| Literature DB >> 29168158 |
Martin Lyngby Lassen1, Sazan Rasul2, Dietrich Beitzke3, Marie-Elisabeth Stelzmüller4, Jacobo Cal-Gonzalez5, Marcus Hacker2, Thomas Beyer5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the frequency of artifacts in MR-based attenuation correction (AC) maps and their impact on the quantitative accuracy of PET-based flow and metabolism measurements in a cohort of consecutive heart failure patients undergoing combined PET/MR imaging.Entities:
Keywords: Attenuation correction; PET/MR; artifacts; cardiac PET
Year: 2017 PMID: 29168158 PMCID: PMC6660490 DOI: 10.1007/s12350-017-1118-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucl Cardiol ISSN: 1071-3581 Impact factor: 5.952
Figure 1Flow-chart of dual-tracer PET/MRI protocol. Patients were injected with NH3 (813 ± 86) MBq with a simultaneous cine-acquisitions (MRI) to assess myocardial functionality. Re-injected with FDG (335 ± 38) MBq, the patients were examined for myocardial viability, with simultaneous acquisitions of myocardial viability through assessments of rest and late-gadolinium enhancement image-acquisitions
Baseline of the 20 patients (13 Male—M, 7 Female—F) enrolled in this study
| Patient # | Gender | Age (years) | Weight (kg) | Injected activity (MBq) | Stent (year) | Sternotomy (year) | Diabetes mellitus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NH3 | FDG | |||||||
| 1 | F | 72 | 62 | 620 | 250 | 1991, 2011 | X | |
| 2 | M | 68 | 95 | 865 | 345 | 2013 | ||
| 3 | M | 57 | 75 | 788 | 345 | |||
| 4 | M | 55 | 73 | 758 | 297 | 2015 | ||
| 5 | F | 73 | 55 | 881 | 319 | |||
| 6 | M | 67 | 98 | 780 | 329 | 2013 | ||
| 7 | M | 76 | 90 | 790 | 386 | |||
| 8 | M | 74 | 83 | 782 | 360 | |||
| 9 | M | 76 | 124 | 1100 | 365 | 2015 | ||
| 10 | F | 70 | 100 | 868 | 356 | 2012 | ||
| 11 | M | 75 | 83 | 749 | 400 | |||
| 12 | F | 68 | 90 | 692 | 334 | 2015 | ||
| 13 | F | 56 | 84 | 813 | 309 | |||
| 14 | M | 73 | 98 | 945 | 362 | |||
| 15 | F | 78 | 94 | 803 | 286 | |||
| 16 | M | 76 | 60 | 822 | 317 | |||
| 17 | M | 47 | 105 | 727 | 308 | 2014 | ||
| 18 | M | 67 | 64 | 750 | 338 | 2001 | X | |
| 19 | F | 62 | 75 | 850 | 317 | |||
| 20 | M | 89 | 62 | 728 | 321 | |||
Figure 2Examples of most frequently observed artifacts on MR-AC (Table 2): A Susceptibility artifacts caused by sternotomy (STN, purple asterisk), aortic valve replacement (SMA, blue asterisk), and soft-fat tissue inversion (FSTI, orange asterisk). B Truncation artifacts (Tr, red asterisk) were found for all MR-AC maps. C Patient with respiratory artifacts (PMA, photopenic type) caused by respiration during the MR-AC acquisition (green asterisk)
Categorization of image artifacts on MR-AC: image artifacts arising susceptibility effects, truncation, tissue misclassifications during the calculation of the AC maps (TI), and patient related artifacts
| Artifact type | Origin | Effect on the MR-AC maps | Effect on the PET images |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Susceptibility type artifacts | |||
| Sternotomy (STN) | Metallic sutures after sternotomy | Soft and Fat tissues surrounding the sutures are misclassified as air ATN values in the DIXON-AC maps | Local misclassification of the activity in areas close to the sutures |
| Metallic implants (SMA) | Metallic implants (stents, aortic valve replacement etc.) | Soft and Fat tissues in the surroundings of the metal-implants are misclassified as air ATN values in the DIXON-AC maps | Local misclassification of the activity in areas close to the implants |
| 2. Truncation | |||
| Truncation (Tr) | Limited field-of-view of the MR-system | Missing tissues in the arm, caused by the limited field of view of the MR system | Local activity misclassifications in the arms |
| 3. Tissue inversion | |||
| Lung/soft tissue (LSTI) | Misclassification of the lung ATN values introduced during classification of soft tissue and lung tissue based on the DIXON-VIBE sequence | Lung tissues are assigned to soft tissue-ATN values | False positive increased lung activity estimates in the areas covered or adjacent to the artifact |
| Fat/soft tissue (FSTI) | Misclassification of the fat and soft tissue in the fat-water sequences in the DIXON-VIBE acquisition protocol | Inversions of the soft and fat tissues in the MR-AC maps | Erroneous activity estimates in the affected areas |
| 4. Respiratory artifacts | |||
| Misalignment artifact (PMA) | Breathing during the MR-AC acquisition | Soft tissue artifacts observed above the diaphragm | False positive increased lung activity estimates in the vicinity of the misclassification |
Of note, susceptibility, and TI artifacts were subdivided into two groups each
Frequency of image artifacts as seen in the DIXON-AC maps for the 20 patients (Table 2)
| Artifact type | Patients affected (13N-NH3 scan) “test” | Patients affected (18F-FDG scan) “retest” | Patients affected combined |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Susceptibility type artifact | |||
