
  • [29] Accurate PET/MR Quantification Using Time of Flight MLAA Image Reconstruction
    Boellaard, R.
    Hofman, M. B. M.
    Hoekstra, O. S.
    Lammertsma, A. A.
    MOLECULAR IMAGING AND BIOLOGY, 2014, 16 (04) : 469 - 477
  • [30] On timing-optimized SiPMs for Cherenkov detection to boost low cost time-of-flight PET
    Gundacker, Stefan
    Borghi, Giacomo
    Cherry, Simon R.
    Gola, Alberto
    Lee, Daehee
    Merzi, Stefano
    Penna, Michele
    Schulz, Volkmar
    Kwon, Sun Il
    PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2023, 68 (16)