Literature DB >> 18006613

Impact of acquisition geometry, image processing, and patient size on lesion detection in whole-body 18F-FDG PET.

Georges El Fakhri1, Paula A Santos, Ramsey D Badawi, Clay H Holdsworth, Annick D Van Den Abbeele, Marie Foley Kijewski.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The aim of this work was to develop a rigorous evaluation methodology to assess performance of different acquisition and processing methods for variable patient sizes in the context of lesion detection in whole-body (18)F-FDG PET.
METHODS: Fifty-nine bed positions were acquired in 32 patients in 2-dimensional (2D) and 3-dimensional (3D) modes 1-4 h after (18)F-FDG injection (740 MBq) using a BGO PET scanner. Three spheres (1.0-, 1.3-, and 1.6-cm diameter) containing (68)Ge were also imaged separately in air, at locations corresponding to possible lesion sites in 2D and 3D (590 targets per condition). Each bed position was acquired for 7 min in 2D and 6 min in 3D and corrected for randoms using delayed window randoms subtraction (DWS) or randoms variance reduction (RVR). Sphere sinograms were attenuated using the 2D or 3D attenuation map derived from the transmission scan of the patient, after scaling 2D and 3D sinograms with identical factors to ensure marginal detectability. Resulting 2D sinograms were reconstructed with filtered backprojection (FBP) and ordered-subsets expectation maximization (OSEM) without any scatter or attenuation correction (FBP-NATS and OSEM-NATS) or corrected for scatter and attenuation and reconstructed using FBP (FBP-ATT) or attenuation-weighted OSEM (AWOSEM). 3D sinograms were processed identically after Fourier rebinning. Next, reconstructed volumes were compared on the basis of performance of a 3-channel Hotelling observer (CHO-SNR [SNR is signal-to-noise ratio]) in detecting the presence of a sphere of unknown size on an anatomic background while modeling observer noise. The noise equivalent count (NEC) rate was computed in 2D and 3D for 3 different phantoms sizes (40, 60, and 95 kg) and compared with lesion detection SNR.
RESULTS: 3D imaging yielded better lesion detectability than 2D (P < 0.025, 2-tailed paired t test) in patients of normal size (body mass index [BMI] < or = 31). However, 2D imaging yielded better lesion detectability than 3D in large patients (BMI > 31), as 3D performance deteriorated in large patients (P < 0.05). 2D and 3D yielded similar results for different lesion sizes. CHO-SNR were 40% greater for AWOSEM, FBP-ATT, and FBPNAT than for OSEM (P < 0.05), and AWOSEM yielded significantly better lesion detectability than did FBP. In all patients, RVR yielded a systematic improvement in CHO-SNR over DWS in both 2D and 3D. radicalNEC was characterized by a behavior similar to that of SNR(CHO) for the 3 different phantom sizes considered in this study.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18006613     DOI: 10.2967/jnumed.108.007369

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


  16 in total

1.  Impact of time-of-flight PET on whole-body oncologic studies: a human observer lesion detection and localization study.

Authors:  Suleman Surti; Joshua Scheuermann; Georges El Fakhri; Margaret E Daube-Witherspoon; Ruth Lim; Nathalie Abi-Hatem; Elie Moussallem; Francois Benard; David Mankoff; Joel S Karp
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2011-04-15       Impact factor: 10.057

2.  Impact of Region-of-Interest Delineation Methods, Reconstruction Algorithms, and Intra- and Inter-Operator Variability on Internal Dosimetry Estimates Using PET.

Authors:  N López-Vilanova; J Pavía; M A Duch; A Catafau; D Ros; S Bullich
Journal:  Mol Imaging Biol       Date:  2017-04       Impact factor: 3.488

3.  Exact confidence intervals for channelized Hotelling observer performance in image quality studies.

Authors:  Adam Wunderlich; Frederic Noo; Brandon D Gallas; Marta E Heilbrun
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2014-09-26       Impact factor: 10.048

Review 4.  Task-based measures of image quality and their relation to radiation dose and patient risk.

Authors:  Harrison H Barrett; Kyle J Myers; Christoph Hoeschen; Matthew A Kupinski; Mark P Little
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2015-01-07       Impact factor: 3.609

5.  4D numerical observer for lesion detection in respiratory-gated PET.

Authors:  Auranuch Lorsakul; Quanzheng Li; Cathryn M Trott; Christopher Hoog; Yoann Petibon; Jinsong Ouyang; Andrew F Laine; Georges El Fakhri
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-10       Impact factor: 4.071

6.  Effect of time-of-flight and point spread function modeling on detectability of myocardial defects in PET.

Authors:  Joshua Schaefferkoetter; Jinsong Ouyang; Yothin Rakvongthai; Carmela Nappi; Georges El Fakhri
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 4.071

7.  Numerical observer for atherosclerotic plaque classification in spectral computed tomography.

Authors:  Auranuch Lorsakul; Georges El Fakhri; William Worstell; Jinsong Ouyang; Yothin Rakvongthai; Andrew F Laine; Quanzheng Li
Journal:  J Med Imaging (Bellingham)       Date:  2016-07-12

8.  Lesion detection and quantification performance of the Tachyon-I time-of-flight PET scanner: phantom and human studies.

Authors:  Xuezhu Zhang; Qiyu Peng; Jian Zhou; Jennifer S Huber; William W Moses; Jinyi Qi
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2018-03-16       Impact factor: 3.609

9.  Reliability of predicting image signal-to-noise ratio using noise equivalent count rate in PET imaging.

Authors:  Tingting Chang; Guoping Chang; John W Clark; Rami H Diab; Eric Rohren; Osama R Mawlawi
Journal:  Med Phys       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 4.071

10.  New Theoretical Results on Channelized Hotelling Observer Performance Estimation with Known Difference of Class Means.

Authors:  Adam Wunderlich; Frédéric Noo
Journal:  IEEE Trans Nucl Sci       Date:  2013-01-11       Impact factor: 1.679

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