Literature DB >> 23293380

Effect of Scan Time on Oncologic Lesion Detection in Whole-Body PET.

Dan J Kadrmas1, M Bugrahan Oktay, Michael E Casey, James J Hamill.   

Abstract

Lesion-detection performance in oncologic PET depends in part upon count statistics, with shorter scans having higher noise and reduced lesion detectability. However, advanced techniques such as time-of-flight (TOF) and point spread function (PSF) modeling can improve lesion detection. This work investigates the relationship between reducing count levels (as a surrogate for scan time) and reconstructing with PSF model and TOF. A series of twenty-four whole-body phantom scans was acquired on a Biograph mCT TOF PET/CT scanner using the experimental methodology prescribed for the Utah PET Lesion Detection Database. Six scans were acquired each day over four days, with up to 23 (68)Ge shell-less lesions (diam. 6, 8, 10, 12, 16 mm) distributed throughout the phantom thorax and pelvis. Each scan acquired 6 bed positions at 240 s/bed in listmode format. The listmode files were then statistically pruned, preserving Poisson statistics, to equivalent count levels for scan times of 180 s, 120 s, 90 s, 60 s, 45 s, 30 s, and 15 s per bed field-of-view, corresponding to whole-body scan times of 1.5-24 min. Each dataset was reconstructed using ordinary Poisson line-of-response (LOR) OSEM, with PSF model, with TOF, and with PSF+TOF. Localization receiver operating characteristics (LROC) analysis was then performed using the channelized non-prewhitened (CNPW) observer. The results were analyzed to delineate the relationship between scan time, reconstruction method, and strength of post-reconstruction filter. Lesion-detection performance degraded as scan time was reduced, and progressively stronger filters were required to maximize performance for the shorter scans. PSF modeling and TOF were found to improve detection performance, but the degree of improvement for TOF was much larger than for PSF for the large phantom used in this study. Notably, the images using TOF provided equivalent lesion-detection performance to the images without TOF for scan durations 40% shorter, suggesting that TOF may offset, at least in part, the need for longer scan times in larger patients.

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 23293380      PMCID: PMC3535285          DOI: 10.1109/TNS.2012.2197414

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Nucl Sci        ISSN: 0018-9499            Impact factor:   1.679


  36 in total

1.  Theoretical study of lesion detectability of MAP reconstruction using computer observers.

Authors:  J Qi; R H Huesman
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2001-08       Impact factor: 10.048

2.  Comparative evaluation of lesion detectability for 6 PET imaging platforms using a highly reproducible whole-body phantom with (22)Na lesions and localization ROC analysis.

Authors:  Dan J Kadrmas; Paul E Christian
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2002-11       Impact factor: 10.057

3.  Performance of MAP reconstruction for hot lesion detection in whole-body PET/CT: an evaluation with human and numerical observers.

Authors:  Johan Nuyts; Christian Michel; Lieselot Brepoels; Liesbet De Ceuninck; Christophe Deroose; Karolien Goffin; Felix M Mottaghy; Sigrid Stroobants; Jelle Van Riet; Raf Verscuren
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 10.048

4.  Addition of a channel mechanism to the ideal-observer model.

Authors:  K J Myers; H H Barrett
Journal:  J Opt Soc Am A       Date:  1987-12       Impact factor: 2.129

5.  Time-of-flight positron emission tomography: status relative to conventional PET.

Authors:  T F Budinger
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  1983-01       Impact factor: 10.057

6.  Image improvement and design optimization of the time-of-flight PET.

Authors:  W H Wong; N A Mullani; E A Philippe; R Hartz; K L Gould
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  1983-01       Impact factor: 10.057

7.  The meaning and use of the area under a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve.

Authors:  J A Hanley; B J McNeil
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  1982-04       Impact factor: 11.105

8.  Experimental comparison of lesion detectability for four fully-3D PET reconstruction schemes.

Authors:  Dan J Kadrmas; Michael E Casey; Noel F Black; James J Hamill; Vladimir Y Panin; Maurizio Conti
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2008-10-03       Impact factor: 10.048

9.  Impact of time-of-flight on PET tumor detection.

Authors:  Dan J Kadrmas; Michael E Casey; Maurizio Conti; Bjoern W Jakoby; Cristina Lois; David W Townsend
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2009-07-17       Impact factor: 10.057

10.  Channelized hotelling and human observer correlation for lesion detection in hepatic SPECT imaging.

Authors:  H C Gifford; M A King; D J de Vries; E J Soares
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 10.057

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  18 in total

Review 1.  Dynamic whole-body PET imaging: principles, potentials and applications.

Authors:  Arman Rahmim; Martin A Lodge; Nicolas A Karakatsanis; Vladimir Y Panin; Yun Zhou; Alan McMillan; Steve Cho; Habib Zaidi; Michael E Casey; Richard L Wahl
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2018-09-29       Impact factor: 9.236

2.  Effect of Using 2mm Voxels on Observer Performance for PET Lesion Detection.

Authors:  A Michael Morey; Frédéric Noo; Dan J Kadrmas
Journal:  IEEE Trans Nucl Sci       Date:  2016-04-28       Impact factor: 1.679

3.  Determination of accuracy and precision of lesion uptake measurements in human subjects with time-of-flight PET.

Authors:  Margaret E Daube-Witherspoon; Suleman Surti; Amy E Perkins; Joel S Karp
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2014-03-06       Impact factor: 10.057

4.  Quantitative and Visual Assessments toward Potential Sub-mSv or Ultrafast FDG PET Using High-Sensitivity TOF PET in PET/MRI.

Authors:  Spencer C Behr; Emma Bahroos; Randall A Hawkins; Lorenzo Nardo; Vahid Ravanfar; Emily V Capbarat; Youngho Seo
Journal:  Mol Imaging Biol       Date:  2018-06       Impact factor: 3.488

5.  Development and validation of the Lesion Synthesis Toolbox and the Perception Study Tool for quantifying observer limits of detection of lesions in positron emission tomography.

Authors:  Hanif Gabrani-Juma; Zamzam Al Bimani; Lionel S Zuckier; Ran Klein
Journal:  J Med Imaging (Bellingham)       Date:  2020-04-21

6.  Assessing time-of-flight signal-to-noise ratio gains within the myocardium and subsequent reductions in administered activity in cardiac PET studies.

Authors:  Ian S Armstrong; Christine M Tonge; Parthiban Arumugam
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2017-05-11       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 7.  Update on time-of-flight PET imaging.

Authors:  Suleman Surti
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2014-12-18       Impact factor: 10.057

Review 8.  Advances in time-of-flight PET.

Authors:  Suleman Surti; Joel S Karp
Journal:  Phys Med       Date:  2016-01-06       Impact factor: 2.685

9.  Clinical impact of time-of-flight and point response modeling in PET reconstructions: a lesion detection study.

Authors:  Joshua Schaefferkoetter; Michael Casey; David Townsend; Georges El Fakhri
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2013-02-13       Impact factor: 3.609

10.  Analytic TOF PET reconstruction algorithm within DIRECT data partitioning framework.

Authors:  Samuel Matej; Margaret E Daube-Witherspoon; Joel S Karp
Journal:  Phys Med Biol       Date:  2016-04-01       Impact factor: 3.609

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