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Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG

INTRODUCTION: Full quantification of positron emission tomography (PET) data requires an input function. This generally means arterial blood sampling, which is invasive, labor-intensive and burdensome. There is no current, standardized method to fully quantify PET radiotracers with irreversible kine...

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Autores principales: Bartlett, Elizabeth A, Ogden, R Todd, Mann, J John, Zanderigo, Francesca
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8969778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35026425
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.118901
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author Bartlett, Elizabeth A
Ogden, R Todd
Mann, J John
Zanderigo, Francesca
author_facet Bartlett, Elizabeth A
Ogden, R Todd
Mann, J John
Zanderigo, Francesca
author_sort Bartlett, Elizabeth A
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Full quantification of positron emission tomography (PET) data requires an input function. This generally means arterial blood sampling, which is invasive, labor-intensive and burdensome. There is no current, standardized method to fully quantify PET radiotracers with irreversible kinetics in the absence of blood data. Here, we present Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE), a novel, data-driven approach to quantify the net influx rate (K(i)) of irreversible PET radiotracers, that requires only individual-level PET data and no blood data. We validate STARE with human [(18)F]FDG PET scans and assess its performance using simulations. METHODS: STARE builds upon a source-to-target tissue model, where the tracer time activity curves (TACs) in multiple “target” regions are expressed at once as a function of a “source” region, based on the two-tissue irreversible compartment model, and separates target region K(i) from source K(i) by fitting the source-to-target model across all target regions simultaneously. To ensure identifiability, data-driven, subject-specific anchoring is used in the STARE minimization, which takes advantage of the PET signal in a vasculature cluster in the field of view (FOV) that is automatically extracted and partial volume-corrected. To avoid the need for any a priori determination of a single source region, each of the considered regions acts in turn as the source, and a final K(i) is estimated in each region by averaging the estimates obtained in each source rotation. RESULTS: In a large dataset of human [(18)F]FDG scans (N = 69), STARE K(i) estimates were correlated with corresponding arterial blood-based K(i) estimates (r = 0.80), with an overall regression slope of 0.88, and were precisely estimated, as assessed by comparing STARE K(i) estimates across several runs of the algorithm (coefficient of variation across runs=6.74 ± 2.48%). In simulations, STARE K(i) estimates were largely robust to factors that influence the individualized anchoring used within its algorithm. CONCLUSION: Through simulations and application to [(18)F]FDG PET data, feasibility is demonstrated for STARE blood-free, data-driven quantification of K(i). Future work will include applying STARE to PET data obtained with a portable PET camera and to other irreversible radiotracers.
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spelling pubmed-89697782022-04-01 Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG Bartlett, Elizabeth A Ogden, R Todd Mann, J John Zanderigo, Francesca Neuroimage Article INTRODUCTION: Full quantification of positron emission tomography (PET) data requires an input function. This generally means arterial blood sampling, which is invasive, labor-intensive and burdensome. There is no current, standardized method to fully quantify PET radiotracers with irreversible kinetics in the absence of blood data. Here, we present Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE), a novel, data-driven approach to quantify the net influx rate (K(i)) of irreversible PET radiotracers, that requires only individual-level PET data and no blood data. We validate STARE with human [(18)F]FDG PET scans and assess its performance using simulations. METHODS: STARE builds upon a source-to-target tissue model, where the tracer time activity curves (TACs) in multiple “target” regions are expressed at once as a function of a “source” region, based on the two-tissue irreversible compartment model, and separates target region K(i) from source K(i) by fitting the source-to-target model across all target regions simultaneously. To ensure identifiability, data-driven, subject-specific anchoring is used in the STARE minimization, which takes advantage of the PET signal in a vasculature cluster in the field of view (FOV) that is automatically extracted and partial volume-corrected. To avoid the need for any a priori determination of a single source region, each of the considered regions acts in turn as the source, and a final K(i) is estimated in each region by averaging the estimates obtained in each source rotation. RESULTS: In a large dataset of human [(18)F]FDG scans (N = 69), STARE K(i) estimates were correlated with corresponding arterial blood-based K(i) estimates (r = 0.80), with an overall regression slope of 0.88, and were precisely estimated, as assessed by comparing STARE K(i) estimates across several runs of the algorithm (coefficient of variation across runs=6.74 ± 2.48%). In simulations, STARE K(i) estimates were largely robust to factors that influence the individualized anchoring used within its algorithm. CONCLUSION: Through simulations and application to [(18)F]FDG PET data, feasibility is demonstrated for STARE blood-free, data-driven quantification of K(i). Future work will include applying STARE to PET data obtained with a portable PET camera and to other irreversible radiotracers. 2022-04-01 2022-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8969778/ /pubmed/35026425 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.118901 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Article
Bartlett, Elizabeth A
Ogden, R Todd
Mann, J John
Zanderigo, Francesca
Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG
title Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG
title_full Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG
title_fullStr Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG
title_full_unstemmed Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG
title_short Source-to-Target Automatic Rotating Estimation (STARE) – A publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for PET tracers with irreversible kinetics: Theoretical framework and validation for [(18)F]FDG
title_sort source-to-target automatic rotating estimation (stare) – a publicly-available, blood-free quantification approach for pet tracers with irreversible kinetics: theoretical framework and validation for [(18)f]fdg
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8969778/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35026425
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.118901
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