Literature DB >> 23464338

A new respiratory gating device to improve 4D PET/CT.

David Didierlaurent1, Sophie Ribes, Olivier Caselles, Cyril Jaudet, Jean-Marc Cazalet, Hadj Batatia, Frédéric Courbon.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Respiratory motion creates artifacts in positon emission tomography with computed tomography (PET/CT) images especially for lung tumors, and can alter diagnosis. To account for motion effects, respiratory gating techniques have been developed. However, the lack of measures strongly correlated with tumor motion limits their accuracy. The authors developed a real-time pneumotachograph device (SPI) allowing to sort PET and CT images depending on lung volumes.
METHODS: The performance of this innovative respiratory tracking system was characterized and compared to a standard system. Our experimental setup consisted in a movable platform and a thorax phantom with six fillable spheres simulating lung tumors. The accuracy of SPI to detect inhalation peaks was also determined on volunteers. A comparison with the real-time position management (RPM) device, that relies on abdominal height measurement, was then investigated.
RESULTS: Experiments showed a high accuracy of the measured signal compared to the input signal (R = 0.88 to 0.99), and of the detection of the inhalation peaks (error of 0.1 +/- 5.8 ms) necessary for prospective binning mode. Activity recovery coefficient was improved (until +39%) and the smearing effect was reduced (until 2.74 times lower) with SPI compared to ungated PET/CT acquisition. The spatial distribution of activity in spheres was similar for 4D PET gated with SPI and RPM. Significant improvement of the binning stability and matching between PET and CT were highlighted for irregular breathing patterns with SPI.
CONCLUSIONS: SPI is an innovative device that provides better binning performance than the current gating device on phantom experiments. Future works will focus on patients where the authors expect a significant improvement of specificity and sensitivity of PET/CT examinations.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23464338     DOI: 10.1118/1.4789487

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Phys        ISSN: 0094-2405            Impact factor:   4.071


  4 in total

1.  Derivation of a respiration trigger signal in small animal list-mode PET based on respiration-induced variations of the ECG signal.

Authors:  Andrei Todica; Sebastian Lehner; Hao Wang; Mathias J Zacherl; Katharina Nekolla; Erik Mille; Guoming Xiong; Peter Bartenstein; Christian la Fougère; Marcus Hacker; Guido Böning
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2015-06-12       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 2.  Management of respiratory motion in PET/computed tomography: the state of the art.

Authors:  Audrey Pépin; Joël Daouk; Pascal Bailly; Sébastien Hapdey; Marc-Etienne Meyer
Journal:  Nucl Med Commun       Date:  2014-02       Impact factor: 1.690

3.  Estimation of optimal number of gates in dual gated 18F-FDG cardiac PET.

Authors:  R Klén; J Teuho; T Noponen; K Thielemans; E Hoppela; E Lehtonen; H T Sipila; M Teräs; J Knuuti
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-11-09       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Pre-radiotherapy FDG PET predicts radiation pneumonitis in lung cancer.

Authors:  Richard Castillo; Ngoc Pham; Sobiya Ansari; Dmitriy Meshkov; Sarah Castillo; Min Li; Adenike Olanrewaju; Brian Hobbs; Edward Castillo; Thomas Guerrero
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 3.481

  4 in total

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