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Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction

The current generation of total-body positron emission tomography (PET) scanners offer significant sensitivity increase with an extended axial imaging extent. With the large volume of lutetium-based scintillation crystals that are used as detector elements in these scanners, there is an increased fl...

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Autores principales: Omidvari, Negar, Cheng, Li, Leung, Edwin K., Abdelhafez, Yasser G., Badawi, Ramsey D., Ma, Tianyu, Qi, Jinyi, Cherry, Simon R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9513593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36172601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnume.2022.963067
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author Omidvari, Negar
Cheng, Li
Leung, Edwin K.
Abdelhafez, Yasser G.
Badawi, Ramsey D.
Ma, Tianyu
Qi, Jinyi
Cherry, Simon R.
author_facet Omidvari, Negar
Cheng, Li
Leung, Edwin K.
Abdelhafez, Yasser G.
Badawi, Ramsey D.
Ma, Tianyu
Qi, Jinyi
Cherry, Simon R.
author_sort Omidvari, Negar
collection PubMed
description The current generation of total-body positron emission tomography (PET) scanners offer significant sensitivity increase with an extended axial imaging extent. With the large volume of lutetium-based scintillation crystals that are used as detector elements in these scanners, there is an increased flux of background radiation originating from (176)Lu decay in the crystals and higher sensitivity for detecting it. Combined with the ability of scanning the entire body in a single bed position, this allows more effective utilization of the lutetium background as a transmission source for estimating 511 keV attenuation coefficients. In this study, utilization of the lutetium background radiation for attenuation correction in total-body PET was studied using Monte Carlo simulations of a 3D whole-body XCAT phantom in the uEXPLORER PET scanner, with particular focus on ultralow-dose PET scans that are now made possible with these scanners. Effects of an increased acceptance angle, reduced scan durations, and Compton scattering on PET quantification were studied. Furthermore, quantification accuracy of lutetium-based attenuation correction was compared for a 20-min scan of the whole body on the uEXPLORER, a one-meter-long, and a conventional 24-cm-long scanner. Quantification and lesion contrast were minimally affected in both long axial field-of-view scanners and in a whole-body 20-min scan, the mean bias in all analyzed organs of interest were within a ±10% range compared to ground-truth activity maps. Quantification was affected in certain organs, when scan duration was reduced to 5 min or a reduced acceptance angle of 17° was used. Analysis of the Compton scattered events suggests that implementing a scatter correction method for the transmission data will be required, and increasing the energy threshold from 250 keV to 290 keV can reduce the computational costs and data rates, with negligible effects on PET quantification. Finally, the current results can serve as groundwork for transferring lutetium-based attenuation correction into research and clinical practice.
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spelling pubmed-95135932022-09-27 Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction Omidvari, Negar Cheng, Li Leung, Edwin K. Abdelhafez, Yasser G. Badawi, Ramsey D. Ma, Tianyu Qi, Jinyi Cherry, Simon R. Front Nucl Med Article The current generation of total-body positron emission tomography (PET) scanners offer significant sensitivity increase with an extended axial imaging extent. With the large volume of lutetium-based scintillation crystals that are used as detector elements in these scanners, there is an increased flux of background radiation originating from (176)Lu decay in the crystals and higher sensitivity for detecting it. Combined with the ability of scanning the entire body in a single bed position, this allows more effective utilization of the lutetium background as a transmission source for estimating 511 keV attenuation coefficients. In this study, utilization of the lutetium background radiation for attenuation correction in total-body PET was studied using Monte Carlo simulations of a 3D whole-body XCAT phantom in the uEXPLORER PET scanner, with particular focus on ultralow-dose PET scans that are now made possible with these scanners. Effects of an increased acceptance angle, reduced scan durations, and Compton scattering on PET quantification were studied. Furthermore, quantification accuracy of lutetium-based attenuation correction was compared for a 20-min scan of the whole body on the uEXPLORER, a one-meter-long, and a conventional 24-cm-long scanner. Quantification and lesion contrast were minimally affected in both long axial field-of-view scanners and in a whole-body 20-min scan, the mean bias in all analyzed organs of interest were within a ±10% range compared to ground-truth activity maps. Quantification was affected in certain organs, when scan duration was reduced to 5 min or a reduced acceptance angle of 17° was used. Analysis of the Compton scattered events suggests that implementing a scatter correction method for the transmission data will be required, and increasing the energy threshold from 250 keV to 290 keV can reduce the computational costs and data rates, with negligible effects on PET quantification. Finally, the current results can serve as groundwork for transferring lutetium-based attenuation correction into research and clinical practice. 2022 2022-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9513593/ /pubmed/36172601 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnume.2022.963067 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Article
Omidvari, Negar
Cheng, Li
Leung, Edwin K.
Abdelhafez, Yasser G.
Badawi, Ramsey D.
Ma, Tianyu
Qi, Jinyi
Cherry, Simon R.
Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction
title Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction
title_full Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction
title_fullStr Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction
title_full_unstemmed Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction
title_short Lutetium background radiation in total-body PET—A simulation study on opportunities and challenges in PET attenuation correction
title_sort lutetium background radiation in total-body pet—a simulation study on opportunities and challenges in pet attenuation correction
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9513593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36172601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnume.2022.963067
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