Phantom-based acquisition time and image reconstruction parameter optimisation for oncologic FDG PET/CT examinations using a digital system
-
Published:2022-08-18
Issue:1
Volume:22
Page:
-
ISSN:1471-2407
-
Container-title:BMC Cancer
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:BMC Cancer
Author:
Fragoso Costa Pedro, Jentzen Walter, Brahmer Alissa, Mavroeidi Ilektra-Antonia, Zarrad Fadi, Umutlu Lale, Fendler Wolfgang P., Rischpler Christoph, Herrmann Ken, Conti Maurizio, Seifert Robert, Sraieb Miriam, Weber Manuel, Kersting DavidORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
New-generation silicon-photomultiplier (SiPM)-based PET/CT systems exhibit an improved lesion detectability and image quality due to a higher detector sensitivity. Consequently, the acquisition time can be reduced while maintaining diagnostic quality. The aim of this study was to determine the lowest 18F-FDG PET acquisition time without loss of diagnostic information and to optimise image reconstruction parameters (image reconstruction algorithm, number of iterations, voxel size, Gaussian filter) by phantom imaging. Moreover, patient data are evaluated to confirm the phantom results.
Methods
Three phantoms were used: a soft-tissue tumour phantom, a bone-lung tumour phantom, and a resolution phantom. Phantom conditions (lesion sizes from 6.5 mm to 28.8 mm in diameter, lesion activity concentration of 15 kBq/mL, and signal-to-background ratio of 5:1) were derived from patient data. PET data were acquired on an SiPM-based Biograph Vision PET/CT system for 10 min in list-mode format and resampled into time frames from 30 to 300 s in 30-s increments to simulate different acquisition times. Different image reconstructions with varying iterations, voxel sizes, and Gaussian filters were probed. Contrast-to-noise-ratio (CNR), maximum, and peak signal were evaluated using the 10-min acquisition time image as reference. A threshold CNR value ≥ 5 and a maximum (peak) deviation of ± 20% were considered acceptable. 20 patient data sets were evaluated regarding lesion quantification as well as agreement and correlation between reduced and full acquisition time standard uptake values (assessed by Pearson correlation coefficient, intraclass correlation coefficient, Bland–Altman analyses, and Krippendorff’s alpha).
Results
An acquisition time of 60 s per bed position yielded acceptable detectability and quantification results for clinically relevant phantom lesions ≥ 9.7 mm in diameter using OSEM-TOF or OSEM-TOF+PSF image reconstruction, a 4-mm Gaussian filter, and a 1.65 × 1.65 x 2.00-mm3 or 3.30 × 3.30 x 3.00-mm3 voxel size. Correlation and agreement of patient lesion quantification between full and reduced acquisition times were excellent.
Conclusion
A threefold reduction in acquisition time is possible. Patients might benefit from more comfortable examinations or reduced radiation exposure, if instead of the acquisition time the applied activity is reduced.
Funder
Universitätsmedizin Essen Clinician Scientist Academy (UMEA)/German Research Foundation Universitätsklinikum Essen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cancer Research,Genetics,Oncology
Reference61 articles.
1. van Sluis J, Boellaard R, Somasundaram A, van Snick PH, Borra RJH, Dierckx R, Stormezand GN, Glaudemans A, Noordzij W. Image Quality and Semiquantitative Measurements on the Biograph Vision PET/CT System: Initial Experiences and Comparison with the Biograph mCT. J Nucl Med. 2020;61(1):129–35. 2. van Sluis J, de Jong J, Schaar J, Noordzij W, van Snick P, Dierckx R, Borra R, Willemsen A, Boellaard R. Performance Characteristics of the Digital Biograph Vision PET/CT System. J Nucl Med. 2019;60(7):1031–6. 3. Lopez-Mora DA, Flotats A, Fuentes-Ocampo F, Camacho V, Fernandez A, Ruiz A, Duch J, Sizova M, Domenech A, Estorch M, et al. Comparison of image quality and lesion detection between digital and analog PET/CT. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2019;46(6):1383–90. 4. Kersting D, Jentzen W, Fragoso Costa P, Sraieb M, Sandach P, Umutlu L, Conti M, Zarrad F, Rischpler C, Fendler WP, et al. Silicon-photomultiplier-based PET/CT reduces the minimum detectable activity of iodine-124. Sci Rep. 2021;11(1):17477. 5. Kersting D, Jentzen W, Sraieb M, Costa PF, Conti M, Umutlu L, Antoch G, Nader M, Herrmann K, Fendler WP, et al. Comparing lesion detection efficacy and image quality across different PET system generations to optimize the iodine-124 PET protocol for recurrent thyroid cancer. EJNMMI Phys. 2021;8(1):14.
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|