Literature DB >> 27370136

Investigation of practical initial attenuation image estimates in TOF-MLAA reconstruction for PET/MR.

Ju-Chieh Kevin Cheng1, Andre Salomon2, Maqsood Yaqub1, Ronald Boellaard1.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Time-of-flight joint attenuation and activity positron emission tomography reconstruction requires additional calibration (scale factors) or constraints during or post-reconstruction to produce a quantitative μ-map. In this work, the impact of various initializations of the joint reconstruction was investigated, and the initial average mu-value (IAM) method was introduced such that the forward-projection of the initial μ-map is already very close to that of the reference μ-map, thus reducing/minimizing the offset (scale factor) during the early iterations of the joint reconstruction. Consequently, the accuracy and efficiency of unconstrained joint reconstruction such as time-of-flight maximum likelihood estimation of attenuation and activity (TOF-MLAA) can be improved by the proposed IAM method.
METHODS: 2D simulations of brain and chest were used to evaluate TOF-MLAA with various initial estimates which include the object filled with water uniformly (conventional initial estimate), bone uniformly, the average μ-value uniformly (IAM magnitude initialization method), and the perfect spatial μ-distribution but with a wrong magnitude (initialization in terms of distribution). 3D gate simulation was also performed for the chest phantom under a typical clinical scanning condition, and the simulated data were reconstructed with a fully corrected list-mode TOF-MLAA algorithm with various initial estimates. The accuracy of the average μ-values within the brain, chest, and abdomen regions obtained from the MR derived μ-maps was also evaluated using computed tomography μ-maps as the gold-standard.
RESULTS: The estimated μ-map with the initialization in terms of magnitude (i.e., average μ-value) was observed to reach the reference more quickly and naturally as compared to all other cases. Both 2D and 3D gate simulations produced similar results, and it was observed that the proposed IAM approach can produce quantitative μ-map/emission when the corrections for physical effects such as scatter and randoms were included. The average μ-value obtained from MR derived μ-map was accurate within 5% with corrections for bone, fat, and uniform lungs.
CONCLUSIONS: The proposed IAM-TOF-MLAA can produce quantitative μ-map without any calibration provided that there are sufficient counts in the measured data. For low count data, noise reduction and additional regularization/rescaling techniques need to be applied and investigated. The average μ-value within the object is prior information which can be extracted from MR and patient database, and it is feasible to obtain accurate average μ-value using MR derived μ-map with corrections as demonstrated in this work.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27370136     DOI: 10.1118/1.4953634

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


  3 in total

1.  Joint Reconstruction of Activity and Attenuation in Time-of-Flight PET: A Quantitative Analysis.

Authors:  Ahmadreza Rezaei; Christophe M Deroose; Thomas Vahle; Fernando Boada; Johan Nuyts
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2018-03-01       Impact factor: 10.057

Review 2.  Quantification, improvement, and harmonization of small lesion detection with state-of-the-art PET.

Authors:  Charlotte S van der Vos; Daniëlle Koopman; Sjoerd Rijnsdorp; Albert J Arends; Ronald Boellaard; Jorn A van Dalen; Mark Lubberink; Antoon T M Willemsen; Eric P Visser
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2017-07-08       Impact factor: 9.236

3.  Simultaneous emission and attenuation reconstruction in time-of-flight PET using a reference object.

Authors:  Pablo García-Pérez; Samuel España
Journal:  EJNMMI Phys       Date:  2020-01-13
  3 in total

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