| Literature DB >> 31342214 |
Elin Trägårdh1,2,3, David Minarik4,5, Helén Almquist6, Ulrika Bitzén6, Sabine Garpered6,5, Erland Hvittfelt6, Berit Olsson6, Jenny Oddstig4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Block-sequential regularized expectation maximization (BSREM), commercially Q. Clear (GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, WI, USA), is a reconstruction algorithm that allows for a fully convergent iterative reconstruction leading to higher image contrast compared to conventional reconstruction algorithms, while also limiting noise. The noise penalization factor β controls the trade-off between noise level and resolution and can be adjusted by the user. The aim was to evaluate the influence of different β values for different activity time products (ATs = administered activity × acquisition time) in whole-body 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography with computed tomography (PET-CT) regarding quantitative data, interpretation, and quality assessment of the images. Twenty-five patients with known or suspected malignancies, referred for clinical 18F-FDG PET-CT examinations acquired on a silicon photomultiplier PET-CT scanner, were included. The data were reconstructed using BSREM with β values of 100-700 and ATs of 4-16 MBq/kg × min/bed (acquisition times of 1, 1.5, 2, 3, and 4 min/bed). Noise level, lesion SUVmax, and lesion SUVpeak were calculated. Image quality and lesion detectability were assessed by four nuclear medicine physicians for acquisition times of 1.0 and 1.5 min/bed position.Entities:
Keywords: Block-sequential regularized expectation maximization; FDG; Image reconstruction; PET-CT; Q. Clear
Year: 2019 PMID: 31342214 PMCID: PMC6656834 DOI: 10.1186/s13550-019-0535-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EJNMMI Res Impact factor: 3.138
Fig. 1a Noise level for all examined combinations of AT (MBq/kg × min/bed) and β values. All values are normalized to AT of 16 with a β of 300 (reference). The boxplots show the median (thick line in the middle of the boxes) and the first and third quartiles (the top and bottom box lines). The whiskers extend to 1.5 times the height of the box (approx. 95% of the data). Circles are outliers, and stars in the graph indicate extreme outliers. b β value versus administered activity × acquisition time (AT) (min/bed × MBq/kg). The β value for all patients at different AT to obtain the same noise level as for the reference image (AT of 16 with a β of 300) (a)
Fig. 2SUVmax (a) and SUVpeak (b) for all examined combinations of AT (MBq/kg × min/bed) and β values. All values are normalized to an AT of 16 with a β of 300 (reference). The same scale on the y-axis is used in order to highlight the smaller variation of SUVpeak compared with SUVmax. The boxplots show the median and the second and third quartile groups (box) whereas the whiskers show the first and the fourth quartile groups. Circles are outliers, and stars indicate extreme outliers
Fig. 3Image quality (a) and lesion detectability (b) for the combinations of AT (min/bed × MBq/kg) and β values
Fig. 4Example of a lesion (right adrenal gland, indicated by the arrow) and how it appears in the reference with an AT of 16 (4 MBq/kg and 4 min/bed position with a β of 300) and the combinations of time/bed position and β values evaluated
Fig. 5Example of a lesion in a vertebra not visible in the 4-min reference (upper left corner) but, to different degrees, visible in the other combinations of time/bed position and β values evaluated. The last row shows 1-min reconstructions from the 4-min acquisition for the last 3 min, where the lesion is not visible. OSEM+TOF with and without PSF are shown in the upper row
Fig. 6Example of a lesion in the liver not visible in the 4-min reference (upper left corner), to different degrees, visible in the other combinations of time/bed position and β values evaluated. The last row shows 1-min reconstructions from the 4-min acquisition for the last 3 min, where the lesion is not visible. OSEM+TOF with and without PSF are shown in the upper row