Abstract
Abstract
Objective. Blood pool region of interest (ROI) data extracted from the field of view of a PET scanner can be impacted by both dispersive and background effects. This circumstance compromises the ability to correctly extract the arterial input function (AIF) signal. The paper explores a novel approach to addressing this difficulty. Approach. The method involves representing the AIF in terms of the whole-body impulse response (IR) to the injection profile. Analysis of a collection/population of directly sampled arterial data sets allows the statistical behaviour of the tracer’s impulse response to be evaluated. It is proposed that this information be used to develop a penalty term for construction of a data-adaptive method of regularisation estimator of the AIF when dispersive and/or background effects maybe impacting the blood pool ROI data. Main results. Computational efficiency of the approach derives from the linearity of the impulse response representation of the AIF and the ability to substantially rely on quadratic programming techniques for numerical implementation. Data from eight different tracers, used in PET cancer imaging studies, are considered. Sample image-based AIF extractions for brain studies with: 18F-labeled fluoro-deoxyglucose and fluoro-thymidine (FLT), 11C-labeled carbon dioxide (CO2) and 15O-labeled water (H2O) are presented. Results are compared to the true AIF based on direct arterial sampling. Formal numerical simulations are used to evaluate the performance of the AIF extraction method when the ROI data has varying amounts of contamination, in comparison to a direct approach that ignores such effects. It is found that even with quite small amounts of contamination, the mean squared error of the regularised AIF is significantly better than the error associated with direct use of the ROI data. Significance. The proposed IR-based AIF extraction scheme offers a practical methodological approach for situations where the available image ROI data may be contaminated by background and/or dispersion effects.
Funder
Science Foundation Ireland
National Cancer Institute
Subject
Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology