Cargando…

Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT

BACKGROUND: We assessed and compared image quality obtained with clinical (18)F-FDG whole-body oncologic PET protocols used in three different, state-of-the-art digital PET/CT and two conventional PMT-based PET/CT devices. Our goal was to evaluate an  improved trade-off between administered activity...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gnesin, Silvano, Kieffer, Christine, Zeimpekis, Konstantinos, Papazyan, Jean-Pierre, Guignard, Renaud, Prior, John O., Verdun, Francis R., Lima, Thiago V. M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6944719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31907664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-019-0269-4
_version_ 1783485065745924096
author Gnesin, Silvano
Kieffer, Christine
Zeimpekis, Konstantinos
Papazyan, Jean-Pierre
Guignard, Renaud
Prior, John O.
Verdun, Francis R.
Lima, Thiago V. M.
author_facet Gnesin, Silvano
Kieffer, Christine
Zeimpekis, Konstantinos
Papazyan, Jean-Pierre
Guignard, Renaud
Prior, John O.
Verdun, Francis R.
Lima, Thiago V. M.
author_sort Gnesin, Silvano
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: We assessed and compared image quality obtained with clinical (18)F-FDG whole-body oncologic PET protocols used in three different, state-of-the-art digital PET/CT and two conventional PMT-based PET/CT devices. Our goal was to evaluate an  improved trade-off between administered activity (patient dose exposure/signal-to-noise ratio) and acquisition time (patient comfort) while preserving diagnostic information achievable with the recently introduced digital detector technology compared to previous analogue PET technology. METHODS: We performed list-mode (LM) PET acquisitions using a NEMA/IEC NU2 phantom, with activity concentrations of 5 kBq/mL and 25 kBq/mL for the background (9.5 L) and sphere inserts, respectively. For each device, reconstructions were obtained varying the image statistics (10, 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 300 s from LM data) and the number of iterations (range 1 to 10) in addition to the employed local clinical protocol setup. We measured for each reconstructed dataset: the quantitative cross-calibration, the image noise on the uniform background assessed by the coefficient of variation (COV), and the recovery coefficients (RCs) evaluated in the hot spheres. Additionally, we compared the characteristic time-activity-product (TAP) that is the product of scan time per bed position × mass-activity administered (in min·MBq/kg) across datasets. RESULTS: Good system cross-calibration was obtained for all tested datasets with < 6% deviation from the expected value was observed. For all clinical protocol settings, image noise was compatible with clinical interpretation (COV < 15%). Digital PET showed an improved background signal-to-noise ratio as compared to conventional PMT-based PET. RCs were comparable between digital and PMT-based PET datasets. Compared to PMT-based PET, digital systems provided comparable image quality with lower TAP (from ~ 40% less and up to 70% less). CONCLUSIONS: This study compared the achievable clinical image quality in three state-of-the-art digital PET/CT devices (from different vendors) as well as in two conventional PMT-based PET. Reported results show that a comparable image quality is achievable with a TAP reduction of ~ 40% in digital PET. This could lead to a significant reduction of the administered mass-activity and/or scan time with direct benefits in terms of dose exposure and patient comfort.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6944719
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Springer International Publishing
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-69447192020-01-23 Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT Gnesin, Silvano Kieffer, Christine Zeimpekis, Konstantinos Papazyan, Jean-Pierre Guignard, Renaud Prior, John O. Verdun, Francis R. Lima, Thiago V. M. EJNMMI Phys Original Research BACKGROUND: We assessed and compared image quality obtained with clinical (18)F-FDG whole-body oncologic PET protocols used in three different, state-of-the-art digital PET/CT and two conventional PMT-based PET/CT devices. Our goal was to evaluate an  improved trade-off between administered activity (patient dose exposure/signal-to-noise ratio) and acquisition time (patient comfort) while preserving diagnostic information achievable with the recently introduced digital detector technology compared to previous analogue PET technology. METHODS: We performed list-mode (LM) PET acquisitions using a NEMA/IEC NU2 phantom, with activity concentrations of 5 kBq/mL and 25 kBq/mL for the background (9.5 L) and sphere inserts, respectively. For each device, reconstructions were obtained varying the image statistics (10, 30, 60, 90, 120, 180, and 300 s from LM data) and the number of iterations (range 1 to 10) in addition to the employed local clinical protocol setup. We measured for each reconstructed dataset: the quantitative cross-calibration, the image noise on the uniform background assessed by the coefficient of variation (COV), and the recovery coefficients (RCs) evaluated in the hot spheres. Additionally, we compared the characteristic time-activity-product (TAP) that is the product of scan time per bed position × mass-activity administered (in min·MBq/kg) across datasets. RESULTS: Good system cross-calibration was obtained for all tested datasets with < 6% deviation from the expected value was observed. For all clinical protocol settings, image noise was compatible with clinical interpretation (COV < 15%). Digital PET showed an improved background signal-to-noise ratio as compared to conventional PMT-based PET. RCs were comparable between digital and PMT-based PET datasets. Compared to PMT-based PET, digital systems provided comparable image quality with lower TAP (from ~ 40% less and up to 70% less). CONCLUSIONS: This study compared the achievable clinical image quality in three state-of-the-art digital PET/CT devices (from different vendors) as well as in two conventional PMT-based PET. Reported results show that a comparable image quality is achievable with a TAP reduction of ~ 40% in digital PET. This could lead to a significant reduction of the administered mass-activity and/or scan time with direct benefits in terms of dose exposure and patient comfort. Springer International Publishing 2020-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6944719/ /pubmed/31907664 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-019-0269-4 Text en © The Author(s). 2020 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
spellingShingle Original Research
Gnesin, Silvano
Kieffer, Christine
Zeimpekis, Konstantinos
Papazyan, Jean-Pierre
Guignard, Renaud
Prior, John O.
Verdun, Francis R.
Lima, Thiago V. M.
Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT
title Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT
title_full Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT
title_fullStr Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT
title_full_unstemmed Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT
title_short Phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)F-FDG protocols in digital PET/CT and comparison to conventional PMT-based PET/CT
title_sort phantom-based image quality assessment of clinical (18)f-fdg protocols in digital pet/ct and comparison to conventional pmt-based pet/ct
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6944719/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31907664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-019-0269-4
work_keys_str_mv AT gnesinsilvano phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT kiefferchristine phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT zeimpekiskonstantinos phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT papazyanjeanpierre phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT guignardrenaud phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT priorjohno phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT verdunfrancisr phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct
AT limathiagovm phantombasedimagequalityassessmentofclinical18ffdgprotocolsindigitalpetctandcomparisontoconventionalpmtbasedpetct