| Sternotomy (STN) | 4 (25%) | 4 (25%) | 4 (20%) |
| Metallic implants (SMA) | 6 (30%) | 5 (25%) | 6 (30%) |
| 2. Truncation | |||
| Truncation (Tr) | 20 (100%) | 20 (100%) | 20 (100%) |
| 3. Tissue inversion | |||
| Tissue inversion (LSTI) | 1 (5%) | 0 (0%) | 1 (5%) |
| Tissue inversion (FSTI) | 2 (10%) | 1 (5%) | 2 (10%) |
| 4. Respiratory artifacts | |||
| Misalignment artifact (PMA) | 7 (35%) | 7 (35%) | 10 (50%) |
Variances in detection of certain artifact types (susceptibility, tissue inversion and respiratory misalignment) were observed in this study (Figure 3). The combined effects denote the collective number of patient affected by the respective artifact types
Figure 3Artifact types (Table 2) observed in the test-rest analysis of the DIXON-AC maps for the individual patients. Circle size corresponds to the number of observations of the given artifact combination for the respective acquisitions (Table 3)
Figure 4Patient 10 with two categories of susceptibility artifacts caused by sternotomy and an aortic valve replacement (blue and black arrows, respectively). The acquired DIXON-AC map (A) was corrected using standard tissue classifications to correct the artifact caused by the valve replacement (B) and both stent and sternotomy artifacts (C). Relative differences maps were calculated for the reconstructed PET images using the corrected AC maps (D, E). Significant improvement of the delineation of the right ventricle was observed when correcting the valve replacement artifact (black arrow, B-E) and both artifacts (blue arrow, C and E)
Figure 5Patient 13 with susceptibility artifact in the inferior wall caused by a stent and corresponding FDG PET reconstructions. Susceptibility artifact in the left circumflex artery was observed in the original AC map (A, arrow). Correction of the susceptibility artifact (B) changed the interpretation from reduced metabolism to normal metabolism (C-F, arrows). The susceptibility artifact accounted for relative differences of more than 10% in the affected region (G)
Relative differences (%) observed in the myocardium when correcting the artifact in the original AC maps
| Artifact type | Effect on NH3 acquisitions | Effect on FDG acquisitions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Average | Maximum | Average | Maximum | |
| Susceptibility | ||||
| Sternotomy (STN) | 2 ± 1 | 11 | 2 ± 1 | 13 |
| Metallic implants (SMA) | 1 ± 1 | 53 | 2 ± 2 | 196 |
| Truncation | ||||
| Truncation (Tr) | 10 ± 8 | 84 | 11 ± 4 | 66 |
| Tissue inversion | ||||
| Tissue inversion (FSTI) | 26 | 431 | N/A | N/A |
| Respiratory misalignment | ||||
| Respiratory misalignment | 2 ± 4 ( | 221 | 6 ± 7 ( | 291 ( |
| Combined effects | ||||
| Respiratory misalignment, susceptibility, and Truncation | 10 ± 9 | 270 ( | 17 ± 12 | 333 ( |
Average effects of the SUVmean were calculated for the entire myocardium, using a 42% threshold segmentation, while maximum relates to the single most changed voxel. Artifact types not mentioned in this table were not considered for evaluation. *Indicate statistically significant differences
Figure 6A Axial misalignment of 18 mm was observed between the PET-emission data and the DIXON-AC map for patient 14. B Rigid co-registration of the AC map subsequently resulted in normal uptake in the anterior wall. C Activity changes of more than 80% in were observed in the relative difference map, with the PET data reconstructed using the standard AC map serving as reference. Corresponding polar-map analyses revealed changes in size and severity of hypo-metabolic area for the misaligned AC map (D) and the re-aligned map (E)
Frequency and effect of the misalignment between the PET-emission data and the AC maps (n = 20)
| Respiratory misalignment (offset) | 13N-NH3 scan | 18F-FDG scan | Patients affected combined |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 11 (55%) | 14 (70%) | 18 (90%) |
| Offset (mean ± std) [mm] | 8 ± 4 | 7 ± 4 | 7 ± 4 |
Average offsets are reported in the axial direction only
Clinical scores obtained for the defect extent as well as scar and hibernating tissues obtained in a clinical evaluation software
| (%) | Acquired | Corrected | Corrected + MLAA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Extent | |||
| Mean ± SD | 26 ± 12 | 25 ± 12 | 21 ± 12 |
| RD (range) | −3 ± 21(−58:33) | −17 ± 19 (−58:5) | |
| Scar | |||
| Mean ± SD | 13 ± 10 | 13 ± 9 | 11 ± 8 |
| RD (range) | 10 ± 35 (−20:100) | −7 ± 31 (−52:50) | |
| Hibernating | |||
| Mean ± SD | 8 ± 8 | 6 ± 7 | 5 ± 7 |
| RD (range) | −11 ± 31 (−80:33) | −30 ± 30 (−80:0) | |
Nonsignificant changes were reported for the grouped analyses, though noteworthy differences of up to 100% were observed for three patients with reported changes in the image-quality (Figures 4, 5 and 6)